Book, Chapter
1 3, VIII | others. These are the major forms of iniquity that spring
2 4, XV | ranged through the corporeal forms, and I defined and distinguished
3 4, XV | went on imagining corporeal forms, and, since I was flesh
4 6, I | ideas, which resembled the forms with which my eyes are still
5 9, VIII | light and all colors and forms of bodies came in through
6 9, XXXIV| delight in fair and varied forms, and bright and pleasing
7 9, XXXIV| flits about me in manifold forms and soothes me even when
8 9, XXXIV| eye, copying the outward forms of the things they make;
9 9, XXXIV| because those beautiful forms which pass through the medium
10 11, VI | having countless and varied forms. Thus, I did not think about
11 11, VI | sorts of foul and horrible “forms”; but still they were “forms.”
12 11, VI | forms”; but still they were “forms.” And still I called it
13 11, VI | compared with more beautiful forms. Right reason, then, persuaded
14 11, VI | possibility of all those forms into which mutable things
15 11, VI | these visible and composite forms.464~
16 11, VIII | changes of things, while the forms, whose matter is the invisible
17 11, XVII | distinguished by qualities and forms, which have now been arranged
18 11, XXIX | materials precede in time the forms of the things which are
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