Book
1 1 | satisfied with a~superficial understanding of a book; nor hastily to
2 3 | quite~uncertain whether the understanding will still continue sufficient
3 3 | conception~of things and the understanding of them cease first.~ We
4 3 | principles~ready for the understanding of things divine and human,
5 4 | faculty of comprehension or understanding.~ Everything harmonizes
6 4 | who~shuts the eyes of the understanding; he is poor, who has need
7 5 | depend on the faculty of understanding and knowledge?~ Things are
8 5 | And this is every man's understanding and reason.~ Art thou angry
9 6 | differences.~But to the understanding those things only are indifferent,
10 6 | sensations; but he who has~understanding, considers his own acts
11 7 | thing signified.~ Is my understanding sufficient for this or not?
12 7 | to what is said. Let thy understanding enter~into the things that
13 7 | intolerable, nor allowing his understanding to~sympathize with the affects
14 8 | indeed according to thy own~understanding too.~ If a thing is in thy
15 8 | which are proper to the understanding no other man is used~to
16 8 | out-pouring and diffusion of the understanding, and it should~in no way
17 9 | For the destruction of the understanding is a~pestilence, much more
18 9 | present opinion founded on understanding, and thy present~conduct
19 10| using it? Is it void of~understanding? Is it loosed and rent asunder
20 10| accordingly the healthy understanding~ought to be prepared for
21 11| years old, if he has any understanding at all, has seen by~virtue
22 12| thyself, that is, from thy understanding, whatever others do or say,~
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