Section, Paragraph
1 II, 82 | discourse or a poem.~Love or hate alters the aspect of justice.
2 II, 86 | 86. My fancy makes me hate a croaker, and one who pants
3 II, 97 | naturally love truth and hate folly. These words move
4 II, 100 | For is it not true that we hate truth and those who tell
5 II, 100 | we wish to be treated. We hate the truth, and they hide
6 III, 187 | Men despise religion; they hate it and fear it is true.
7 III, 224 | 224. How I hate these follies of not believing
8 IV, 286 | love God; they desire to hate themselves only. They feel
9 IV, 286 | must love God only, and hate self only; but that, all
10 VI, 423 | natural capacity. Let him hate himself, let him love himself;
11 VI, 423 | indeed, that he should hate in himself the lust which
12 VII, 451 | 451. All men naturally hate one another. They employ
13 VII, 451 | for at bottom it is only hate.~
14 VII, 455 | to us from it. But if I hate it because it is unjust
15 VII, 455 | everything, I shall always hate it.~In a word, the Self
16 VII, 455 | it lovable to those who hate injustice; you render it
17 VII, 468 | religion has proposed to men to hate themselves. No other religion,
18 VII, 468 | then, can please those who hate themselves, and who seek
19 VII, 476 | We must love God only and hate self only.~If the foot had
20 VII, 479 | evil; therefore we ought to hate ourselves and all that excited
21 VII, 482 | also miserable, and would hate rather than love themselves;
22 VII, 485 | only virtue, then, is to hate self (for we are hateful
23 VII, 494 | of self, to love and to hate.~
24 X, 675 | Christians and for all who do not hate themselves.~But how well
25 X, 675 | Christ, when they truly hate themselves!~
26 XIII, 812| 813. Miracles.—How I hate those who make men doubt
|