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Alphabetical    [«  »]
rash 1
rate 9
rather 20
rational 37
rationality 3
rationally 2
reach 6
Frequency    [«  »]
38 before
38 three
37 existing
37 rational
36 both
36 derives
36 reason
Anselmus Cantuariensis
Monologium

IntraText - Concordances

rational

   Par.
1 10| universal essence, which is a rational, mortal animal.~Now, the 2 13| has been created. But no rational mind can doubt that all 3 15| themselves are. For, the rational mind, as to which no bodily 4 15| great, it is --the less this rational mind would be if it were 5 17| be a material body, and rational, and human, these three 6 17| accordance with another, rational; and no one of these, taken 7 22| kind of restraint. But what rational consideration can by any 8 31| excel the non-sentient, the rational the irrational. For, since 9 31| lives, and is sentient and rational, it is clear that, of all 10 31| sentient at all; and what is rational, more than what is incapable 11 31| alive, and sentient, and rational, to be deprived of its reason, 12 31| than a non-sentient, and a rational than a nonrational. So, 13 32| conceive of itself; since a rational mind can remember not only 14 32| after the likeness of a rational mind; nay, not after the 15 32| place that Spirit, and the rational mind after its likeness. 16 33| it be denied that when a rational mind conceives of itself 17 33| by thinking of him.~The rational mind, then, when it conceives 18 49| himself! since even the rational human mind is convinced 19 50| at any rate, clear to the rational man that he does not remember 20 66| CHAPTER LXVI.~Through the rational mind is the nearest approach 21 66| evident, then, that as the rational mind alone, among all created 22 66| is not the less this same rational mind alone, through which 23 66| that the more earnestly the rational mind devotes itself to learning 24 67| utterly inconceivable that any rational creature can have been naturally 25 68| CHAPTER LXVIII.~The rational creature was created in 26 68| to follow, then, that the rational creature ought to devote 27 68| with the will? For, to the rational nature rationality is the 28 68| clear enough that every rational being exists for this purpose, 29 68| therefore, most obvious that the rational creature was created for 30 68| except through it.~But the rational being cannot love this Being, 31 68| is clear, then, that the rational creature ought to devote 32 69| that the human soul is a rational creature. Hence, it must 33 70| gave to what was nothing, a rational being, that it might be 34 70| the profit? For, if the rational creature, which is useless 35 70| is most true that every rational soul, if, as it should, 36 72| immortal. But if there are some rational souls which are to be judged 37 78| applied only to an individual, rational nature; and the word substance


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