bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Not,       1| perceiving mind and the things perceived followed from old physical
 2     Not,       2|    know things not immediately perceived by sense. In D.F. III. 33
 3     Not,       2|      175). Now no sensation is perceived alone; the percipient subject
 4     Not,       2|        partly capable of being perceived, partly not capable, (2)
 5     Not,       2|        into those which can be perceived (known with certainty) and
 6     Not,       2|    into those capable of being perceived and those not so capable,
 7     Not,       2|        into those which can be perceived and those which cannot.
 8     Not,       2|    recollection only of things perceived and known." The dogmatist
 9     Not,       2|    difference being infallibly perceived by human sense, that the
10     Not,       2|   admit that all things can be perceived no more and no less clearly
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