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1 Int | elements in Augustine’s thought were appealed to in condemnation
2 Int | non-evangelical aspects of Augustine’s thought and life. And, still today,
3 Int | impossible, not only because his thought is so extraordinarily complex
4 Int | depth analyses of will and thought in their interaction, and
5 Int | insistent demand that reflective thought issue in practical consequence;
6 Int | significant developments in his thought over this twoscore years,
7 Int | focus his experience and thought into what were, for him,
8 Int | characteristic flavor of his thought.~Augustine was baptized
9 Int | what had happened in his thought between 385 and 391. He
10 Int, 1 | deliberate involutions of thought and word order. He was always
11 Int, 1 | the point beyond which the thought itself is being recast.
12 Int, 1 | argumentation. There has been no thought of trying to contrive an
13 Int, 1 | said without sufficient thought. In any case, the matter
14 1, XVIII | applauded by those whom I then thought it my whole duty to please,
15 2, III | thee, and I knew it not. I thought that thou wast silent and
16 2, III | because he had little or no thought of thee, and only vain thoughts
17 2, III | my mother, because she thought that the usual course of
18 2, IX | hearts were tickled at the thought of deceiving the owners,
19 3, I | excessive vanity, to be thought elegant and urbane. And
20 4, XV | supreme evil. This evil I thought was not only a substance
21 5, VI | not competent judges. They thought him able and wise because
22 5, X | fully persuaded that they thought just as they are commonly
23 5, X | these vain imaginations. I thought, therefore, that such a
24 5, XI | censured in thy Scriptures I thought impossible to be defended.
25 5, XI | those books, to test what he thought of them. For already the
26 5, XIV | probable views. So, in what I thought was the method of the Academics -
27 6, V(159) | Faith and Reason in the Thought of St. Augustine," in Church
28 6, V | both as to what should be thought about thy substance and
29 6, VII | O our God, that I had no thought at that time of curing Alypius
30 6, VII | he took it to himself and thought that I would not have said
31 6, VIII | and still prepared (as he thought) to despise and rise superior
32 6, IX | place. Now, at last, they thought they could convince him
33 6, X | to many others, though he thought them strange who could prefer
34 6, XI | faith does not teach what we thought it did, and vainly accused
35 6, XI | it while I sought it. I thought I should be miserable if
36 6, XI | woman, and I never gave a thought to the medicine that thy
37 6, XII | which my life, which he thought was so happy, seemed to
38 6, XIV | turmoil of men. This we thought could be obtained by bringing
39 6, XIV | belong to each and to all. We thought that this group might consist
40 6, XVI | incorruptibility. But his thought is still bound by his materialistic
41 6, I | my own eyes. I no longer thought of thee, O God, by the analogy
42 6, I | beclouded my vision. I no longer thought of God in the analogy of
43 6, I | unchangeable substance, which I thought was better than the corruptible,
44 6, I | could I see that the act of thought, by which I formed those
45 6, I | measurable entity.~So also I thought about thee, O Life of my
46 6, III | confesses to thee - where I thought that thou didst suffer evil,
47 6, VI | dear to him, as to what I thought about some affairs of his
48 6, VII | by these fluctuations of thought. I still believed both that
49 6, IX | was in the form of God and thought it not robbery to be equal
50 6, XIII | better world, because my thought ranged over all, and with
51 6, XIV | through infinite space; and it thought this was thou and set it
52 6, XIV | but not in the way I had thought - and this vision was not
53 6, XV | except the existence in thought of what does not exist in
54 6, XVII(214) | very close parallels in thought and echoes of language.
55 6, XIX | CHAPTER XIX~ ~25. But I thought otherwise. I saw in our
56 6, XX | there acquired, I might have thought that wisdom could be attained
57 6, XXI | the apostle Paul. I had thought that he sometimes contradicted
58 7, II | as Simplicianus said, and thought out and studied all the
59 7, VII | in malice.~18. And I had thought that I delayed from day
60 8, X | to do, we then with rapid thought might touch on that Eternal
61 8, X | changed’300?”~26. Such a thought I was expressing, and if
62 8, XI | increasing sickness.~28. But as I thought about thy gifts, O invisible
63 8, XII | the house, with those who thought I should not be left alone,
64 8, XII | and listened intently and thought me free of any sense of
65 8, XIII | was so close, she took no thought to have her body sumptuously
66 9, VIII | perceived are there for thought to remember. And who can
67 9, VIII | through the ears is being thought about. Similarly all the
68 9, XIV | before I recalled them and thought about them, they were there
69 9, XIX | because it was not habitually thought of in association with him.
70 9, XXXV | me even from some serious thought and draws me after it -
71 9, XXXV | thee by a deliberate act of thought - or else to despise the
72 9, XL | questioning about others which I thought to be related to my inner
73 10, III | inside the chambers of my thought, Truth itself - neither
74 10, XIII | 15. But if the roving thought of someone should wander
75 10, XIV | can even comprehend it in thought or put the answer into words?
76 10, XX(437) | movement of Augustine's thought in the Confessions: from
77 10, XXVII | lasts? Do we not project our thought to the measure of a sound,
78 10, XXVII | are still, we review - in thought - poems and verses, and
79 11, V | CHAPTER V~ ~5. When our thought seeks something for our
80 11, V | and felt” - while human thought says such things to itself,
81 11, XV | have passed. Moreover, all thought that varies thus is mutable,
82 11, XXIV | saying confidently that Moses thought thus and that in this narrative
83 11, XXIV | this is true, whether Moses thought the one or the other. For
84 11, XXV | a lie speaks of his own thought.494~35. Hear, O God, best
85 11, XXVI | arrived at in their own thought; and if, in the light of
86 11, XXX | which I have said what I thought was proper. Yet those little
87 12, XIX | Teacher (whom the rich man thought a man and nothing more)
88 12, XXXVIII(654)| that the world exists as a thought in the mind of God.~
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