Chapter

 1      I|        as if it either had no existence at all, or possessed a nature
 2    III|  which God differs, lose what existence they had whilst they are
 3    III|        when changed, lose the existence they had before; whose equal,
 4     IV|       whatever exists has its existence. [4] Either take away nativity,
 5     VI|        But that which has not existence when it comes into existence,
 6     VI|  existence when it comes into existence, is made out of nothing.
 7    VII|     possibly not have been in existence. We have all been born,
 8    VII|       one does not deny their existence, but censures their faults. [
 9   VIII|  fault, nor has it indeed any existence except through fault. [410     XI|     until the thing came into existence to which it was unknown,
11     XI|       invisible? But even its existence is an impossibility, unless
12     XI|  which is instrumental to its existence. Since, however, it exists,
13     XI|      which exists is a bodily existence sui generis. Nothing lacks
14     XI| generis. Nothing lacks bodily existence but that which is non-existent.
15    XIX|     in order to point out the existence of that mysterious seed
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