Part, Chapter, §
1 Pref, Intro,Intro | of knowledge which makes true knowledge a matter of inspection,
2 Pref, Intro,Intro | entailed in the ~premises, but true also to fact? Cardinal Newman,
3 Pref, Intro,Intro | know certain things to be true without further argument
4 Pref, Intro,Intro | stated in words, ~could be true or false. If you believed
5 Pref, Intro,Intro | believing something demonstrably true. ~Most Christian philosophers
6 MendicantVision, 1,7 | turning himself away from the true light to mutable goods,
7 MendicantVision, 1,9 | Creator, that we may be true Hebrews crossing from Egypt ~
8 MendicantVision, 2,8 | alone is the original ~and true delight, and that we are
9 MendicantVision, 2,9 | these rules. It must thus be true that they are incommutable
10 MendicantVision, 2,10| this in his book "On the True Religion" and in the sixth
11 MendicantVision, 3,3 | conditions: the one, the true, the good. Since being,
12 MendicantVision, 3,3 | certitude that they are true. And to know this is simply
13 MendicantVision, 3,3 | world [John, 1, 9], which is true light and ~the Word which
14 MendicantVision, 3,3 | he is moved. And this is true even if the ~man is not
15 MendicantVision, 3,3 | Augustine ~says in his "On True Religion" [Ch. 39, 72], "
16 MendicantVision, 5,4 | Wherefore ~it seems very true that just as the bat's eye
17 MendicantVision, 6,3 | greatest communication and true ~diffusion, there is also
18 MendicantVision, 6,3 | diffusion, there is also true origin and true distinction.
19 MendicantVision, 6,3 | is also true origin and true distinction. And because
20 MendicantVision, 6,3 | one, therefore it must be true that there is ~unity in
21 MendicantVision, 6,4 | may ~know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, Whom
22 MendicantVision, 7,1 | as the six steps of ~the true throne of Solomon by which
23 MendicantVision, 7,6 | because this is indubitably true: "Man shall ~not see me
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