I've recently been reading Joseph Fux's Gradus Ad Parnassum and have some encountered some confusion with modes and hexachords in first species counterpoint. The cantus firmus supplied is in E Phygian (no sharps or flats, beginning and ending on E). In the example given (which can be found below), a B against G is marked incorrect for the following reason:

When I look at the hexachords I see that G is sol, re, ut and B is mi. I don't understand how this is mi against fa, could anyone further explain this?mi against fa
is the devil of musica
This mi against fa you have written in the progression from the sixth to seventh bar by a skip of an augmented fourth or tritone which is hard to sing and sounds bad, for which reason it is forbidden in strict counterpoint.
Thanks.