Section, Paragraph
1 II, 62 | sought to be fashionable.~His foolish project of describing himself!
2 II, 82 | reason only would be deemed foolish by the generality of men.
3 II, 139 | they would no longer be foolish.~This man spends his life
4 II, 140 | strain, he will be more foolish still, because he would
5 II, 161 | thing to say that it is foolish to seek greatness?~
6 IV, 257 | and happy, the last are foolish and unhappy; those between
7 V, 316 | spruce is not altogether foolish, for it proves that a great
8 V, 328 | then, shown that man is foolish, by the estimation he makes
9 V, 328 | founded, the people are not so foolish as is said. And so we have
10 V, 328 | true that the people are foolish, though their opinions are
11 VI, 360 | propose is so difficult and foolish!~The Stoics lay down that
12 VI, 360 | degree of wisdom are equally foolish and vicious, as those who
13 VI, 365 | what is this thought? How foolish it is!~
14 VI, 388 | of armed hands. He is not foolish enough to declare that men
15 VI, 390 | 390. My God! How foolish this talk is! "Would God
16 VII, 434 | weak reason; be silent, foolish nature; learn that man infinitely
17 VII, 446 | wise child than an old and foolish king who cannot foresee
18 VII, 446 | infancy to old age, and foolish because it leads man in
19 VII, 464 | most empty and the most foolish.~
20 VIII, 587| power. Thus our religion is foolish in respect to the effective
21 VIII, 588| Our religion is wise and foolish. Wise, because it is the
22 VIII, 588| miracles, prophecies, etc. Foolish, because it is not all this
23 IX, 610 | not a people... and with a foolish nation." Isaiah 65:1.~That
24 X, 649 | would understand only a foolish meaning.~
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