Part, Chapter, §
1 MindRoad,Prologue,5 | than the ~erudition of the intellect. That such may come about,
2 MendicantVision, 1,6| sense, imagination, reason, intellect, intelligence, and ~the
3 MendicantVision, 2,9| rules of the apprehending intellect - are ~indelibly stored
4 MendicantVision, 2,9| unquestionable rules of the judging intellect. And this is so because, ~
5 MendicantVision, 3,3| 3~The operation of the intellect is concerned with the meaning
6 MendicantVision, 3,3| propositions, and inferences. The intellect however, understands the ~
7 MendicantVision, 3,3| some positive sense, our intellect cannot reach the point ~
8 MendicantVision, 3,3| purity. For how would the intellect know that a ~being is defective
9 MendicantVision, 3,3| aforesaid conditions.~ ~ ~The intellect is said to comprehend truly
10 MendicantVision, 3,3| God [John, 1, 1].~ ~ ~Our intellect perceives truly the meaning
11 MendicantVision, 3,3| it ~is obvious that our intellect is conjoined with that eternal
12 MendicantVision, 3,5| leaps into the eye of the intellect, which is nothing other
13 MendicantVision, 5,3| Being, it cannot enter the intellect except ~through Being; Being,
14 MendicantVision, 5,3| is what first enters the ~intellect, and that Being is pure
15 MendicantVision, 5,4| is the blindness of the intellect which does not consider ~
16 MendicantVision, 5,6| cannot be thought of ~by an intellect as opposed to these, and
17 MendicantVision, 7 | WHICH REPOSE IS GIVEN TO THE INTELLECT ~WHEN THE AFFECTIONS PASS
18 MendicantVision, 7,1| the insight of the human intellect, there remains that ~by
19 MendicantVision, 7,6| instruction; desire, not intellect; the cry of prayer, not
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