Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| illusory the judgment of the senses may be; and the first doubt
2 1, Int| it presents itself to the senses and to the~comprehension:
3 1, 2 | through this rebellion of the senses, which urge him thither
4 1, 3 | intention, sharpen their senses, and in the sulphur of the
5 1, 3 | most acute and penetrative senses; whence it follows that
6 1, 3 | appear superficially to the senses.~TANS. Even so; because
7 1, 3 | excellence, by virtue of the senses, but such as may~be formed
8 1, 4 | within the knowledge of the, senses nor of the intellect? How,
9 1, 4 | intelligently; the power of the senses will inform itself of all
10 1, 4 | beautiful in the world of the senses. Hence it follows that not
11 1, 4 | enthusiasms, of loves, and of senses, not only in the scale of
12 2, 1 | nothing that comes within the senses that satisfies me so much, --
13 2, 1 | predominates, and solicits the senses with greater force.~III.~
14 2, 1 | fellow tranquillize the senses, assuage the woes of the
15 2, 1 | most spiritual of all the senses, and which reaches swiftly
16 2, 2 | knots of perturbation of the~senses, free from the fleshly prison
17 2, 2 | according to the different senses, as through various cracks,
18 2, 3 | different intellects and senses, and they made lament of
19 2, 3 | suppose~It is not as the senses show it?~It asks, what power
20 2, 3 | the eyes that which the senses deny? But the eyes in the
21 2, 4 | fastened on my soul,~And of my senses, torn the chief away,~Leaving
22 2, 4 | falls down and dulls the senses~Of the joyless folk to every
23 2, 4 | to reason by means of the senses, proceed to the knowledge
24 2, 4 | sensible has corrupted the senses. Thus it would happen to
25 2, 4 | life and in consequence his senses. As he who looks aloft sometimes
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