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1 Ana | to Whom Nature and the human soul bear witness (ch. 17),
2 IV | erred? it is I suppose of human origin, for it did not fall
3 V | divinity is weighed out at human caprice. Unless a god shall
4 V | inasmuch as he had some human feelings, he soon stopped
5 VII | disclosed, would at once provoke human punishment and for which
6 VIII | least stand by while this human being dies before it has
7 VIII | believe these things of a human being can also do them.
8 IX | own games they deluge with human blood. 'But,' you say, '
9 IX | is still forming into a human being. Prevention of birth
10 IX | formation. That also is a human being, which is about to
11 IX | loaded with as yet undigested human entrails. Flesh which has
12 IX | lust open their mouths to human bodies, because they devour
13 IX | consecrated to filth by human blood because they lick
14 IX | credit with a thirst for human blood the very people on
15 IX | much by their desire for human blood as by their refusal
16 IX | would never be in want of human blood at your trials and
17 IX | thus scattered may through human intercourse meet with members
18 XIV | wounded by an arrow shot by human hands, because she wished
19 XV | the same way dance over human blood, the stains resulting
20 XVII | to whom Nature and the human Soul bear witness. ~THE
21 XVII | may be estimated by the human senses: He is therefore
22 XVII(46) | Himself through nature and the human conscience, and in His more
23 XIX | world and the birth of the human race, and the subsequent
24 XXI | Illuminator and Guide of the human race; not born in any wise
25 XXI | accomplished, in the humility of a human lot; the second, which impends
26 XXVI | of states, under Whom the human race once existed without
27 XXVIII | render more reverence to a human lordship. With you, in fact,
28 XXXV | nature had only covered human breasts with some mirror-like
29 XXXVII | should be avenged by human fire 99, or should grieve
30 XXXVII | them the enemies of the human race. ~Now who else would
31 XXXVII | but of error, not of the human race. ~
32 XL | bottom with many thousands of human beings. Plato also mentions
33 XL | come upon themselves. The human race has ever deserved ill
34 XLV | be despised. But with you human sanction alone has introduced
35 XLV | introduced innocence, and merely human regulations enjoin it: therefore
36 XLV | what is the authority of human laws, when it can happen
37 XLVI(120) | superficial schemes based upon human expediency. Comp. ch. 45. ~
38 XLVII | did the restlessness of human perversity, despising faith,
39 XLVII | a nonentity as regards human affairs. The Stoics indeed 123
40 XLVIII | good for the re-entrance of human souls into bodies did not
41 XLVIII | they were before, namely, human, and clothed with the same
42 XLVIII(126)| Tertullian first shews that a human soul must return into a
43 XLVIII(126)| soul must return into a human (not an animal) body; and
44 XLVIII | shall be restored the whole human race for the adjusting of
45 L | glory, licensed, because of human origin; which is attributed
46 L | antagonism between divine and human things, when we are condemned
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