History of Modern Philosophy |
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Page xii
... Reality , and Truthfulness of God CHAPTER V. THE ORIGIN OF ERROR . — UNDERSTANDING AND WILL . -HUMAN FREEDOM · I. ERROR AS THE FAULT OF THE WILL . 1. The Fact of Error . 2. Will and Understanding 3. Blameworthy Ignorance . • • · 354 356 ...
... Reality , and Truthfulness of God CHAPTER V. THE ORIGIN OF ERROR . — UNDERSTANDING AND WILL . -HUMAN FREEDOM · I. ERROR AS THE FAULT OF THE WILL . 1. The Fact of Error . 2. Will and Understanding 3. Blameworthy Ignorance . • • · 354 356 ...
Page 40
... reality , some- thing universal and inanimate ; and so under this conception the desire of salvation was without expectation and without hope . The Jewish desire for salvation , on the other hand , was filled with a definite expectation ...
... reality , some- thing universal and inanimate ; and so under this conception the desire of salvation was without expectation and without hope . The Jewish desire for salvation , on the other hand , was filled with a definite expectation ...
Page 45
... reality of Jesus was accepted as an axiom of incontestable truth . - In a short time , the Church became a living and indestruc- tible power . Its influence increased in spite of the persecu tions of Rome , and because of them . In the ...
... reality of Jesus was accepted as an axiom of incontestable truth . - In a short time , the Church became a living and indestruc- tible power . Its influence increased in spite of the persecu tions of Rome , and because of them . In the ...
Page 47
... is maintained at the expense of his historical and human reality : on the other , reversely , his creatural nature is maintained at the expense of his divine . There , the Gnostic - Docetic CHRISTIANITY AND THE CHURCH .
... is maintained at the expense of his historical and human reality : on the other , reversely , his creatural nature is maintained at the expense of his divine . There , the Gnostic - Docetic CHRISTIANITY AND THE CHURCH .
Page 65
... reality of God and theanthropism were not subjects of inquiry or of doubt , as if they were first to be established : they were incontestable certainties . The question was only as to the arguments for demonstrating them . And the ...
... reality of God and theanthropism were not subjects of inquiry or of doubt , as if they were first to be established : they were incontestable certainties . The question was only as to the arguments for demonstrating them . And the ...
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according acquainted activity affirm animals appears Aristotelian Aristotle attacked Augustinianism authority body cartes Cartesian cause certainty Chanut Christian Church clear and distinct completely conceived conception consciousness consists controversy culture declared dependent Descartes desire divine doctrine doubt dualism earth ecclesiastical Egmond error essay Euvres existence explained faith false follows France freedom French fundamental Galileo Gröningen human idea independent Jesuits knowledge Leibnitz letter Leyden live mathematics matter means Méd Meditations merely Mersenne metaphysics method Middle Ages mind mode of thought modern philosophy motion nature Neo-Platonism Netherlands object ontological argument opposition origin Paris passions perfect planets Platonic principle problem Protestantism Ptolemaic system published queen question reality reason Reformation regarded Regius relation religious Renaissance René Descartes Rosicrucians salvation scepticism scholasticism sense sought soul Spinoza spirit substance Sweden theology theory things tion true truth union universe Utrecht Voëtius wished writings wrote