Book, Chapter
1 Int | materialism” and taught him how to think of spiritual and immaterial
2 Int, 1 | when read. What some people think of them is their own affair [
3 2, III | the future, she did not think they should be restrained
4 4, XIII | books - two or three, I think - On the Beautiful and the
5 4, XV | yet I chose rather to think thee mutable than to think
6 4, XV | think thee mutable than to think that I was not as thou art.
7 5, VI | in rhetoric; nor could I think the man’s soul necessarily
8 5, VIII | law never will allow. They think that they act thus with
9 5, X | I did not know what to think of but a huge extended body -
10 5, X | finite - than if I should think that thou couldst be confined
11 6, IV | when they actually did not think in that way. And I listened
12 6, I | because I was unable to think of anything else; yet it
13 6, II | mind and tongue, when they think and speak such things about
14 6, V | large as I could possibly think, still only finite on every
15 6, VII | masses, and when I tried to think, the images of bodies obtruded
16 6, XIX | in Christ, and he did not think that a human mind was ascribed
17 7, XI | kept saying to me, “Do you think you can live without them?”~
18 7, XII | began most earnestly to think whether it was usual for
19 7, XII | feet, for I could not but think that this was a divine command
20 7, XII | above all that we ask or think.”266 For she saw that thou
21 8, IV | heard, lest they should think that I was speaking it just
22 8, IX | read to them, they should think of them as instruments by
23 9, X | never have been able to think of them at all?~
24 9, XIX | For example, if we see or think of some man we know, and,
25 9, XXII | thee - far be it from me to think I am happy because of any
26 9, XXII | no other. But those who think there is another follow
27 9, XXX | more than we can ask or think,”349 to bring it about that
28 9, XLIII| greater. Otherwise, we might think that thy word was removed
29 10, XVIII| know: that we generally think ahead about our future actions,
30 11, VI | varied forms. Thus, I did not think about it rightly. My mind
31 11, XXVII| or hear these words,500 think that God, like some sort
32 11, XXVII| and it was done,” they think of words begun and ended,
33 11, XXVII| what was commanded. They think of other things of the same
34 11, XXXI | he meant what I do,” I think that I speak more faithfully
35 12, XI | one of these, let him not think that he has thereby discovered
36 12, XXXI | therefore, one thing to think like the men who judge something
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