Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
merely 7
method 2
might 17
mind 47
mindful 1
minds 1
mirror 3
Frequency    [«  »]
48 man
48 must
47 like
47 mind
47 truly
47 who
46 separately
Anselmus Cantuariensis
Monologium

IntraText - Concordances

mind

   Par.
1 1 | at some time, turn his mind's eye to the examination 2 9 | unless there is, in the mind of the creative agent, some 3 10| an artisan forms in his mind for what he intends to make. ~ 4 10| by the expression of the mind or reason I mean, here, 5 10| the general view in the mind, by the vision of conception, 6 10| themselves inwardly in our mind, whether by the power of 7 10| and in another, when the mind regards the man himself, 8 10| image of his body, when the mind imagines his visible form; 9 10| expressed by the vision of the mind thinking of the object itself.~ 10 11| artisan first conceives in his mind what he afterwards actually 11 13| created. But no rational mind can doubt that all creatures 12 15| themselves are. For, the rational mind, as to which no bodily sense 13 15| the less this rational mind would be if it were any 14 23| local limitation, does the mind contain anything, nor is 15 31| express any objects in our mind, that is, conceive of them, 16 31| certainly, -- does every mind judge natures in any way 17 32| itself; since a rational mind can remember not only itself, 18 32| itself? For, if the human mind could have no memory or 19 32| meditation by itself, as my mind does now.~Hence, that Spirit, 20 32| the likeness of a rational mind; nay, not after the likeness 21 32| Spirit, and the rational mind after its likeness. But, 22 33| denied that when a rational mind conceives of itself in meditation 23 33| rather the thought of the mind is itself its image, after 24 33| For, whatever object the mind, either through representation 25 33| thinking of him.~The rational mind, then, when it conceives 26 36| created; how can the human mind comprehend of what kind 27 48| in the case of the human mind.~For, since the human mind 28 48| mind.~For, since the human mind is not always thinking of 29 49| even the rational human mind is convinced that it can 30 62| are as many words in the mind of the thinker as there 31 62| anything outside his own mind, the word corresponding 32 62| which is perhaps called to mind through a corporeal sense 33 63| expression of our human mind is nothing but the intuition 34 65| naturally conceive in my mind of what I see in created 35 65| their meaning suggests to my mind, than that the conception 36 65| the conception of which my mind itself attempts to achieve 37 66| LXVI.~Through the rational mind is the nearest approach 38 66| assists the investigating mind in the approach to supreme 39 66| correctly what opinion the mind itself ought to form regarding 40 66| then, that as the rational mind alone, among all created 41 66| less this same rational mind alone, through which the 42 66| alone, through which the mind itself can most successfully 43 66| more earnestly the rational mind devotes itself to learning 44 67| CHAPTER LXVII.~The mind itself is the mirror and 45 67| that Being. ~THEREFORE, the mind may most fitly be said to 46 67| face to face. For, if the mind itself alone among all created 47 73| all his soul, and all his mind.~ ~


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL