Part, Paragraph
1 Ded, 2 | things be proved to them by natural reason. And since in this
2 Ded, 2 | affirmed the sufficiency of natural reason for the proof of
3 Syn, 4 | are known by means of the natural light alone. ~
4 III, 9 | their objects, and not a natural light that affords a knowledge
5 III, 9 | different; for what the natural light shows to be true can
6 III, 9 | the falsity of what the natural light declares to be true,
7 III, 9 | with respect to seemingly] natural impulses, I have observed,
8 III, 10| former, for just as those natural impulses, of which I have
9 III, 14| Now, it is manifest by the natural light that there must at
10 III, 15| thus clearly taught by the natural light that ideas exist in
11 III, 20| objects that are unreal, the natural light teaches me that they
12 III, 28| consider it, to discern by the natural light; but when I allow
13 III, 31| manifestly a dictate of the natural light that conservation
14 III, 38| since it is a dictate of the natural light that all fraud and
15 IV, 6 | no avail in physical or natural ] things; for it appears
16 IV, 8 | assuredly divine grace and natural knowledge, very far from
17 IV, 12| for it is a dictate of the natural light, that the knowledge
18 IV, 13| intelligence or more perfect natural light than he has actually
19 VI, 15| truths I discern by the natural light without the aid of
20 VI, 17| that it would also be as natural for such a body, supposing
21 VI, 17| do itself harm, as it is natural for it, when it is not indisposed
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