Book, Chapter, Paragraph

 1   I,   III,  7|   good and bad, to just and unjust, by so doing give a preference
 2  II,    IV,  1| rain on the just and on the unjust," most evidently suggests
 3  II,     V,  2|  Nay, what else is there so unjust charged by them against
 4  II,     V,  3|   good, so neither will the unjust man be wicked; and again,
 5  II,     V,  3| wicked man also will not be unjust. But who does not see the
 6  II,     V,  3|   is none who can be called unjust, as there is a Satan who
 7  II,     V,  3|  that a bad man is not also unjust, and an unjust man wicked.
 8  II,     V,  3|     not also unjust, and an unjust man wicked. And if these
 9  II,     V,  4| should without any doubt be unjust, and impure, and unholy,
10  II,    IX,  6|   will neither appear to be unjust in distributing (for the
11  II,    IX,  8|  bad, and the just from the unjust, and all by the sentence
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