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Part, Chapter, § grey = Comment text
1 MendicantVision, 2,1 | minds through the bodily senses.~ ~ ~
2 MendicantVision, 2,2 | through the doors of ~the five senses, according to the apprehension,
3 MendicantVision, 2,3 | a "microcosm," has five senses like five ~doors, through
4 MendicantVision, 2,3 | by the three intermediate senses the intermediates, as by
5 MendicantVision, 2,3 | when through these five senses we ~apprehend the motion
6 MendicantVision, 2,4 | through the five doors of ~the senses. They enter, I say, not
7 MendicantVision, 2,5 | the recipient, since the senses are pained by extremes and
8 MendicantVision, 2,5(2)| a whole person has five senses, he touches as a whole,
9 MendicantVision, 2,5(2)| exercises all his other senses as a whole. But we can speak
10 MendicantVision, 2,6 | through ~the doors of the senses by the three aforesaid operations.~ ~ ~
11 MendicantVision, 2,9 | enter into it through the senses.~ ~ ~
12 MendicantVision, 2,10 | these and received ~into our senses, and these he calls "heard."
13 MendicantVision, 2,10 | in the pleasures of the senses which arise from ~attending
14 MendicantVision, 3,2 | through the doors of the senses and the images of sensible ~
15 MendicantVision, 4,3 | taste and touch. When these senses are recovered, when he sees
16 MendicantVision, 4,3 | this level, when the inner senses are renewed in order to ~
17 MendicantVision, 4,4 | delights of the spiritual senses and ecstatic elevation,
18 MendicantVision, 4,6 | virtues and the spiritual senses reformed ~and the three
19 MendicantVision, 4,7 | granted, by the spiritual senses, and ~by mental elevation,
20 MendicantVision, 7,5 | strengthened ~feet abandon thy senses and intellectual operations,
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