Part, Chapter, §
1 Pref | wish to read a work of a great medieval Franciscan thinker.
2 Pref, Intro,Intro | the thinking of one of the great monastic orders of the West; ~
3 Pref, Intro,Intro | one does not have to be a great rationalist, an ~erudite
4 Pref, Intro,Intro | eloquent ~description of a great painting, but who had never
5 Pref, Intro,Intro | the natural world than its great ~rival, Thomism, did. Even
6 Pref, Intro,Intro | Duns Scotus, and their great friend and ~protector, Robert
7 MendicantVision, 1,15| is not illumined by such great splendor of created ~things
8 MendicantVision, 1,15| is not awakened by such great clamor is deaf; he ~who
9 MendicantVision, 1,15| First Principle from such great signs is foolish. Open your ~
10 MendicantVision, 1,15| Ps., 91, 5]. . . . ~How great are Thy works, O Lord; Thou
11 MendicantVision, 2,6 | however, is the same in the great and the small, ~and is not
12 MendicantVision, 3,4 | some resemblance to it. ~So great is the force of the highest
13 MendicantVision, 3,7 | illumined and suffused by such great radiance, unless they be
14 MendicantVision, 6,3 | Who in the face of such great marvels would not ~start
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