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1 Int | mirror of the heart and mind of the Christian community
2 Int | and moved his heart and mind. It was in Scripture that,
3 Int, 1 | introduction to the heart and mind of this great Christian
4 1, VII | body and not in the infant mind. I have myself observed
5 1, VIII | stored in my memory by the mind which thou, O my God, hadst
6 1, IX | for my age. However, my mind was absorbed only in play,
7 1, XIII | power that links together my mind with my inmost thoughts?
8 2, II | moderate way of the love of mind to mind - the bright path
9 2, II | way of the love of mind to mind - the bright path of friendship.
10 2, III | chastity, she did not bear in mind what her husband had told
11 2, VI | wisdom, nor such as is in the mind, memory senses, and the
12 2, VIII | it that has prompted my mind to inquire about it, to
13 2, IX | itself to their sense or mind. Yet alone I would not have
14 3, V | therefore, to direct my mind to the Holy Scriptures,
15 3, VI | theirs which deceive the mind through the eye. And yet
16 3, VI | can turn into food for the mind, for though I sang about “
17 3, VI | the understanding of the mind, by means of which thou
18 3, VII | objects, and the sight of my mind reached no farther than
19 3, VIII | his soul, and with all his mind; and his neighbor as himself?74
20 3, IX | frequently the deed itself, the mind of the doer, and the hidden
21 3, IX(78) | Augustine doubtless had in mind is God's command to Abraham
22 4, III | continued, “if out of the human mind, by some higher instinct
23 4, IV | he had received when his mind and senses were inactive,
24 4, VIII | does strange things in the mind. Lo, time came and went
25 4, VIII | and going it brought to my mind other ideas and remembrances,
26 4, VIII | that took strong hold of my mind: to discourse and jest with
27 4, XIII | this idea sprang up in my mind out of my inmost heart,
28 4, XV | great wonders.”107 And so my mind ranged through the corporeal
29 4, XV | attention to the nature of the mind, but the false opinions
30 4, XV | not perceive these with my mind, I concluded that I could
31 4, XV | I could not perceive my mind. And since I loved the peace
32 5, III | planets.~4. For it is by the mind and the intelligence which
33 5, V | have remained a doubt in my mind whether the theories were
34 5, VI | listened with unsettled mind to the Manichean teaching
35 5, VII | modesty of an ingenious mind is a finer thing than the
36 5, VII | suitable to his bent of mind. But all my endeavors to
37 5, X | followed after.~For when my mind tried to turn back to the
38 5, X | thus far, no conception of mind, except as a subtle body
39 5, XIV | there also came into my mind the ideas which I ignored;
40 5, XIV | now I earnestly bent my mind to require if there was
41 5, XIV | and been cast out of my mind. But I could not. Still,
42 6, III | thou wouldst help me. My mind was wholly intent on knowledge
43 6, III | with necessary food or his mind with reading. ~Now, as he
44 6, III | for the recruiting of his mind, free from the clamor of
45 6, VII | from ruining his excellent mind in his blind and headstrong
46 6, VII | cauterize and cure the hopeful mind thus languishing. Let him
47 6, VII | pleasures. And he roused his mind with a resolve to moderation.
48 6, VIII | cannot force me to give my mind or lend my eyes to these
49 6, VIII | eyes closed and forbade his mind to roam abroad after such
50 6, X | prevailed, and he changed his mind for the better, thinking
51 6, XI | recreation and relax my mind from the strain of work?~
52 6, I | swarmed around the eyes of my mind. But behold they were scarcely
53 6, I(177) | to no reality outside the mind.~
54 6, I | nothing. For at that time my mind dwelt only with ideas, which
55 6, II | without dreadful sacrilege of mind and tongue, when they think
56 6, III | the search with a quiet mind, now in a confident feeling
57 6, III | trying to draw the eye of my mind up out of that pit, I was
58 6, V | of right doctrine, but my mind did not utterly lose it,
59 6, VI | came into my irresolute mind, although I did add that
60 6, VII | immovably settled in my mind, I eagerly inquired, “Whence
61 6, VIII | darkened eyesight of my mind was from day to day made
62 6, IX | there. But I did not set my mind on the idols of Egypt which
63 6, X | of my soul and above my mind the Immutable Light. It
64 6, X | whatever. Nor was it above my mind in the same way as oil is
65 6, XVII | dwelling weighs down the mind, which muses upon many things.211
66 6, XVII | truth above my changeable mind.~And thus by degrees I was
67 6, XVII | this it follows that the mind somehow knew the unchangeable,
68 6, XIX | properties of a soul and mind subject to change. And if
69 6, XIX | did not think that a human mind was ascribed to him.218
70 6, XXI | wars against the law of his mind, and brings him into captivity
71 7, I | thou didst put it into my mind, and it seemed good in my
72 7, V | warred against the law of my mind and brought me into captivity
73 7, V | tyranny of habit, by which the mind is drawn and held, even
74 7, VI | avoided all distractions of mind, and reserved as many hours
75 7, VI | world dropped away from his mind, as soon became plain to
76 7, VIII | dwelling, agitated both in mind and countenance, I seized
77 7, VIII | limbs at the order of my mind than my soul obeyed itself
78 7, IX | And why should it be? The mind commands the body, and the
79 7, IX | and the body obeys. The mind commands itself and is resisted.
80 7, IX | itself and is resisted. The mind commands the hand to be
81 7, IX | obedience in act. Yet the mind is mind, and the hand is
82 7, IX | in act. Yet the mind is mind, and the hand is body. The
83 7, IX | and the hand is body. The mind commands the mind to will,
84 7, IX | body. The mind commands the mind to will, and yet though
85 7, IX | actually an infirmity of mind, which cannot wholly rise,
86 7, X | the presence of another mind, but the punishment of my
87 7, X | do at one time. For the mind is pulled four ways by four
88 7, X | different wills distract the mind when a man is trying to
89 8, IV | 12. When shall I call to mind all that happened during
90 8, VI | even now I recall him to mind with a sense of security,
91 8, VII | And also from this the mind of that angry woman, though
92 8, VIII | Lord, who makest men of one mind to dwell in a single house,
93 8, VIII | will not omit anything my mind has brought back concerning
94 8, XI | so little is the human mind capable of grasping things
95 8, XII | the strong behest of my mind my eyes sucked back the
96 8, XII | day, and with a troubled mind entreated thee, as I could,
97 8, XII | of all habit, even on a mind which now no longer feeds
98 8, XII | washes anxiety from the mind. Now see, this also I confess
99 8, XII | verses of Ambrose came to my mind, for thou art truly,~ ~ “
100 9, III | neither extend eye nor ear nor mind. They desire as those willing
101 9, VI(333) | the relation of body and mind. Cf. On Music, VI, 5:10;
102 9, VII | diversity of which I, the single mind, act. I will soar also beyond
103 9, VIII | in that vast recess of my mind, with its full store of
104 9, VIII | Yet it is a power of my mind, and it belongs to my nature.
105 9, VIII | all that I am. Thus the mind is far too narrow to contain
106 9, VIII | can it be, then, that the mind cannot grasp itself? A great
107 9, IX | it were still sounding in mind while it did so no longer
108 9, X | them at all except by my mind. And what I have stored
109 9, X | credit of another man’s mind, but I recognized them in
110 9, X | true, took them into my mind and laid them up, so to
111 9, XI | present themselves to the mind which is now familiar with
112 9, XI | make frequently]. But the mind has properly laid claim
113 9, XI | gathered together in the mind, is properly said to be “
114 9, XIII | that if afterward I call to mind that I once was able to
115 9, XIV | contains the feelings of my mind; not in the manner in which
116 9, XIV | the manner in which the mind itself experienced them,
117 9, XIV | body is concerned; for the mind is one thing and the body
118 9, XIV | it is identical with the mind - as when we tell someone
119 9, XIV | See that you bear this in mind”; and when we forget a thing,
120 9, XIV | say, “It did not enter my mind” or “It slipped my mind.”
121 9, XIV | mind” or “It slipped my mind.” Thus we call memory itself
122 9, XIV | Thus we call memory itself mind.~Since this is so, how does
123 9, XIV | remember past sorrow? Thus the mind has joy, and the memory
124 9, XIV | memory has sorrow; and the mind is joyful from the joy that
125 9, XIV | memory does not belong to the mind? Who will say so? The memory
126 9, XIV | to say, the belly of the mind: and joy and sadness are
127 9, XIV | four basic emotions of the mind: desire, joy, fear, sadness.
128 9, XIV | emotions when I call them to mind by remembering them. Moreover,
129 9, XIV | the flesh, but which the mind itself recognizes by the
130 9, XV | could not possibly call to mind what the sound of this name
131 9, XVI | which, when it controls my mind, I cannot remember? But
132 9, XVI | It is I myself - I, the mind - who remember. This is
133 9, XVI | reflect upon them in my mind, if I choose to remember
134 9, XVII | multiplicity! And this is the mind, and this I myself am. What,
135 9, XVII | retains even though the mind feels them no longer, as
136 9, XVII | the memory is also in the mind - through all these I run
137 9, XVII | to me? See, I soar by my mind toward thee, who remainest
138 9, XIX | something comes into the mind on which our knowledge can
139 9, XIX | entirely blotted out of the mind, we should not be able to
140 9, XXI | eloquence, call the thing to mind, even if they are not themselves
141 9, XXI | have experienced it in my mind when I rejoiced; and the
142 9, XXI | so that I can call it to mind, sometimes with disdain
143 9, XXI | execrate as I call them to mind. At other times, I call
144 9, XXI | At other times, I call to mind with longing good and honest
145 9, XXI | life that I can call it to mind and love it and long for
146 9, XXIII | thus, truly thus: the human mind so blind and sick, so base
147 9, XXIII | opposite is what happens - the mind itself is not hidden from
148 9, XXV | For in calling thee to mind, I soared beyond those parts
149 9, XXV | remembered affections of my mind, and I did not find thee
150 9, XXV | into the inmost seat of my mind, which is in my memory,
151 9, XXV | in my memory, since the mind remembers itself also -
152 9, XXV | so neither art thou the mind itself. For thou art the
153 9, XXV | art the Lord God of the mind and of all these things
154 9, XXV | memory when I call thee to mind.~
155 9, XXX | our conscious purposes in mind, continue most chastely
156 9, XXXII | concealed, so that when my mind inquires into itself concerning
157 9, XXXIII | my flesh - to which the mind ought never to be surrendered
158 9, XXXIII | However, when I call to mind the tears I shed at the
159 9, XXXIV | if it is long absent the mind is saddened.~52. O Light,
160 9, XXXV | with the inclination of my mind. And unless, by showing
161 9, XXXVII | have been able to hold my mind in check when I abstain
162 9, XXXVII | whole complex of them. The mind is able to see clearly if,
163 9, XL | manifold chambers of my mind, marvelously full of unmeasured
164 9, XLIII | keep my ransom before my mind, and eat and drink and share
165 10, II | streaks of thy light in my mind and the remaining darkness,
166 10, II | body, the exercise of the mind, and the service we owe
167 10, II | offer the service of my mind and my tongue - and give
168 10, III | and nothing would touch my mind; but if he spoke in Latin,
169 10, III(419) | was profoundly stirred, in mind and heart, by the great
170 10, V | according to the fancy of his mind, able somehow or other to
171 10, V | impose on it a form which the mind perceived in itself by its
172 10, V | thou hadst not made that mind?). He imposes the form on
173 10, V | artisan, and thou madest the mind which directs the limbs;
174 10, V | art and sees within his mind what he may do with the
175 10, V | he may communicate from mind to matter what he proposes
176 10, V | do and report back to his mind what has been done, that
177 10, V | has been done, that the mind may consult with the Truth
178 10, VI | conveyed to the conscious mind, whose inner ear lay attentively
179 10, IX | thee speaking to his inner mind. I will cry out with confidence
180 10, XVIII | which were formed in the mind, like footprints in their
181 10, XVIII | exist. But when I call to mind its image and speak of it,
182 10, XVIII | they are conceived in the mind. These conceptions, however,
183 10, XVIII | had an image of it in my mind; as, indeed, I do even now
184 10, XVIII | is it a conception in my mind. These two435 are seen in
185 10, XXVI | extendedness may be of the mind itself. For what is it I
186 10, XXVII | XXVII~ ~34. Press on, O my mind, and attend with all your
187 10, XXVII | fixed.~36. It is in you, O mind of mine, that I measure
188 10, XXVIII | unless it is that in the mind in which all this happens
189 10, XXVIII | three functions? For the mind expects, it attends, and
190 10, XXVIII | there is already in the mind the expectation of things
191 10, XXVIII | longer? Still there is in the mind the memory of things past.
192 10, XXX | How did it come into his mind to make something when he
193 10, XXXI | light. Surely, if there is a mind that so greatly abounds
194 10, XXXI | is well known to me, that mind would be an exceeding marvel
195 11, III(459) | associations of his readers in mind - for many of them may have
196 11, IV | indicated to those of sluggish mind, unless we use some word
197 11, VI | think about it rightly. My mind in its agitation used to
198 11, VI | me a kind of form that my mind turned away from, as bizarre
199 11, VI | nearly nothing.~Thus my mind ceased to question my spirit -
200 11, XI | else and which, with a pure mind in most harmonious stability,
201 11, XV | rational and intelligible mind of that chaste city of thine.
202 11, XVI | Truth has indicated to my mind. Let those who deny these
203 11, XXIV | me that this was in his mind when he wrote these things,
204 11, XXIV | this great man saw in his mind when he used these words
205 11, XXV | our soul, and with all our mind, and our neighbor as ourself.”497
206 11, XXIX | always before them. Whose mind is acute enough to be able,
207 11, XXXII | indeed! What strength of mind, what length of time, would
208 12, VIII | and if every obedient mind in thy heavenly city had
209 12, XI | for there is one life, one mind, one essence. Finally, the
210 12, XI | this distinction before his mind; let him look into himself
211 12, XIII | by the renewing of your mind.”543 And “be not children
212 12, XIII | Eve by his subtlety, his mind should be corrupted from
213 12, XVIII | themselves to things of the mind and others absorbed in things
214 12, XXI | figures are the motions of our mind: that is to say, the haughtiness
215 12, XXII | by the renewing of your mind.”621 This will not now be “
216 12, XXII | has been renewed in his mind, and comes to behold and
217 12, XXIII | the power of reason in his mind by which he perceives “the
218 12, XXIV | understood in only one way in the mind may be expressed in many
219 12, XXIV | may be understood in the mind in many different ways.
220 12, XXIV | being excogitated by the mind.~We thus interpret the phrase, “
221 12, XXVII | on the “fruit” that the mind is fed, and by which it
222 12, XXX | But [they say] a hostile mind and an alien nature - not
223 12, XXXII | rational intelligence in the mind, still in the sex of her
224 12, XXXII | the deliberation of the mind in order to conceive the
225 12, XXXIV | image and likeness, the mind which is faithful to thee
226 12, XXXVIII(654)| exists as a thought in the mind of God.~
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