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Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 Int | religious understanding.~In the space of some forty-four years,
2 3, VII | are limited by a certain space than in its infinity. It
3 6, III | everywhere and nowhere in space, and art not shaped by some
4 6, III | image and, see, he dwells in space, both head and feet.~
5 6, IV | the Creator of all, into space, which, however extended
6 6, I | be some kind of body in space, either infused into the
7 6, I | deprived of the dimensions of space appeared to me to be nothing,
8 6, I | if a body is taken out of space, or if space is emptied
9 6, I | taken out of space, or if space is emptied of all its contents (
10 6, I | yet it remains an empty space - a spacious nothing, as
11 6, I | stretched out through infinite space, interpenetrating the whole
12 6, I | other and fills a larger space. And this would make the
13 6, V | everywhere through measureless space nothing but an infinite
14 6, VII | no respite or breathing space. They thrust on my sight
15 6, X | brighter, and flood all space. It was not like that light,
16 6, X | is not diffused through space - neither finite nor infinite?”
17 6, XIV | extended through infinite space; and it thought this was
18 6, XV | are in thee not as in a space, but because thou holdest
19 6, XX | though not diffused in finite space or infinity; that thou truly
20 7, X | things concurring in the same space of time and all being equally
21 8, VII | could breathe as much as the space allows in this our straw
22 10, XV | has been cut down to the space of scarcely a single day.
23 10, XV(434) | means extension either in space or time.~
24 10, XXIV | to observe the point in space where and from which the
25 10, XXVI | that way we would measure space rather than time - but when
26 11, XXXII(504)| Augustine devotes more time and space to these opening verses
27 12, IX | understand this as a motion in space, as a body moves, then not
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