St. Augustine, Aspects of His Life and ThoughtHodder and Stoughton, 1914 - 255 páginas |
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Página 18
... goes into the full - charged phrase , quidquid aspiciebam mors erat " ( " the face of death looked out at me from all things " ) . There is another passage of which we best appreciate the force when we see how Shakespeare has expanded ...
... goes into the full - charged phrase , quidquid aspiciebam mors erat " ( " the face of death looked out at me from all things " ) . There is another passage of which we best appreciate the force when we see how Shakespeare has expanded ...
Página 22
... goes any distance in explaining his greatness in this direction ; we have here to do with the incalculable element of genius . It is possible that it may seem to some readers a paradox to distinguish thus sharply between metaphysical ...
... goes any distance in explaining his greatness in this direction ; we have here to do with the incalculable element of genius . It is possible that it may seem to some readers a paradox to distinguish thus sharply between metaphysical ...
Página 45
... goes on , saw the difficulty in which he was placed , but forced himself to say : " He is indeed also called God , but it is the Father who is properly called God . " Here I interposed ( says Augustine ) saying , " Stop ! You must not ...
... goes on , saw the difficulty in which he was placed , but forced himself to say : " He is indeed also called God , but it is the Father who is properly called God . " Here I interposed ( says Augustine ) saying , " Stop ! You must not ...
Página 47
... goes on to say that the sacred Scriptures teach us to avoid and despise , not all philosophies , but only " the philosophers of this world " ( with allusion to Col. ii . 8 ) Whoever teaches us that all philosophy is to be shunned ...
... goes on to say that the sacred Scriptures teach us to avoid and despise , not all philosophies , but only " the philosophers of this world " ( with allusion to Col. ii . 8 ) Whoever teaches us that all philosophy is to be shunned ...
Página 55
... goes on right down into the period immediately pre- ceding his conversion . That period was marked , not by an advance but by a grave moral lapse . In fact , the ugliest blot upon his life falls here . It must be referred to , because ...
... goes on right down into the period immediately pre- ceding his conversion . That period was marked , not by an advance but by a grave moral lapse . In fact , the ugliest blot upon his life falls here . It must be referred to , because ...
Outras edições - Ver todos
St. Augustine: Aspects of His Life and Thought (Classic Reprint) W. Montgomery Prévia não disponível - 2015 |
St. Augustine: Aspects of His Life and Thought (Classic Reprint) W. Montgomery Prévia não disponível - 2017 |
Termos e frases comuns
Alypius Anim appear argument Augustine Augustine's believe bishop body called Carthage Cassiciacum character Christ Christian Church Circumcelliones Civitate comes command Conf Confessions connexion course crowd psychology demonic possession Descartes Dialogues difficulty Divine doctrine Donatist doubt evil example experience fact feeling give goes Hippo Regius human illustration images inner intellectual interesting Jerome Julian of Eclanum kind letter Licentius Manichaean Manichaeism means memory memory-image ment mental metaphor mind modern nature Neo-Platonic Neo-Platonists object observed passage Pauline Epistles Pelagian perhaps philosophy philosophy of history Plotinus preacher presbyter present principle psycho psychology question quoted reason recall recognise reference regard remarks remember says Augustine Scripture seems sense impressions Septuagint Serm sermon soul speak Spirit style suggested Tagaste tells theory things Thou thought tion touch Trin Trinity truth Trygetius turn whole wholly word writes