Part, Paragraph
1 I, 6 | medley of the members of different animals; or if they chance
2 II, 3 | that there is not something different altogether from the objects
3 II, 5 | smell; that can be moved in different ways, not indeed of itself,
4 II, 7 | to me, are not in truth different from myself whom I know.
5 III, 8 | produced in me by something different from myself, viz., by the
6 III, 9 | these two things are widely different; for what the natural light
7 III, 12| existence of certain things different from myself, which, by the
8 III, 13| one thing and another a different, it is evident that a great
9 III, 32| dependent upon some being different from myself. ~
10 III, 38| mark should be something different from the work itself; but
11 IV, 10| rather which I myself am, is different from that corporeal nature,
12 VI, 3 | it depends on something different from the mind. And I easily
13 VI, 6 | perceived certain objects wholly different from my thought, namely,
14 VI, 7 | they proceeded from things different from myself, since perhaps
15 VI, 9 | certain that the one is different from the other, seeing they
16 VI, 9 | compelled to judge them different; and, therefore, merely
17 VI, 10| exist in some substance different from me, in which all the
18 VI, 14| And indeed, as I perceive different sorts of colors, sounds,
19 VI, 17| the term nature is very different from the other: for this
20 VI, 19| soul of man is entirely different from the body, if I had
21 VI, 21| will not be moved in a different way than it would be were
22 VI, 22| of something altogether different: the motion might, for example,
23 VI, 22| some other object quite different, whatever that might be;
24 VI, 23| than by one acting in a different quarter, it is reasonable
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