Searching The Philosophy of Thomas Aquinas Matches
You may select a new search term and repeat your search.
Searches are not case sensitive, and you can use
regular expressions
in your queries.
Query type:
Query was: physical
Here are the matching lines in their respective documents.
Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below
to jump to that point in the document.
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture I: Thomas and Augustine
Matching lines:
- the relation of this moral-physical sun in the heavens, to the
- physical eyes as something at the same time spiritual.
- sympathetically moved by the physical self-evidence, by the
- not look upon the physical universe as spiritual-material. As
- plants and minerals and animals and physical men, was something
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture II: The Essence of Thomism
Matching lines:
- Plotinus considers human nature with its physical and psychic
- translated into more physical conceptions. And Aristotle had it
- psychic-spiritual on the physical body and the subsequent
- physical body was sufficiently performed: they had an idea of
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture III: Thomism in the Present Day
Matching lines:
- physical organism of man? Thomas Aquinas' view was still
- psychic as working itself into the physical. When through
- conception and birth man enters upon the physical existence, he
- is equipped by means of his physical inheritance only with the
- of physical comprehension; but that without pre-existence the
- conceptions, is conceived only out of the physical world around
- is, we must be free, but as we live here in the physical body,
- physical body. That becomes concrete, real knowledge. The
- how I tried to show there, how one part of the physical human
- as to say concerning the physical body, how the spirit or the
- spiritual-psychic into each separate part of the physical
- which is otherwise bound to the physical man, becomes
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Comment I: Thomas and Platonism
Matching lines:
- particular physically visible man is not the same as
- the individual physical man, which does not belong to the
- physical men. Thus we can also say that the separate man is
- man” of all physical humanity, in so far as human nature
- over to physical humanity.
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Comment IV: Man as a Learning Being
Matching lines:
- as one may also say that we see and judge everything physical
- to see something physically, so it is not necessary, in order
- higher things is more perfect than its application to physical
- thus gain a proportionate knowledge from physical things, just
- learn with regard to all physical nature. Thus if it were to
- to be void of all physical nature — which is
- extracts this knowledge from physical things through the
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Comment V: The Application of Intelligence to the Human Body
Matching lines:
- psychophysical quality is for Thomas the basis of man's
The
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|