Book, Chapter
1 3, VII | breadth, whose being has no mass - for every mass is less
2 3, VII | has no mass - for every mass is less in a part than in
3 3, VII | and if it be an infinite mass it must be less in such
4 5, X | one: where the extended mass of evil stood opposed to
5 5, X | our salvation out of the mass of thy bright shining substance.
6 6, I | interpenetrating the whole mass of the world, reaching out
7 6, V | thy creation as one vast mass, composed of various kinds
8 6, V | were like. I pictured this mass as vast - of course not
9 6, V | imagined as environing the mass on every side and penetrating
10 9, VI | beholds335 them. “They are a mass, less in part than the whole.”
11 9, VI | since you animate the whole mass of your body, giving it
12 9, X | says, “If it had no bodily mass, I did not touch it, and
13 11, XX | God made the universal mass of this corporeal world,
14 11, XX | them both in the mighty mass of this world.”489 Another
15 11, XXI | namely, the entire corporeal mass of the world, divided into
16 11, XXVI | we all come from the same mass,498 and what is man that
17 12, IX | are propelled by their own mass; they seek their own places.
18 12, IX | They are moved by their own mass; they seek their own places.
19 12, XXXII| from which the universal mass of the world or the universal
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