Book, Chapter
1 I, 5 | after the deluge, when the human race started as it were
2 I, 8 | the latter belongs to our human condition and is part of
3 I, 8 | condition and is part of human effort. I would that all
4 I, 17| kind of second root for the human race, must of course be
5 I, 18| concession of Moses to the human race, so too the eating
6 I, 18| At the beginning of the human race we neither ate flesh,
7 I, 36| what would become of the human race”? Like shall here beget
8 I, 36| this is not a property of human bodies, we must deny also
9 I, 41| that we read such things of human beings, when heathen error
10 I, 48| of Christ really long for human heirs? And shall he desire
11 II, 6 | treatise on Simples, that human dung is of service in a
12 II, 7 | Atticoti, a British tribe, eat human flesh, and that although
13 II, 10| pleasures of touch. But a human being cannot subsist without
14 II, 14| Alexander in that he conquered human nature. For Antisthenes
15 II, 15| to the beginning of the human race, that is, to the sphere
16 II, 23| another star covers the whole human race; but he introduces
17 II, 25| not examples of the whole human race, but of the careful
18 II, 29| For the essence of the human soul and the essence of
19 II, 29| He had been; nor did the human nature lose that which it
20 II, 31| and those of the whole human race, but the characters
|