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1 1, Int | penetrate to the cause of things. When he appeared before
2 1, Int | adding that they refer all things to the ultimate cause, which
3 1, Int | penetrates and moves all things; the world itself is a sacrum
4 1, Int | that he sought for higher things and longed for nobler ones.
5 1, Int | numbers are the beginning of things; in other words numbers
6 1, Int | the existence of material things; they are not final, but
7 1, Int | that animates and moves all things is one; everything differentiates
8 1, Int | operates. Hence, of animate things some are inferior by reason
9 1, Int | secret of memory and other things that he knew."~The philosopher
10 1, Int | departure, and sent his things on to Frankfort, intending
11 1, Int | of the divinity in all things, of the unity of all things,
12 1, Int | things, of the unity of all things, the dependence and inter-dependence
13 1, Int | inter-dependence of all things, and of the existence of
14 1, 1 | laurel who sing worthily of things pertaining to heroes, substituting
15 1, 1 | He brings forward four things: Love, Fate, the Object,
16 1, 1 | in order that the highest things may be heard, understood,
17 1, 1 | accomplished; or it makes the things loved, grand-at least in
18 1, 2 | simple wine. Almost all things are made up of opposites,
19 1, 2 | through the mixture that is in things, can afford no pleasure
20 1, 2 | is what the mixture of things causes, and hence it is
21 1, 2 | the sage holds all mutable things as things that are not,
22 1, 2 | holds all mutable things as things that are not, and affirms
23 1, 2 | themselves by loving worthy things, and aspiring to illustrious
24 1, 2 | aspiring to illustrious things, and higher still to things
25 1, 2 | things, and higher still to things divine, by suitable studies
26 1, 2 | more fascinated by such things than I am now fascinated
27 1, 3 | speak and perform wonderful things, without themselves understanding
28 1, 3 | thought for other than divine things, and shows himself insensible
29 1, 3 | impassive towards those things which are commonly felt,
30 1, 3 | of the law, innate in all things. Not, as drunk from the
31 1, 3 | tangible images and material things, he comes to comprehend
32 1, 3 | ardent desire of divine things, this arrow is the impression
33 1, 3 | deserve it; and amongst other things of which the lover deems
34 1, 3 | either to the substance of things hoped~for, as those say,
35 1, 3 | in lower and less noble things.~CIC. Truly a dignified
36 1, 3 | they turn towards superior things and force themselves on
37 1, 3 | their conversion to inferior things, they are thrust into the
38 1, 3 | help of others, superior things lower themselves to things
39 1, 3 | things lower themselves to things inferior, and, by their
40 1, 3 | excellence and felicity, inferior things raise themselves to superior
41 1, 3 | and which disposes of all things according to justice. In
42 1, 3 | nature, counsel, will, those things, justly and rightfully ordained,
43 1, 3 | because the mind raises to things sublime, as the imagination
44 1, 3 | imagination lowers to inferior things. The mind always understands
45 1, 3 | of those towards inferior things, invests himself with divers
46 1, 4 | intellect converting the things learned into itself.~CIC.
47 1, 4 | that the intellect learns things intelligibly -- i.e., in
48 1, 4 | way, and the will pursues things naturally, that is, according
49 1, 4 | whence comes it that in things divine we have more love,
50 1, 4 | act of seeing, beautiful things offer themselves to us;
51 1, 4 | therefore we desire beautiful things.~CIC. We desire the beautiful
52 1, 4 | less do we desire to see things unknown and unseen than
53 1, 4 | we do not desire unknown things. Because, if they~be occult
54 1, 4 | no longer classed among things in general, but among things
55 1, 4 | things in general, but among things good and beautiful; then
56 1, 4 | has reference to visible things, so has the, intellect to
57 1, 4 | intellect to intelligible things. I believe now that you
58 1, 4 | heart; let live the sense of things that are felt, and the understanding
59 1, 4 | and the understanding of things intelligible, come to the
60 1, 4 | is order and analogy in things diverse; where each thing
61 1, 4 | according to the law of things that can be felt, the flesh
62 1, 4 | obscure and to inferior things, which it brightens, vivifies,
63 1, 4 | which it rises to superior~things and declines to things inferior.
64 1, 4 | superior~things and declines to things inferior. And this, you
65 1, 4 | ultimate degree of divine things, descends into the mortal
66 1, 4 | there are, of which those things are equal, as those of demons
67 1, 4 | man, nor wish for those things that are suitable to the
68 1, 4 | love of the material and of things intelligible, she feels
69 1, 4 | to the hatred of inferior things, which she partly shows,
70 1, 4 | the corruption of living things in those worlds, serving
71 1, 4 | who is sufficient for all things and primary, and whose word
72 1, 4 | is how, in the scale of things superior and inferior, the
73 1, 5 | the air, and amongst other things a tower, of which the architect
74 1, 5 | splendour of intellectual things through the act of contemplation,
75 1, 5 | diverting the sight from things which stand between him
76 1, 5 | which are common to those things which are equal and inferior.
77 1, 5 | and attention, to superior things. The third is by bringing
78 1, 5 | in effect, towards those things that are constant and invariable
79 1, 5 | absolute action.~CIC. All those things, then, that are dependent,
80 1, 5 | is occupied with material things.~IX.~CIC. It seems to me
81 1, 5 | worthies felt not those things~which would torment and
82 1, 5 | experience some difficulties, things being as they are, so entangled;
83 1, 5 | when it is attached to low things, but flies high when it
84 1, 5 | and derivation; as in all things which are dependent, their
85 1, 5 | other, seeing that where things are finite it may result
86 1, 5 | that we can have of divine things, which, while we force ourselves
87 1, 5 | me are full of woe;~All things time takes from me,~And
88 1, 5 | perfectly, and confess that all things agree very well. It is time
89 2, Pre | author makes use of lower things to picture and suggest the
90 2, 1 | best and most excellent things are in the world when the
91 2, 1 | part, perfectly, to those things; and this it is said takes
92 2, 1 | Zodiac; 1 and low and evil things~ ./. prevail when the opposite
93 2, 1 | succession and order of things is most true and most certain;
94 2, 1 | before him; to signify that things of the past afflict by means
95 2, 1 | thoughts, but not so much as things of the present which actually
96 2, 1 | that of the then present things nothing would~remain but
97 2, 1 | is the natural order of things; outside of which order,
98 2, 1 | that, from these visible things his heart becomes exalted
99 2, 1 | becomes exalted towards those things which are more excellent
100 2, 1 | men of heroic, spirit, all things turn to good and how they
101 2, 1 | tranquil, or else he aspires to things more excellent and grand.
102 2, 1 | enterprises: for these low things are derived from those,
103 2, 1 | if they be not God, are things divine, are living images
104 2, 1 | splendour shines and is in all things; and therefore it does not
105 2, 1 | error to admire Him in all things, according to the way in
106 2, 1 | the other: and where these things which are generated and
107 2, 1 | known than all those other things which thou honourest, by
108 2, 1 | we never discourse about things divine, but we cannot oven
109 2, 1 | are bodies, are created things, similar to this globe on
110 2, 1 | considering attentively things low and high, divine and
111 2, 1 | the various conditions of things which we usually admire,
112 2, 1 | usually admire, for not those things of which we desire to have
113 2, 1 | but the contempt for those things."~CES. Well. Bat tell me
114 2, 1 | indissoluble sacrament to divine things, in such a way that he will
115 2, 1 | either love or hatred of things mortal. Considering himself
116 2, 1 | Discourse and penetrate to other things.~SO that the continual movement
117 2, 1 | shown that the sense of low things is diminished and annulled
118 2, 1 | known by means of posterior things and effects. So the lights
119 2, 1 | its perfection to inferior things, through the likeness which
120 2, 1 | allow of~ ./. intellectual things towards their proper objects,
121 2, 1 | which are all the species of things, which are indications of
122 2, 1 | individuals and species of things, in which shine the splendour
123 2, 1 | light of intelligible things, the mind becomes exalted
124 2, 1 | life nor sense about other things, so that he cannot be stabbed
125 2, 1 | unity, desires to be in all things severed and withdrawn from
126 2, 1 | himself indeed to fortuitous things, and has brought upon himself
127 2, 1 | be in pain about future,~things and absent ones which at
128 2, 2 | be entertained with low things which are beneath our faculties,
129 2, 2 | life attached to unworthy things.~CES. There must be artisans,
130 2, 2 | separated the universe into things major and minor, superior
131 2, 2(1)| delights which are perceived in things corporeal are vile; for
132 2, 2(1)| it proceeds to external things, and happier, the more it
133 2, 2(1)| the more it proceeds to things internal. -- ("Spiritual
134 2, 2 | the noble, the order of things would become perverted and
135 2, 2 | philosophers; to treat of natural things, and mix themselves with
136 2, 2 | themselves with and decide about things Divine r Who does not see
137 2, 2 | principles and substance of things, more anxious about the
138 2, 2 | found in the superficies of things rather than by the Truth,
139 2, 2 | but judge and censor of things which he had never studied.
140 2, 2 | and yet are occupied about things low and vain.~MAR.~Ride,
141 2, 2 | their time in light and vain things; for time flies with infinite
142 2, 2 | they rot, and in these things they place the anchor of
143 2, 2 | not suffice for necessary things, however carefully we use
144 2, 2 | consumed about superfluous things, and things vile and shameful.~
145 2, 2 | superfluous things, and things vile and shameful.~Is it
146 2, 2 | should. be intent upon things more worthy of being put
147 2, 2 | without hindrance to higher things.~CES. I am not wrong in
148 2, 2 | that holds the substance of things. Therefore he called Idea
149 2, 2 | the reason of corporeal things. Besides which it must be
150 2, 2 | the intelligence of those things which belong to the conservation
151 2, 2 | the wild woods of natural things, where there are many objects
152 2, 2 | and Being are found in all things. 1~Anaxagoras and Empedocles
153 2, 2 | all-producing divinity fills all things, and with them nothing was
154 2, 2 | considered that superior things were, by participation,
155 2, 2 | generation and mutation of things, which are called after
156 2, 2 | universe, nature, which is in things, light which is in the opacity
157 2, 2 | hunt for wild beasts and things less elevated, and the greater
158 2, 2 | kinds of sport, for special things, the hunter possesses himself
159 2, 2 | possesses himself of those things, absorbing them with the
160 2, 2 | dogs -- thoughts of Divine things -- -devour Actæon, making
161 2, 3 | does not belong to natural things, nor would it be so if the
162 2, 3 | to the condition of the things, over which it is diffused.
163 2, 3 | to contemplate superior things; so that it is in receptive
164 2, 3 | divinity is diffused into things, but that of things which
165 2, 3 | into things, but that of things which aspires to the divinity.~
166 2, 4 | the body and the soul to things more difficult and great,
167 2, 4(1)| the first principle of all things; this was the central doctrine
168 2, 4(1)| cosmogonists taught, all things had at first proceeded,
169 2, 4(1)| moisture is found in all living things, and that if it were absent
170 2, 4(1)| essence and principle of all things. -- ("Encyclopædia Metropolitiana.")~
171 2, 4 | rule of nature which orders things. So far, it is a thing most
172 2, 4 | be really blind in many things, and according to the common
173 2, 4 | hand, they abominate those things which are really good and
174 2, 4 | order to contemplate Divine things, the eyes must be opened
175 2, 4 | profound cognition of Divine things, is through negation and
176 2, 4 | and the true species of things,~or the substance of ideas,
177 2, 4 | being one, exalted above all things.~SEV. You say well; but
178 2, 4 | whence it happens that all things appear to them according
179 2, 5 | whoever had knowledge of human things, could easily comprehend
180 2, 5 | who fix their thoughts on things above."~Daughter and Mother
181 2, 5 | Show to the soul all lower things are null. ./. The fifth
182 2, 5 | Showing the soul all lower things are null,~Seasoning with
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