Part, Chapter, § 
 1 MendicantVision,       1,2 |    ought next to enter into our minds, which are the eternal image ~
 2 MendicantVision,       2,1 | creatures which enter into ~our minds through the bodily senses.~ ~ ~
 3 MendicantVision,       2,8 |  imagination, but ~entering our minds through the truth of apprehension.
 4 MendicantVision,       2,10|       necessarily transcend our minds ~because they are infallible
 5 MendicantVision,       2,10|     there are ~imprinted on our minds the "artificial" numbers
 6 MendicantVision,       2,11|        before our yet untrained minds, limited to sensible ~things,
 7 MendicantVision,       3,1 |    ourselves, that is, into our minds in which the divine ~image
 8 MendicantVision,       3,1 |     truth is shining before our minds as in a candelabrum, ~for
 9 MendicantVision,       3,4 |     that law is higher than our minds, and through this higher
10 MendicantVision,       3,7 |        the eternal law into our minds. And thus our minds, ~illumined
11 MendicantVision,       3,7 |         our minds. And thus our minds, ~illumined and suffused
12 MendicantVision,       4,1 |      that God is so near to our minds, that there are so few who
13 MendicantVision,       4,4 |    contemplation of ~Him in the minds in which He dwells through
14 MendicantVision,       4,7 |         and perfection of human minds through the hierarchical
15 MendicantVision,       4,7 |     found to be ordered in our ~minds in the likeness of the heavenly
16 MendicantVision,       5,1 |      which has ~signed upon our minds the light of eternal Truth,
 
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