Book, Chapter, Paragraph

1  II,    VI,  6|   without offence, the metal iron is capable of cold and heat.
2  II,    VI,  6|    heat. If, then, a mass of iron be kept constantly in the
3  II,    VI,  6|     being continuous and the iron never removed from it, it
4  II,    VI,  6| which is by nature a mass of iron, that when placed in the
5  II,    VI,  6| experience the action not of iron, but of fire. In this way,
6  II,    VI,  6|     that soul which, like an iron in the fire, has been perpetually
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