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1 1, Int | while the mind may grasp Nature in her grandeur and majesty,
2 1, Int | doubtful, and the precise, nature of his employment when there
3 1, Int | taught that everything in Nature has a soul, one universal
4 1, Int | all, that which exalts our nature, is Thought. By means of
5 1, Int | and the contemplation of Nature alone can give, this is
6 1, Int | figures and symbols drawn from Nature, how the divine light is
7 1, Int | be found in the study of Nature, that the laws of the visible
8 1, Int | science. and humanity with Nature and with God.~Bruno returned
9 1, Int | lands.~"By what condition, nature, or fell chance,~In living
10 1, 2 | 10.~By what condition, nature, or fell chance,~In living
11 1, 2 | the thing recedes from its nature, the perfection of which
12 1, 2 | those who are of a barbarous nature, who neither do nor can
13 1, 2 | vile, loose, and ignoble nature, although hid under an excellent
14 1, 3 | generation, as instruments of nature in a certain way, have for
15 1, 3 | his utmost, for the heroic nature is content and shows its
16 1, 3 | himself who would unite with a nature of a contrary kind.~CIC.
17 1, 3 | do change we to a god.~In Nature is one revolution and one
18 1, 3 | to-wards, tae comprehension of Nature, but also by the, necessity
19 1, 3 | appertains to that particular nature; not in so far as it appertains
20 1, 3 | appertains to the universal nature, where nothing happens without
21 1, 3 | TANS. Necessity, fate, nature, counsel, will, those things,
22 1, 4 | transform him into that nature towards which he aspires,
23 1, 4 | contracted into being this nature, this species, this form,
24 1, 4 | disagreement with the inferior nature,~are sent to recall the
25 1, 4 | each thing serves its own nature. Therefore lot the sense
26 1, 4 | they will. This is a law of Nature, and therefore a law of
27 1, 4 | author and originator of Nature. Sin on then, now that all
28 1, 4 | It is a law of fate and Nature that everything should adapt
29 1, 4 | hopes of others? Ought not Nature to refuse to give you the
30 1, 4 | which is in the horizon of Nature, is corporeal and incorporeal,
31 1, 4 | not only in the scale of Nature according to the orders
32 1, 4 | degrees as the scale of Nature; for man, in all his powers,
33 1, 4 | number of sages believe that Nature delights in this changeful
34 1, 5 | to all the accidents of Nature and of fortune, who at the
35 1, 5 | other sort of thing that Nature produces.~TANS. Magicians
36 1, 5 | which by fate, by will, by nature I incline.~Here, in the
37 1, 5 | yourself, it means that the nature of the comprehension of
38 1, 5 | its human condition and nature that it Ends itself so wretched,
39 1, 5 | light nor any necessity of nature which forces me to a less
40 1, 5 | themselves, nor by their own nature, but by reflection from
41 1, 5 | being a divine thing, and by nature, not a servant but the mistress
42 1, 5 | Truly, as are the degrees of Nature and of the essences, so
43 1, 5 | satisfy the condition of his nature.~CIC. How can our finite
44 1, 5 | human intellect is finite in nature and in act, how can it have
45 2, 1 | intellect, and the law of nature? It is right, then, that
46 2, 1 | myself: for I am certain~that nature, which has placed this beauty
47 2, 1 | the skill and~ ./. art of nature works, so that one is wasted
48 2, 1(1)| experience -- not until the whole nature has yielded and become subject
49 2, 1 | as sure and as blythe as Nature herself could make it. "
50 2, 1 | subject to the divinity and to nature. Thus will he become strong
51 2, 1 | kinds are the principles of nature settled and defined, in
52 2, 1 | the imbecility of human nature (ingegno) which, intent
53 2, 2 | squares with the intellectual nature but the intellectual, as
54 2, 2 | fecund spirit, oh, fine nature, oh, divine intelligence,
55 2, 2 | through the power either of nature or of art. Yon know, besides,
56 2, 2 | progress was from the lowest of nature to the highest, as from
57 2, 2 | sects, seek the truth of nature in all her specific natural
58 2, 2 | the world, the universe, nature, which is in things, light
59 2, 2 | disposition of the body of nature, and led by those~ ./. two
60 2, 2 | proceeds this monad which is nature, the universe, the world,
61 2, 2(2)| perfect, because Divine, nature is, so to say, mixed with,
62 2, 2(2)| plane of differentiated Nature. -- ("The Secret Doctrine.")~
63 2, 2 | which is comprehensible nature, in which burns the sun
64 2, 2 | splendour of the higher nature, according to which, unity
65 2, 2 | obtained by an inferior nature, and therefore is not worthy
66 2, 3 | sevenfold course unto the sea.~Nature hath given two lights~To
67 2, 3 | encroaches not upon another.~Nature wills not that all should
68 2, 3 | twofold course unto the sea,~Nature abhors the covered ground. 1~
69 2, 3 | intellect is derived as to its nature and acts. Therefore, the
70 2, 3(1)| muse of every phenomenon in Nature. -- ("The Secret Doctrine.")
71 2, 3 | effects and in the~inferior nature. I do not say that which
72 2, 4 | notwithstanding that he is blind by nature, yet he laments, saying
73 2, 4 | cannot persuade himself that nature has been less courteous
74 2, 4 | contempt and persecution of nature. He says then:~63.~The first
75 2, 4 | lamentation.~Who will deny that nature upon me~Has frowned more
76 2, 4 | in fact the same rule of nature which orders things. So
77 2, 4 | sweet according to common nature; but it is most worthy,
78 2, 4 | of the condition of its nature and being. How can immobility,
79 2, 5 | incantations, would be able to curb nature. I should believe that she,
80 2, 5 | the work of man, nor of nature; the form and manner of
81 2, 5 | pierced~Not for a fault by nature caused,~But through a cruel
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