Part, Paragraph
1 Pre, 4 | equivocal; for it may be taken either materially for an
2 Pre, 7 | Meditations until they have taken care to read the whole of
3 Syn, 2 | second place, that body, taken generally, is a substance,
4 Syn, 3 | avoid the use of comparisons taken from material objects, that
5 Syn, 5 | illustration of corporeal nature, taken generically, a new demonstration
6 I, 11| observations; care must be taken likewise to keep them in
7 II, 7 | existence, thus precisely taken, is not dependent on things,
8 II, 11| having been but recently taken from the beehive; it has
9 II, 15| referred, scarcely merit to be taken into account. ~
10 III, 11| than the whole earth, is taken up on astronomical grounds,
11 III, 13| out of me. If ideas are taken in so far only as they are
12 III, 15| objects from which they are taken, but can never contain anything
13 III, 21| appears to me, might have been taken from the idea I have of
14 IV, 8 | found in it thus accurately taken. And although there are
15 IV, 14| nature that nothing could be taken from it without destroying
16 VI, 15| nature. For nature is here taken in a narrower sense than
17 VI, 18| prevent the nature of man thus taken from being fallacious. ~
18 VI, 19| conscious that nothing has been taken from my mind; nor can the
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