103-exemp | exerc-philo | phras-weigh | west-zealo
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 501 MendicantVision,       2,5(2) |           whole, sees as a whole, ~and exercises all his other senses as
 502     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              If we distinguish between existential and qualitative identity, ~
 503 MendicantVision,       2,10   |              beauty and delight do not exit apart from proportion, and
 504     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            also of certain passages in Exodus and Isaiah in which details
 505     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                purposes, and not to be expected to exist in anything other ~
 506 MendicantVision,       2,8    |         salubrious and satisfying, and expelling all lack in the apprehending
 507     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                the most simple sensory experiences. If Messrs. Doe and Roe
 508     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                 though when he came to explain how lower orders emanated
 509 MendicantVision,       4,4(2) |             XXII, 25-27, where each is explained. Since ~they are somewhat
 510     Pref                      |               in a while have inserted explanatory words and phrases ~in square
 511     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |         knowledge, the question of why exploration is pushed into fields which ~
 512 MendicantVision,       6,7    |               If then ~the image is an express likeness when our mind contemplates
 513 MendicantVision,       6,2    |               in which all things ~are expressed, and as Gift, in which all
 514 MendicantVision,       3,6    |            which gives us the power of expression; ~logic, which gives us
 515 MendicantVision,       3,2    |             whose ~indivisible present extends to all times. From the second
 516 MendicantVision,       3,6    |            third, natures, powers, and extensive operations. Therefore the
 517     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |      properties of numbers, finding it extraordinary that there ~are four Gospels,
 518 MendicantVision,       2,5    |               the senses are pained by extremes and delight in ~the mean.
 519     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                The difficulty with the extremists who maintained that either
 520 MendicantVision,       7,6    |               II Cor., 12, 9]; ~let us exult with David, saying, "For
 521 MendicantVision,       6,4    |                look toward each, their faces being ~turned toward the
 522     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |         century, for the attempt would fail. But similarly one would
 523 MendicantVision,       7,6    |               flesh and my heart hath ~fainted away; Thou art the God of
 524 MendicantVision,       1,10   |                 rationally or believes faithfully or contemplates intellectually. ~
 525 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |             mirror, lest by chance you fall into the lower pit of shadows
 526 MendicantVision,       4,2    |                since, when anyone lies fallen, he must remain there prostrate ~
 527 MendicantVision,       2,11   |                 as if we had two wings falling to our feet, we can determine
 528 MendicantVision,       4,2    |             give a helping hand and he falls in order to rise again ~[
 529     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               words, ~could be true or false. If you believed in one
 530     Pref                      |            first time would do well to familiarize themselves with Giotto's
 531     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                still larger orders and families, until we come to the class ~
 532 MendicantVision,       1,12   |             believe that ~the ages are fashioned by the Word of Life [Hebr.,
 533 MendicantVision,       3,3    |            created beings unless it be favored by ~the understanding of
 534 MendicantVision,       1,1    |             heart rejoice that ~it may fear Thy name" [Ps., 85, 11].~ ~ ~
 535 MendicantVision,       4,8    |             head, the sister, and ~the fellow-heir; made nonetheless the temple
 536     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                the saints seem to have felt such an intimate relationship ~
 537 MendicantVision,       5,7    |              highly infinite ~and most fertile in efficacy.~ ~ ~
 538 MendicantVision,       1,1    |               of tears, aided only ~by fervent prayer. Thus prayer is the
 539 MendicantVision,       3,1    |                mind loves itself most ~fervently. Nor could it love itself
 540 MendicantVision,       7,6    |             the man kindles it in ~the fervor of His burning Passion,
 541 MendicantVision,       3,3    |             because then it would be a fiction if it were not ~in the world
 542     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |          Tuscany, was born Giovanni di Fidanza in 1221. ~He entered the
 543 MendicantVision,       5,2    |               18, 19]. Damascenus ["De fide orthodox.," 1, 9] therefore,
 544     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |          trivial example from ~another field, we could prove that a person
 545 MendicantVision,       2,3    |            something aerial, something fiery or warm, as ~appears in
 546     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |             and in the short space of ~fifteen years rose to be seventh
 547 MendicantVision,       1,15   |           account the whole world will fight against ~the unwise [Prov.,
 548     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |      scientific. Thus we have had such figurative terms as ~"affinity" in
 549 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |            blood ~we are purged of the filth of vice, do I first invite
 550     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             the properties of numbers, finding it extraordinary that there ~
 551 MendicantVision,       1,7    |             the Creation, man was made fit for the repose of contemplation, ~
 552 MendicantVision,       5,3    |              the unity of His essence, fix your gaze upon Being itself, ~
 553 MendicantVision,       7,6    |              not light, but the wholly flaming fire which will bear you
 554 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |              of one's heart, ~and by a flash of apprehension by which
 555 MendicantVision,       2,10   |            judicial ~number from which flow the uttered numbers out
 556     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               did. Even in the "Little Flowers" of Saint Francis, only
 557 MendicantVision,       4,7    |              as with ~wings opened for flying which hold the middle place -
 558     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           maintain that the conclusion followed from the ~premises, but
 559     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             thinkers as Hegel and his ~followers seemed to have taken that
 560     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |         philosophical work, there is a fondness for ~what we call Nature
 561 MendicantVision,       1,0(1) |                do to write vestiges or footprints, and traces is not much
 562     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               of knowledge. We are not forced ~to know about things; we
 563 MendicantVision,       5,2    |                The first way first and foremost signifies Him in Being itself,
 564 MendicantVision,       3,2    |            receiving it, the future by foreseeing it. It retains the ~simple,
 565 MendicantVision,       7,6    |                God that is my portion ~forever [Ps. 72, 26]. . . . Blessed
 566 MendicantVision,       3,2    |         eternally. For it can never so forget them while it uses reason
 567     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               of this ~was undoubtedly fortified by Saint Francis' fashion
 568 MendicantVision,       2,11   |               see they may be carried ~forward to the intelligibles, which
 569     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              the physical world as the founder of the Order to which Saint ~
 570     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |          science as it ~was before the fourteenth century and that which it
 571 MendicantVision,       4,3    |            harmony, smell the highest ~fragrance, taste the highest delicacy,
 572 MendicantVision,       4,3    |         aromatic ~spices, of myrrh and frankincense [Cant., 3, 6]; the second,
 573 MendicantVision,       4,7    |               soul reformed by virtues freely granted, by the spiritual
 574 MendicantVision,       1,0(1) |               be seen. The Italian and French ~translators have the advantage
 575     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                kinds of evidence, but ~frequently we have to be satisfied
 576 MendicantVision,       1,9    |              me, and be filled with my fruits" [Ecclesiasticus, 24, 26].
 577 MendicantVision,       3,7    |                 Hence this prophecy is fulfilled: ~"Thou enlightenest wonderfully
 578 MendicantVision,       6,5    |              temporal man, born in the fullness of time of a Virgin - the ~
 579     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |        Chartres ~Cathedral in terms of functional architecture as that is
 580 MendicantVision,       7,6    |             This fire is God, and the ~furnace of this fire leadeth to
 581     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             second hierarchy which was fused with the logical hierarchy
 582     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                 actually walked in the Garden of Eden; that He ~spoke
 583 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |               of the Lamb as through a gate. For one is not disposed
 584 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |               and may ~enter in by the gates into the City"; as if he
 585 MendicantVision,       5,3    |               of His essence, fix your gaze upon Being itself, ~and
 586 MendicantVision,       2,7    |                all knowable things can generate ~their likeness (species),
 587 MendicantVision,       2,8    |   proportionality and ~equality to the generator. In this is power, not through
 588 MendicantVision,       1,14   |          goodness adorning ~all things generously. "Magnitude" of things,
 589     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                was the personal God of Genesis. His metaphysical problem ~
 590     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                matter being a ~perfect geometrical triangle, no human being
 591     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              postulates of a system of geometry which we ~accept merely
 592     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              the future can be seen in germ. Besides its importance
 593 MendicantVision,       2,10   |                the body, as appears in gestures and bodily movements, and
 594     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |           Washington, D. C., 1946.~ ~ ~Gilson, E. H., "La Philosophie
 595     Pref                      |            familiarize themselves with Giotto's painting ~of St. Francis
 596     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |            native of Tuscany, was born Giovanni di Fidanza in 1221. ~He
 597     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               be ringing and therefore giving off ~air waves. When these
 598     Pref                      |           given to the Reverend George Glanzman, S. J., who ~made a painstaking
 599 MendicantVision,       3,1    |              which is to see through a glass darkly [I Cor., 13, 12].~ ~ ~
 600 MendicantVision,       3,1    |                candelabrum, ~for in it gleams the resplendent image of
 601     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              one, until he reaches his goal.~ ~ ~The mysticism of Saint
 602 MendicantVision,       1,8    |               we ~shall see the God of gods in Sion [Ps., 83, 8]~ ~ ~
 603 MendicantVision,       1,7    |              the true light to mutable goods, he was bent over ~by his
 604     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |     extraordinary that there ~are four Gospels, four points of the compass,
 605 MendicantVision,       4,5    |                             5~For this grade of contemplation there is
 606 MendicantVision,       7,5(1) |         Theology," Ch. I [Migne, "Pat. Graec.," Vol. III, 997].~ ~ ~
 607     Pref                      |        accepted all of his suggestions gratefully but, of course, I alone
 608 MendicantVision,       5,7    |               because ~power, the more greatly it is unified, the closer
 609 MendicantVision,       1,9    |   Ecclesiasticus, 24, 26]. For by ~the greatness of the beauty and of the
 610 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |            wishing for peace in every ~greeting, yearning for ecstatic peace
 611     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |             and created a ~cardinal by Gregory X shortly before his death
 612 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |                prayer, which makes one groan with the murmuring of one'
 613     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |          friend and ~protector, Robert Grosseteste, whose interest in what
 614 MendicantVision,       5,7    |                         7~But you have ground for rising in wonder. For
 615     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             there are good traditional grounds for ~thinking so. Plato,
 616     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              are not simply convenient groupings made by man for his own
 617 MendicantVision,       7,1    |               truly ~contemplative man grows strong to rise again, filled
 618 MendicantVision,       7,5    |              superdivine and supergood guardian of ~Christian knowledge
 619 MendicantVision,       3,3    |             certainty except under its guidance. ~Therefore you can see
 620 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |               the eyes of our ~mind to guide our feet into the way of
 621 MendicantVision,       4,7    |               far as their operations, habits, and knowledge are ~concerned,
 622 MendicantVision,       1,10   |           believing, it ~considers the habitual course of things; reasoning,
 623     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |          presents. There is no need to hack one's way through a jungle
 624     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               figures as Alexander of ~Hales, the master of Saint Bonaventura;
 625 MendicantVision,       4,6    |            according to the triple law handed down to us in it: ~the law
 626 MendicantVision,       1,0(1) |            will ~know the artist. This handiwork shows traces of his workmanship.
 627 MendicantVision,       1,15   |                and in the works of Thy hands I shall rejoice [Ps., 91,
 628 MendicantVision,       7,6    |                My soul rather chooseth hanging and my bones death" [Job,
 629 MendicantVision,       1,5    |              omega, or in so far as we happen to see God ~in one of the
 630 MendicantVision,       1,0(1) |            translated traces. It will ~hardly do to write vestiges or
 631 MendicantVision,       2,6    |             whether it is healthful or harmful, for this pertains to ~the
 632 MendicantVision,       2,8    |              is the conjunction of the harmonious, and the likeness of ~God
 633     Pref,   Intro,Intro(1)    |          Wolfson s "Philo" (Cambridge: Harvard ~University, 1949).
 634 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |           peace said, with those ~that hated peace he was peaceable [
 635 MendicantVision,       1,0(1) |          consideration - for he ~seems haunted by the basic metaphor of
 636 MendicantVision,       4,8    |            made a member of Christ the head, the sister, and ~the fellow-heir;
 637 MindRoad,Prologue,5           |          treatise into seven chapters, heading them ~with titles so that
 638 MendicantVision,       4,3    |          Father, he recovers spiritual healing ~and vision: hearing to
 639 MendicantVision,       2,6    |                 not only whether it is healthful or harmful, for this pertains
 640     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |         Bonaventure," Paris, 1924.~ ~ ~Healy, Sister Emma Therese, "Saint
 641 MendicantVision,       4,3    |                he sees his spouse ~and hears, smells, tastes, and embraces
 642     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                to Philo-Judaeus in the Hebraic-~Christian tradition: the
 643 MendicantVision,       1,9    |           Creator, that we may be true Hebrews crossing from Egypt ~to
 644     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                such modern thinkers as Hegel and his ~followers seemed
 645     Pref,   Intro,Intro       | anti-intellectualism. Christianity was held to be a religion, not merely
 646 MendicantVision,       4,2    |       prostrate ~unless someone give a helping hand and he falls in order
 647     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              led him at times close to heresy. Later there ~were Franciscans
 648 MendicantVision,       4,4(2) |           based on St. ~Bonaventura's "Hexaemeron," XXII, 25-27, where each
 649 MendicantVision,       3,7    |       wonderfully from the everlasting hills. All the foolish ~of heart
 650 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |                following ~reflections, hinting that little or nothing is
 651     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              recognized by all serious historians of philosophy as one of
 652 MendicantVision,       1,8    |                secondly, we must live ~holily; thirdly, we must strive
 653 MendicantVision,       4,6    |              which ~purifies us for an honest life, the allegorical which
 654 MendicantVision,       1,15   |             and adore Him, magnify and honor Him, lest the whole world ~
 655 MendicantVision,       4,3    |                soul which believes in, hopes in, and loves Jesus Christ,
 656     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                  GEORGE BOAS~THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY~July, 1953~ ~ ~ ~ ~
 657 MendicantVision,       4,8    |               the divine wisdom as the house of God; become the daughter,
 658 MendicantVision,       6,3    |                have the wherewithal to hover in highest ~wonder; and
 659 MendicantVision,       1,1    |               power raising us up. For howsoever the interior steps are disposed, ~
 660 MendicantVision,       6,7    |              of the invisible God, our humanity now ~wonderfully exalted,
 661     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              Saint Francis' fashion of humanizing natural ~objects - the sun,
 662 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |                by divine grace, to the humble and ~the pious, to those
 663 MendicantVision,       1,1    |              seek it from their hearts humbly and ~devoutly; and this
 664     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               Leibniz's Monadology, or Hume's "Enquiry" in its compactness ~
 665 MendicantVision,       2,3    |             which have ~something of a humid nature, something aerial,
 666 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |              love, understand without ~humility, be zealous without divine
 667     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              fire), four seasons, four humors, four ~temperaments. But
 668 MendicantVision,       6,2    |             and consubstantial, and an hypostasis as noble as the producer ~
 669 MendicantVision,       6,2    |             intrinsic, substantial and hypostatic, ~natural and voluntary,
 670 MendicantVision,       7,5(2) |                                        Ibid."
 671     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              its comparability, and he identified the ~hierarchy of reality
 672     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             simply the satisfaction of idle ~curiosity, but the fulfillment
 673 MendicantVision,       2,9    |       transmutation, by the immutable, illimitable, ~and endless reason, and
 674 MendicantVision,       4,6    |            life, the allegorical which illuminates us for ~the clarity of understanding,
 675     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |        corroborate his faith. The best illustration of this conflict ~is found
 676 MendicantVision,       3,5    |          coequal, and coeval, mutually immanent. If then God is perfect
 677 MendicantVision,       7,5    |             thyself and all things in ~immeasurable and absolute purity of mind,
 678 MendicantVision,       2,5    |           active power does not exceed immoderately the powers ~of the recipient,
 679 MendicantVision,       3,3    |     concupiscence and phantasms do not impede you and place themselves ~
 680 MendicantVision,       4,4(2) |          ductio, ordinatio, roboratio, imperatio, susceptio, ~revelatio,
 681 MendicantVision,       3,3    |             incomplete or complete, as imperfect or perfect, as potential
 682     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |         exaggeration maintain that the impetus ~to the study of the natural
 683 MendicantVision,       1,6    |        Synteresis"). These ~stages are implanted in us by nature, deformed
 684 MendicantVision,       7,6    |            over into ~darkness; let us impose silence on cares, concupiscence,
 685 MendicantVision,       2,10   |  incontrovertible. By these there are ~imprinted on our minds the "artificial"
 686     Pref                      |                several revisions which improved my first draft. I have ~
 687 MendicantVision,       2,3    |              smoke which is freed from incense.~ ~ ~There enter then through
 688     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                species, though we ~are inclined to believe that the species
 689 MendicantVision,       2,10   |              which Augustine does not ~include in this classification because
 690 MendicantVision,       5,8    |       therefore within all, though not included in them; ~beyond all, but
 691     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               come to the class ~which includes all other classes and which
 692     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                 nevertheless they all, including Saint Bonaventura, pushed ~
 693     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            previously have been terrae incognitae. And when one compares science
 694 MendicantVision,       2,9    |             thus be true that they are incommutable and ~incorruptible since
 695 MendicantVision,       6,3    |        yourself able to understand the incomprehensible. For you have still in ~
 696 MendicantVision,       2,9    |                since ~intellectual and incorporeal, not made but uncreated,
 697 MendicantVision,       2,9    |          apprehending intellect - are ~indelibly stored up in the memory
 698 MendicantVision,       3,3    |            permanent, as ~dependent or independent, as mixed with non-being
 699 MendicantVision,       2,9    |               shine forth ~infallibly, indestructibly, indubitably, irrefragably,
 700     Pref                      |               brackets. In two places, indicated in footnotes, I have made ~
 701     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             kind of knowledge which is indisputable. No one ~can deny what the
 702     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |        accustomed to the doctrine that individuals can be grouped into classes ~
 703 MendicantVision,       2,9    |                boundlessly, endlessly, indivisibly, and intellectually. And ~
 704 MendicantVision,       2,9    |              laws] ~are infallible and indubitable rules of the apprehending
 705 MendicantVision,       6,7    |               wonderfully exalted, now ineffably united, by seeing at once
 706     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                 something irrational - inept - than in believing something
 707 MendicantVision,       2,13   |               Him and to love Him, are inexcusable [Rom., 1, ~20], while they
 708 MendicantVision,       2,9    |                all things shine forth ~infallibly, indestructibly, indubitably,
 709 MendicantVision,       1,7    |            original sin, which doubly ~infected human nature, ignorance
 710 MendicantVision,       1,7    |                human nature, ignorance infecting man's mind and concupiscence
 711 MendicantVision,       3,3    |              terms, ~propositions, and inferences. The intellect however,
 712 MendicantVision,       3,6    |        knowledge which perfects it and informs ~it, and represents in three
 713 MendicantVision,       4,8    |         intellectual illuminations, is inhabited ~by the divine wisdom as
 714 MendicantVision,       2,2    |            them who shall receive ~the inheritance of salvation [Hebr., 1,
 715     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             parents, was nevertheless ~inherited by us - one can also see
 716 MendicantVision,       6,3    |            eternity, in existence and ~inimitability While therefore you consider
 717 MendicantVision,       2,11   |                      11~From these two initial steps by which we are led
 718 MendicantVision,       3,2    |              were recognizing them ~as innate and familiar, as appears
 719 MendicantVision,       7,5    |              little should be given to inquiry but much to unction, ~little
 720     Pref                      |               and once in a while have inserted explanatory words and phrases ~
 721     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |          rational criticism, but would insist that his method, to use
 722     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                the Christian ~religion insisted upon man's nature as having
 723     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            vision.~ ~ ~Along with this insistence on direct experience as
 724     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                compared to the man who insists on direct ~testimony; Saint
 725     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             true knowledge a matter of inspection, of ~seeing. We all have
 726 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |               without wisdom divinely ~inspired. Therefore to those predisposed
 727 MendicantVision,       3,2    |           quantities - the point, ~the instant, the unit - without which
 728 MendicantVision,       2,12   |               those which He wished to institute for the purpose of signifying
 729 MendicantVision,       1,1    |                  ch. 1, 13, wishing to instruct us in mental elevation,
 730 MendicantVision,       7,6    |            about, question grace, not ~instruction; desire, not intellect;
 731 MendicantVision,       7,5    |              superluminous darkness of instructive silence - darkness ~which
 732     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |      philosophy such as this a perfect instrument ~for the Christian, for
 733 MendicantVision,       2,6    |            through sense, to enter the intellective faculty by purification
 734 MendicantVision,       7,5    |         pouring out upon the invisible intellects the splendors of invisible ~
 735 MendicantVision,       2,2    |               which philosophers call "intelligences," but we "angels." These, ~
 736 MendicantVision,       5,7(2) |           Latin: "causa essendi, ratio intelligendi, et ordo vivendi."~
 737 MendicantVision,       2,11   |                carried ~forward to the intelligibles, which they do not see,
 738 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |               turns most directly and ~intensely to the rays of light [Ps.,
 739 MindRoad,Prologue,5           |                one think rather of the intention of the writer than of his ~
 740 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |              Jesus Christ, that by the intercession of the most holy Virgin ~
 741 MendicantVision,       1,8    |         purifying justice, and this in intercourse; toward the illumination
 742     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              In Philo, who ~was mainly interested in the Pentateuch, the allegorical
 743 MendicantVision,       1,1    |               us up. For howsoever the interior steps are disposed, ~nothing
 744 MendicantVision,       2,3    |      terrestrial ~bodies; by the three intermediate senses the intermediates,
 745 MendicantVision,       2,3    |                intermediate senses the intermediates, as by taste the ~aqueous,
 746     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                method was ~employed in interpreting Scripture. It was believed
 747     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              seem to have felt such an intimate relationship ~with the physical
 748 MendicantVision,       6,2    |               only if it is actual and intrinsic, substantial and hypostatic, ~
 749     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            added assumption is usually introduced into the ~discussion at
 750     Pref,   Intro             |                                        INTRODUCTORY MATERIAL~ ~ ~ ~ ~
 751 MendicantVision,       4,2    |              the things of sense to an intuition of itself and of the eternal
 752     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              of God. If permanence and invariability are marks of goodness, then ~
 753     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           answered the question by the invention of a basic metaphor. The ~
 754 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |            speculate without devotion, investigate without wonder, examine
 755 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |              filth of vice, do I first invite the reader, lest ~perchance
 756 MendicantVision,       7,3    |                spiritual men have been invited by God to passage ~of this
 757 MendicantVision,       3,4    |              idea of the ~good must be involved in every deliberation about
 758 MendicantVision,       1,4    |           sensuality; the second looks inward and into itself, wherefore
 759 MendicantVision,       2,8    |              is united in truth and in inwardness and in plenitude which employs
 760 MendicantVision,       3,7    |               that eternal light. ~The irradiation and consideration of this
 761 MendicantVision,       2,9    |              as if always present, are irrefragable ~and unquestionable rules
 762 MendicantVision,       4,5    |                Holy Scripture divinely issued, as ~philosophy was added
 763 MendicantVision,       1,0(1) |           which God is to be seen. The Italian and French ~translators
 764     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |            canonized in 1482 by Sixtus IV and a little over a century ~
 765     Pref                      |           Reverend George Glanzman, S. J., who ~made a painstaking
 766 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |               best and perfect ~gifts [James, 1, 17], the eternal Father
 767 MendicantVision,       7,6    |           hanging and my bones death" [Job, 7, 15]. He who ~chooses
 768     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                        GEORGE BOAS~THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY~July,
 769 MendicantVision,       1,3    |                this is the three days' journey into the wilderness [Ex.,
 770 MendicantVision,       7,5    |               tongue but much to inner joy, little to the word and
 771 MendicantVision,       7,2    |              appreciation, praise, and jubilation, makes a passover - that ~
 772 MendicantVision,       2,9    |             more certain judgments are judged by ~this mode of reasoning,
 773     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY~July, 1953~ ~ ~ ~ ~
 774     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               hack one's way through a jungle of ~authorities, quotations,
 775     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |        cosmology into modern terms nor justify Chartres ~Cathedral in terms
 776     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           faith. Far from it. But what Kant was to say of the ~relationship
 777     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |          religious ideas. This was ~in keeping with many traditions which
 778     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               believed that he had the key to ~the allegory. Similarly
 779 MendicantVision,       7,6    |          Jerusalem; and Christ the man kindles it in ~the fervor of His
 780 MendicantVision,       4,5    |              brother and Lord, at once king and friend, at ~once Word
 781 MendicantVision,       1,5    |                throne of ~Solomon [III Kings, 10, 19]; the Seraphim whom
 782 MendicantVision,       2,7    |                and object. If then all knowable things can generate ~their
 783 MendicantVision,       7,2    |                if ~outwardly dead, yet knowing, as far as possible in our
 784     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |              1946.~ ~ ~Gilson, E. H., "La Philosophie de St. Bonaventure,"
 785 MendicantVision,       2,5    |           supplies ~what the recipient lacks; and this is to save and
 786     Pref                      |               and introduction must be laid at my door.~ ~ ~G. B.~
 787 MendicantVision,       1,9    |            crossing from Egypt ~to the land promised to our fathers;
 788     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             his method, to use modern ~language, is empirical rather than
 789     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |         appeared in the Bestiaries and Lapidaries, and which we retain in ~
 790     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              being ~grouped into still larger orders and families, until
 791 MendicantVision,       5,2    |               the New Testament, which lays down the plurality of the
 792 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |                Francis, our father and leader, He may enlighten the eyes
 793 MendicantVision,       7,6    |              the ~furnace of this fire leadeth to Jerusalem; and Christ
 794 MendicantVision,       4,3    |             with the sweetest delight, leans ~totally upon its beloved [
 795 MendicantVision,       3,5    |                which is in the memory ~leaps into the eye of the intellect,
 796     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                as clearly as the most ~learned scholar. That made a philosophy
 797     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |         knowledge of God as the man of learning. ~This did not discourage
 798     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                 Discourse ~on Method," Leibniz's Monadology, or Hume's "
 799 MendicantVision,       1,13   |             discern. And the first are lesser things, the ~second midway,
 800 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |       announced and given to us; which lesson our father ~Francis always
 801 MendicantVision,       4,3    |                 hearing to receive the lessons of Christ, vision to look
 802 MendicantVision,       1,7    |           carried aloft to supermental levels.~ ~ ~
 803 MendicantVision,       2,9    |           because, ~as Augustine says [Lib. Arb., II, ch. 4], no one
 804     Pref                      |             readable, I have taken the liberty of breaking up a few of
 805     Pref,   Intro,Intro(1)    |                H. Whitaker in the Loeb Library. For a thorough study of
 806     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |           widely ~venerated during his lifetime and is mentioned as a saint
 807 MindRoad,Prologue,5           |           thoughts must not be perused lightly, but should be meditated
 808     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |          George Washington or Abraham ~Lincoln, was more real than the
 809     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              thing ~illustrated in the Linnaean classification of plants
 810     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                such as the Eagle, the ~Lion, and the Olive Branch; or
 811 MendicantVision,       1,15   |              spiritual ears, open your lips, and apply ~your heart,
 812 MendicantVision,       2,13   |          bodies. Since, however, he is listing the ~three kinds of visible
 813 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |            live, now not I, but Christ liveth in me" [Gal., 2, 19]; who
 814 MendicantVision,       6,3    |          origin, and a ~mission not of local change but of free spiration,
 815 MendicantVision,       1,11   |            directs things to a certain location;[ 2] number, by which they ~
 816     Pref,   Intro,Intro(1)    |               of G. H. Whitaker in the Loeb Library. For a thorough
 817     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |           Esser Nemmers, St. Louis an ~London, 1946.~ ~ ~ - - , "Opera
 818     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               told that the person has looked ~and seen. Sensory observation
 819 MendicantVision,       5,7    |               nothing new nor does ~it lose what it had, and therefore
 820     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |               Erwin Esser Nemmers, St. Louis an ~London, 1946.~ ~ ~ - - , "
 821 MendicantVision,       4,1    |              spiritual gladness. Thus, lying totally in this ~sensible
 822     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |                 De Benedictis, Matthew M., "The Social Thought of
 823 MendicantVision,       1,15   |               Him, love and adore Him, magnify and honor Him, lest the
 824     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           philosophy, was almost their main interest. ~Indeed, one might
 825     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             method. In Philo, who ~was mainly interested in the Pentateuch,
 826     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                were in the position of maintaining that there were some ~beliefs,
 827     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               start, Saint Bonaventura maintains, but it is the proper ~start.
 828     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |             this little treatise, ~his major works are the "Reductio
 829     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            inclusive than the class of mammals, ~and the class of animals
 830 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |             Francis that his soul w as manifest in his flesh and ~he bore
 831     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             more real than the idea of mankind though it is doubtful ~whether
 832 MendicantVision,       7,2    |               he ~may taste the hidden manna and with Christ may rest
 833     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              might be ~thought of as a map of all things, a tree not
 834 MendicantVision,       1,4    |                and ~with all its soul [Mark, 12, 30]. And in this consists
 835     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |       permanence and invariability are marks of goodness, then ~indeed
 836 MendicantVision,       7,4    |                earth, has inflamed his marrow. And ~therefore the Apostle
 837 MendicantVision,       5,4    |                                      4~Marvelous then is the blindness of
 838 MendicantVision,       6,3    |              in the face of such great marvels would not ~start in wonder?
 839     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |      philosophy as one of the ~shorter masterpieces of medieval philosophy.
 840     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                 or logical classes, or mathematical ~concepts, such as circles
 841     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                as early as Philo. ~Few mathematicians today would play upon the
 842 MendicantVision,       3,6    |              divided into metaphysics, mathematics, and physics. The ~first
 843     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                with this ~metaphysical matrix a certain philosophical
 844 MendicantVision,       3,4    |                  But such proximity is measured by degrees of likeness.
 845 MendicantVision,       4,8    |              the friend of God; made a member of Christ the head, the
 846 MendicantVision               |                                    THE MENDICANT'S VISION IN THE WILDERNESS~ ~ ~ ~ ~
 847     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                method. One has only to mention such figures as Alexander
 848     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                sensory experiences. If Messrs. Doe and Roe are ~exactly
 849 MendicantVision,       5,8    |            move" [Boethius, Cons. III, met. 9]. Because most ~perfect
 850 MendicantVision,       1,14   |          bodies, minerals, stones and ~metals, plants and animals, obviously
 851     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            flowed from a candle. Such ~metaphors have been of the greatest
 852     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             various ~assumptions, both methodological and doctrinal, and begin
 853     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                world through empirical methods came from the ~Franciscans.
 854 MendicantVision,       2,10   |               the highest ~through the middles to the lowest, there is
 855 MendicantVision,       1,5    |                called Moses out of the midst of the cloud [Ex., ~21,
 856 MendicantVision,       1,13   |             lesser things, the ~second midway, and the third the best.
 857 MendicantVision,       7,5(1) |               Mystic Theology," Ch. I [Migne, "Pat. Graec.," Vol. III,
 858 MendicantVision,       4,3    |       Jerusalem and part of the Church militant, which, according to the
 859 MendicantVision,       6,2    |                 and due love, and both mingled together, which is the fullest
 860 MendicantVision,       2,2    |            wherefore they are ~called "ministering spirits," sent to minister
 861 MendicantVision,       2,12   |            wished to appear in angelic ministry. And most specially does
 862 MindRoad,Prologue,2           |             things there occurred that miracle which ~happened in the same
 863     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           which a human ~being exactly mirrored the universe as a whole,
 864 MendicantVision,       4,7    |             within ourselves as in the mirrors of created images - and
 865     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            Church. ~The result of this miscomprehension has been disparagement of
 866 MendicantVision,       2,13   |                        1 This may be a mistranslation. For St. Bonaventura may
 867 MendicantVision,       2,2    |             contrariety of elements in mixtures, there can be generated ~
 868 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |                ecstatic peace in every moment of contemplation, as ~a
 869     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |       Discourse ~on Method," Leibniz's Monadology, or Hume's "Enquiry" in
 870     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           thinking of one of the great monastic orders of the West; ~it
 871 MendicantVision,       3,6(1) |                             In Latin, "monasticam oeconomicam et politicam."~
 872     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           Roger Bacon; and the various monks ~of Saint Victor, to realize
 873 MendicantVision,       4,3    |               becomes as the dawn, the moon, and ~the sun, like the
 874 MendicantVision,       7,5    |                direct thou us into the more-than-unknown and ~superluminous and most
 875 MendicantVision,       1,3    |                evening, second as ~the morning, third as noon; this signifies
 876 MendicantVision,       6,5    |             with the most ~passive and mortal, the most perfect and immense
 877 MendicantVision,       4,6    |              principal part of it: the Mosaic Law purifying, the prophetic ~
 878     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                question reduces to the motivation of ~knowledge, the question
 879     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            committed it, that he had a motive for committing it, that
 880 MendicantVision,       1,13   |         visible things, therefore, one mounts to considering the power ~
 881 MendicantVision,       2,3    |                cognition of spiritual ~movers, as through an effect we
 882 MendicantVision,       3,3    |              man is running, a man is ~moving. It perceives, however,
 883     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             are consulted and weighed, multiple distinctions are made, and ~
 884 MendicantVision,       1,14   |               manifestly. "Operation," multiplex inasmuch as it is natural,
 885 MendicantVision,       5,7    |               universal source of all ~multiplicity. And for this reason it
 886 MindRoad,Prologue,3           |               makes one groan with the murmuring of one's heart, ~and by
 887 MendicantVision,       2,10   |             and in the sixth book "On ~Music," wherein he assigns the
 888 MendicantVision,       3,5    |  consubstantial, ~coequal, and coeval, mutually immanent. If then God is
 889 MendicantVision,       4,3    |                of aromatic ~spices, of myrrh and frankincense [Cant.,
 890 MendicantVision,       4,4(2) |                 The translation of the names of the nine steps is based
 891     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               or the "life cycle ~of a nation" in history, terms which
 892     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |     BONAVENTURA~ ~ ~St. Bonaventura, a native of Tuscany, was born Giovanni
 893     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |      interpreted allegorically, and he naturally believed that he had the
 894 MendicantVision,       4,1    |               is clear ~that God is so near to our minds, that there
 895 MendicantVision,       3,3    |               man is not existing. The necessity of this mode of inference
 896 MendicantVision,       2,10   |                primarily in number, it needs must be that all things
 897     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               which has ~been too much neglected since the publication of "
 898     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |      Breviloquium," tr. by Erwin Esser Nemmers, St. Louis an ~London, 1946.~ ~ ~ - - , "
 899     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               the three hierarchies of Neo-Platonism: the hierarchy of logical ~
 900     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              so. Plato, Aristotle, the Neo-Platonists, and even the Stoics had ~
 901     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            true also to fact? Cardinal Newman, in his "Grammar of ~Assent,"
 902     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                seminal reasons. In the nineteenth century, when men ~were
 903     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             people, both ~Catholic and non-Catholic, the impression that the
 904     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              the Tree ~of Porphyry. In non-philosophic work we find the same sort
 905 MendicantVision,       7,5    |         invisible things, and both all nonbeing and being; and unknowingly
 906     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            identical but existentially nonidentical sensations. Until Roe can
 907 MendicantVision,       1,3    |              as ~the morning, third as noon; this signifies the threefold
 908 MendicantVision,       2,2    |                            2~Let it be noted then that this world, which
 909 MendicantVision,       5,3    |               from Non-Being, ~just as nothingness is in full flight from Being.
 910 MendicantVision,       5,3    |               utterly nothing contains nought of Being nor of its conditions,
 911 MendicantVision,       2,5    |                and this is to save and nourish it, which appears ~especially
 912                               | nowhere
 913 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |             the ~throne of Solomon was nowise save in peace, since it
 914     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              the curious properties of numbers-~-virgin numbers, perfect
 915 MendicantVision,       2,10   |               things are rhythmical ~("numerosa"). And for this reason number
 916 MendicantVision,       4,4(2) |              my rendering. They run: ~"nuntiatio, dictatio, ductio, ordinatio,
 917     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             rational arguments - where objections are analyzed, ~authorities
 918     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               figure.~ ~ ~We should be obligated to maintain that the conclusion
 919     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             fulfillment of a religious obligation. But it goes ~without saying
 920 MendicantVision,       4,1    |                itself through memory; ~obscured by phantasms, it does not
 921 MendicantVision,       1,4    |             consists both the perfect ~observance of the Law and Christian
 922     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              the "Itinerarium," where ~observational science becomes not simply
 923     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            only to ~look about one and observe that certain laws obtain;
 924     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             can deny what the sensory ~observer sees. The philosopher who
 925     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              observe that certain laws obtain; that there is order; ~that
 926 MendicantVision,       4,3    |          Canticles, as was done on the occasion of this fourth stage of ~
 927 MendicantVision,       1,12   |                 succeed each other and occur in most ~orderly fashion;
 928 MindRoad,Prologue,2           |             amongst other things there occurred that miracle which ~happened
 929     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                analogous to sounds and odors, but who had no direct ~
 930 MendicantVision,       3,6(1) |                  In Latin, "monasticam oeconomicam et politicam."~
 931                               | off
 932     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                 Thomas Aquinas is the "official" philosophy of the Roman
 933 MendicantVision,       3,5    |            arises intelligence as ~its offspring, for then do we know when
 934 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |           devotion, anointed with the ~oil of gladness [Ps., 44, 8],
 935 MendicantVision,       5,2    |                refers above all to the Old Testament, which preaches
 936 MendicantVision,       4,3    |       affection he recovers spiritual ~olfaction. When he embraces the incarnate
 937     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              Eagle, the ~Lion, and the Olive Branch; or the use of certain
 938     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |                1946.~ ~ ~ - - , "Opera Omnia," As Claras Aquas (Quaracchi),
 939 MendicantVision,       5,7    |       Therefore it is ~all-inclusive ("omnimodal"), because it is one to
 940 MendicantVision,       5,8    |             And this is so since it is omnipotent, ~omniscient, and all-good.
 941 MendicantVision,       5,8    |               since it is omnipotent, ~omniscient, and all-good. And to see
 942 MendicantVision,       4,7    |                and this as with ~wings opened for flying which hold the
 943     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |              London, 1946.~ ~ ~ - - , "Opera Omnia," As Claras Aquas (
 944 MendicantVision,       5,6    |         thought of ~by an intellect as opposed to these, and one of these
 945     Pref                      |             Fathers contained in "Tria Opuscula" ~(Quaracchi), fifth edition,
 946     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              reality, that classes are ordained by God and ~are not simply
 947 MendicantVision,       2,11   |          productive, exemplifying, and ordering, given to us for looking
 948     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               are ~responsible for the orderliness of the universe; they are
 949 MendicantVision,       4,4(2) |           nuntiatio, dictatio, ductio, ordinatio, roboratio, imperatio, susceptio, ~
 950 MendicantVision,       5,7(2) |                 ratio intelligendi, et ordo vivendi."~
 951 MendicantVision,       5,2    |              19]. Damascenus ["De fide orthodox.," 1, 9] therefore, following ~
 952 MendicantVision,       4,5    |                there is especially and outstandingly ~added as a support the
 953 MendicantVision,       7,2    |                rest in the tomb as if ~outwardly dead, yet knowing, as far
 954 MendicantVision,       5,1    |              are the Cherubim of glory overshadowing the propitiatory. By these
 955     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |             1939.~ ~ ~Prentice, Robert P., "The Psychology of Love
 956     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               the general. In ancient ~Pagan thought, there was a standard
 957     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                sets forth in very few ~pages a whole system of metaphysics;
 958 MendicantVision,       2,5    |        recipient, since the senses are pained by extremes and delight
 959     Pref                      |           Glanzman, S. J., who ~made a painstaking comparison of this translation
 960     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              saw, and which had ~three pairs of wings, has to be interpreted
 961     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |       mentioned as a saint in Dante's ~Paradiso. He was canonized in 1482
 962     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |             details of the ~vision are paralleled. The Seraph which Saint
 963     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            committed by our primordial parents, was nevertheless ~inherited
 964 MendicantVision,       3,3    |               relative or absolute, as partial or total, as transient or
 965 MendicantVision,       3,2    |         potency, ~and that it can also participate in Him.~ ~ ~
 966 MendicantVision,       1,0(1) |                then left it alone, ~as Pascal said of Descartes' God.~ ~ ~
 967     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |           itself, but ~also of certain passages in Exodus and Isaiah in
 968 MendicantVision,       7,3    |              who was ~with him when he passed over into God through the
 969 MendicantVision,       2,5    |               medium through ~which it passes, or to the end for which
 970 MendicantVision,       6,5    |             most actual with the most ~passive and mortal, the most perfect
 971 MendicantVision,       7,2    |                and jubilation, makes a passover - that ~is, the phase or
 972 MendicantVision,       7,5(1) |              Theology," Ch. I [Migne, "Pat. Graec.," Vol. III, 997].~ ~ ~
 973     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                  who is looking upon a patch of red, sees precisely what
 974     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                publication of "Aeterni Patris," in 1879. ~That encyclical
 975     Pref,   Intro,Biograph    |                Theology"), the "Biblia Pauperum" ("Bible of the Poor"),
 976 MendicantVision,       6,2    |                         2~See then and pay heed, since the best which
 977 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |                that hated peace he was peaceable [Ps., 119, 7], "Pray ye
 978 MendicantVision,       7,1    |                peace, where the truly ~peaceful man reposes in peace of
 979     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               of Saint Bonaventura was peculiar in that it was based on
 980 MendicantVision,       5,8    |           therefore it encompasses and penetrates all duration, existing at
 981 MendicantVision,       6,2    |               highest degree of mutual penetration and ~one operates with the
 982     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |               mainly interested in the Pentateuch, the allegorical method
 983                               | per
 984 MendicantVision,       2,5    |             takes delight in an object perceived ~through an abstracted similitude
 985 MendicantVision,       3,2    |                 not as though it ~were perceiving them for the first time,
 986 MendicantVision,       4,6    |                and the most delightful perceptions of wisdom - in accordance
 987     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              are the simple matters of perceptual fact which we are likely
 988 MindRoad,Prologue,4           |               invite the reader, lest ~perchance he should believe that it
 989     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                as characteristic ~of a period to which they refer as one
 990     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |                in the ~mind of God. If permanence and invariability are marks
 991 MendicantVision,       3,3    |              or total, as transient or permanent, as ~dependent or independent,
 992 MendicantVision,       3,5    |      essentially or accidentally, but ~personally. When therefore the mind
 993 MendicantVision,       3,6    |            which makes us ~skillful in persuasion or stirring the emotions.
 994 MindRoad,Prologue,5           |            these ~thoughts must not be perused lightly, but should be meditated
 995 MendicantVision,       7,2    |               passover - that ~is, the phase or passage [Exod., 12, 11]
 996 MindRoad,Prologue,1           |              Eph., 1, 17; Luke, 1, 79; Phil., 4, 7], which peace our ~
 997 MendicantVision,       7,6    |            shown to us we may say with Philip, "It is enough for us" [
 998     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |            which goes back at least to Philo-Judaeus in the Hebraic-~Christian
 999     Pref,   Intro,Intro       |              history of thought, ~both philosophic and scientific. Thus we
1000     Pref,   Intro,Biblio      |                     Gilson, E. H., "La Philosophie de St. Bonaventure," Paris,
  |