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 1    II,      1|    46.] . . . [owing to some cause or other] to cross its boundary
 2    II,      2|      this Fire, what was the cause that stirred it up also
 3    II,      2|       was that which was the Cause of all the causes? If it
 4    II,      2|      was God, then He is the cause of all confusion, He who
 5    II,      2|    say, [P. 56.] is the real cause of all beauty turns out
 6    II,      2|   beauty turns out to be the cause of all ugliness.~But whoever
 7    II,      2|      method and arranged the Cause to make the Evil cross the
 8    II,      3|     natural height; and what Cause, then, stirred him up, too,
 9    II,      3|    know not, whence did this cause spring?~For as regards these
10    II,      3|    something) concerning the Cause on which all the causes
11    II,      6|                   God is the cause of the Entities. ~[And if
12   III,      4|    must inquire what was the cause which made it spread, and
13   III,      4|    is clear that that is the cause of the trouble and war.
14   III,      5|      Mani as to the original cause of the Disturbance. ~[L.
15   III,      5|   Mani) said, 'There arose a cause by chance, and the Wind
16   III,      5|    us ask) whence sprang the cause, O Marcion, which first [
17   III,     17| Teaching says, how is it the cause of his torment, as the end
18   III,     18| takes pleasure, what was the cause of the negligence long ago (
19   III,     18|     therein? And what is the cause of its fierceness so that
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