St Augustine of Hippo and the other fellow Augustinians, such as St Bonaventure, argued that the human mind lacks the cognitive capacity to attain the necessary, certain, and the immutable truth. This necessary, certain, and the immutable truth, they argued, can only come through divine illumination whose source is God. For this reason, many people have recourse to religious places in search of this immutable and necessary truth about nature and human beings. This paper argued that discourse about truths reduces to discourse about language truth. If it is true that language and meaning are natural and originate form human cognitive faculty, then statements about the idea of divine truth, divine illumination, necessity, and even every statem...
This text aims to show that the core of human divinity according to Aristotle is exercising the divi...
In Saint Augustine’s works, especially in The City of God, The Confessions, and On Free Choice of th...
William of Auvergne (1180–1249) was one of the first wave professors of University in Paris to engag...
Roughly speaking, Augustine claims that ‘Immutable Truth’ is superior to the human mind and, consequ...
This study is a work of constructive theology that retrieves the ancient Christian understanding of ...
Augustinian interiority is a way of deifying ourselves in order to attain true happiness(i.e., teleo...
All men, says Aristotle, have a natural desire for knowledge. The need for knowledge is a law of our...
According to St. Thomas, words refer to actual things by the mediation of concepts in the intellect....
This thesis reinterprets the significance of the Doctrine of the Fall to Augustine’s relationship wi...
From close to its inception, St. Augustine’s misunderstanding of the nature of ancient Greek philoso...
The discussion about the relationships between reason and faith in the theology of Augustine is conn...
É intuito esclarecer o modo como o filósofo de Hipona, em seus Solilóquios, ao retomar os argumentos...
According to St. Augustine Faith and Reason are intertwined, overlapping each other, but without exc...
This paper is based on the words of welcome to the symposium on Religion and the Body on 16 June 201...
Human beings by nature are rational beings. They are endowed with the gift of intellect in order to ...
This text aims to show that the core of human divinity according to Aristotle is exercising the divi...
In Saint Augustine’s works, especially in The City of God, The Confessions, and On Free Choice of th...
William of Auvergne (1180–1249) was one of the first wave professors of University in Paris to engag...
Roughly speaking, Augustine claims that ‘Immutable Truth’ is superior to the human mind and, consequ...
This study is a work of constructive theology that retrieves the ancient Christian understanding of ...
Augustinian interiority is a way of deifying ourselves in order to attain true happiness(i.e., teleo...
All men, says Aristotle, have a natural desire for knowledge. The need for knowledge is a law of our...
According to St. Thomas, words refer to actual things by the mediation of concepts in the intellect....
This thesis reinterprets the significance of the Doctrine of the Fall to Augustine’s relationship wi...
From close to its inception, St. Augustine’s misunderstanding of the nature of ancient Greek philoso...
The discussion about the relationships between reason and faith in the theology of Augustine is conn...
É intuito esclarecer o modo como o filósofo de Hipona, em seus Solilóquios, ao retomar os argumentos...
According to St. Augustine Faith and Reason are intertwined, overlapping each other, but without exc...
This paper is based on the words of welcome to the symposium on Religion and the Body on 16 June 201...
Human beings by nature are rational beings. They are endowed with the gift of intellect in order to ...
This text aims to show that the core of human divinity according to Aristotle is exercising the divi...
In Saint Augustine’s works, especially in The City of God, The Confessions, and On Free Choice of th...
William of Auvergne (1180–1249) was one of the first wave professors of University in Paris to engag...