Part, Paragraph
1 Syn, 2 | body, taken generally, is a substance, and therefore can never
2 Syn, 2 | accidents, but is a pure substance. For although all the accidents
3 III, 19| situation; to which may be added substance, duration, and number. But
4 III, 21| have of myself, as those of substance, duration, number, and the
5 III, 21| think that a stone is a substance, or a thing capable of existing
6 III, 21| and that I am likewise a substance, although I conceive that
7 III, 21| are only certain modes of substance, and because I myself am
8 III, 21| and because I myself am a substance, it seems possible that
9 III, 22| name God, I understand a substance infinite, eternal, immutable],
10 III, 23| For though the idea of substance be in my mind owing to this,
11 III, 23| this, that I myself am a substance, I should not, however,
12 III, 23| the idea of an infinite substance, seeing I am a finite being,
13 III, 23| it were given me by some substance in reality infinite. ~
14 III, 24| reality in the infinite substance than in the finite, and
15 III, 30| accidents of a thinking substance; and certainly, if I possessed
16 III, 31| that the conservation of a substance, in each moment of its duration,
17 VI, 9 | being a thinking thing or a substance whose whole essence or nature
18 VI, 10| without an intelligent substance in which they reside, for
19 VI, 10| preceding, apart from a substance in which they inhere. It
20 VI, 10| some corporeal or extended substance, since in their clear and
21 VI, 10| therefore exist in some substance different from me, in which
22 VI, 10| before remarked; and this substance is either a body, that is
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