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1 I, 11 | representation of the passions so natural and so delicate that it
2 I, 14 | 14. When a natural discourse paints a passion
3 I, 16 | possible, to the simple and natural, and not to magnify that
4 I, 20 | never appear save in their natural confusion. Nature has established
5 I, 21 | the other. But this is not natural. Each keeps its own place.~
6 I, 29 | 29. When we see a natural style, we are astonished
7 I, 33 | poetry. We do not know the natural model which we ought to
8 II, 72 | stays for us. This is our natural condition and yet most contrary
9 II, 72 | all is held together by a natural though imperceptible chain
10 II, 81 | 81. It is natural for the mind to believe
11 II, 82 | is no principle, however natural to us from infancy, which
12 II, 83 | a subject full of error, natural and ineffaceable, without
13 II, 86 | this weight because it is natural? No, but by resisting it...~
14 II, 91 | always recur, we infer a natural necessity in it, as that
15 II, 92 | 92. What are our natural principles but principles
16 II, 92 | custom will cause different natural principles. This is seen
17 II, 92 | experience; and if there are some natural principles ineradicable
18 II, 93 | 93. Parents fear lest the natural love of their children may
19 II, 93 | nature? For is custom not natural? I am much afraid that nature
20 II, 94 | nature of man is wholly natural, omne animal. 18 ~There
21 II, 94 | nothing he may not make natural; there is nothing natural
22 II, 94 | natural; there is nothing natural he may not lose.~
23 II, 95 | for education produces natural intuitions, and natural
24 II, 95 | natural intuitions, and natural intuitions are erased by
25 II, 96 | bad reasons for proving natural effects, we are not willing
26 II, 100 | justice and reason, have a natural root in his heart.~
27 II, 105 | upset a judgement from its natural place, or, rather, so rarely
28 II, 109 | should have other desires natural to this new state.~We must
29 II, 139 | real reason, namely, the natural poverty of our feeble and
30 II, 139 | heart wherein it has its natural roots and to fill the mind
31 II, 153 | we are.—Pride takes such natural possession of us in the
32 II, 156 | which is so strong and so natural.~
33 III, 194 | eternity; and thus it is not natural that there should be men
34 III, 194 | if they restrained their natural feelings in order to make
35 III, 195 | glimmerings of common sense and by natural feelings.~For it is not
36 III, 233 | us now speak according to natural lights.~If there is a God,
37 IV, 254 | too much docility. It is a natural vice like credulity, and
38 IV, 267 | as to know this. But if natural things are beyond it, what
39 V, 294 | but that it resides in natural laws, common to every country.
40 V, 294 | him?~Doubtless there are natural laws; but good reason once
41 V, 294 | is said, get back to the natural and fundamental laws of
42 V, 308 | believes that it arises by a natural force, whence come these
43 V, 325 | desire. They are principles natural to man.~It would, therefore,
44 V, 327 | of things, for it is in natural ignorance, which is man'
45 V, 327 | meet. The first is the pure natural ignorance in which all men
46 V, 327 | who have departed from natural ignorance and not been able
47 VI, 363(53)| what is to him the most natural." ~
48 VI, 374 | he is not in a state of natural and inevitable weakness,
49 VI, 374 | but, on the contrary, of natural wisdom.~Nothing fortifies
50 VI, 392 | completely extinguishes the natural light which assures us of
51 VI, 392 | the clearness, nor our own natural lights chase away all the
52 VI, 423 | not therefore despise this natural capacity. Let him hate himself,
53 VII, 425 | that this desire, being natural to man, since it is necessarily
54 VII, 431 | greatness, which are equally natural to man.~"Lift your eyes
55 VII, 434 | them in ourselves. Now this natural intuition is not a convincing
56 VII, 434 | truth and good as during natural sleep, these different thoughts
57 VII, 434 | sincerely, we cannot doubt natural principles. Against this
58 VII, 434 | try to find out by your natural reason what is your true
59 VII, 435 | exalts infinitely more than natural pride, but without inflating;
60 VII, 446 | to say that the malignity natural to man has said that to
61 VII, 477 | depraved.~If the members of natural and civil communities tend
62 VII, 498 | proportion as the vice which is natural to us resists supernatural
63 VII, 521 | the former is in some sort natural. And thus there will always
64 VII, 532 | thing by her two infinities, natural and moral; for we shall
65 VIII, 556 | undertake here to prove by natural reasons either the existence
66 IX, 609 | worshippers of the one only God of natural religion; among the Jews,
67 IX, 619 | easy to conjecture from the natural order of things during so
68 X, 659 | 660. Lust has become natural to us and has made our second
69 X, 677 | are perfectly clear and natural! This is what Jesus Christ
70 XII, 782 | opposed, not only from the natural opposition of lust; but,
71 XII, 797 | which is evidence of the natural disinterestedness with which
72 XIII, 803 | effect, which exceeds the natural power of the means which
73 XIII, 803 | which does not exceed the natural power of the means which
74 XIII, 803 | that does not exceed the natural power of the devil. But...~
75 XIII, 851 | miracles"; because the last is natural, and not the first. The
76 XIV, 875 | one man. But it appears so natural for it to reside in a multitude,
77 XIV, 902 | sects in the world have had natural reason for a guide. Christians
78 XIV, 919 | they mean by it not the natural interpretation, but, as
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