Section, Paragraph
1 I, 41 | People are mistaken in thinking otherwise.~For lust is the
2 II, 139 | king and to prevent his thinking of self. For he is unhappy,
3 II, 139 | no one prevents them from thinking of themselves.~
4 II, 146 | making oneself king, without thinking what it is to be a king
5 II, 164 | soon as we are reduced to thinking of self and have no diversion.~
6 II, 165 | not need diversion from thinking of it in order to make ourselves
7 II, 166 | is easier to bear without thinking of it than is the thought
8 II, 169 | to prevent himself from thinking of death.~
9 III, 194 | live without troubling or thinking about it.~I can have only
10 III, 194 | pass their life without thinking of this ultimate end of
11 III, 222 | impossible. A popular way of thinking!~Why cannot a virgin bear
12 IV, 252 | persuades the mind without its thinking about the matter. Who has
13 IV, 259 | people have the power of not thinking of that about which they
14 VI, 347 | thing in nature; but he is a thinking reed. The entire universe
15 VI, 348 | 348. A thinking reed.—It is not from space
16 VII, 464 | us, even when we are not thinking of them. And thus philosophers
17 VII, 473 | us imagine a body full of thinking members.~
18 VII, 474 | must imagine a body full of thinking members, for we are members
19 VII, 482 | should compose a body of thinking members. For our members
20 VII, 499 | imitate her discourses, thinking to imitate her conditions,
21 X, 691 | their enemies. But he was thinking of sins, and, to show this,
22 XIII, 842| know the general rules, thinking thereby to set up dissension
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