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Chapter 1. That the body of man is mortal, but not the mind; and that the body of the animal is an organ of the Soul. 63.
Chapter 2. What the composition of the human body is, and for what reason. 64.
Chapter 3. That the human Soul does not have any innate skill, nor is corporeal form connatural to it. 64.
Chapter 4. That the human Soul does not need a corporeal organ because it is simple, and for that reason, incorruptible. 65.
Chapter 5. That the Soul becomes immortal from the infinite power of learning, because it does not have innate knowledge. 65.
Chapter 6. That the Mind is simple and absolute, and for that reason, immortal; and that the simple is twofold. 66.
Chapter 7. Solution of two objections. 67.
Chapter 8. That the Mind undoubtedly understands God and itself, and other insensible forms without a corporeal organ; and that it even abstracts sensible forms through the intellect without that same organ. 67.
Chapter 9. Epilogue of the aforementioned, and that some things are material, others immaterial, and these [immaterial things] are furthermore twofold. 68.
Chapter 10. That the Mind is not corporeal by reason of intellection. 69.
Chapter 11. That the rational Soul is not a body, either simply or [even] of the most subtle [kind]. 69.
Chapter 12. How simple and mixed bodies are all ensouled. 70.
Chapter 13. That the Soul is not a body, because every such thing is composed of matter and form, but that it is its form, and other [things] concerning its reasons. 70.
Chapter 14. That the Soul is not a figure or a complexion of the body. 71.
Chapter 15. That the Soul is not a likeness expressed from matter, because it is again not a body. 72.