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Passages similar to: Stromata (Miscellanies) — Chapter XVI: Scripture the Criterion By Which Truth and Heresy Are Distinguished.
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Christian Mysticism
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XVI: Scripture the Criterion By Which Truth and Heresy Are Distinguished. (21)
But, as appears, we incline to ideas founded on opinion, though they be contrary, rather than to the truth. For it is austere and grave. Now, since there are three states of the soul - ignorance, opinion, knowledge - those who are in ignorance are the Gentiles, those in knowledge, the true Church, and those in opinion, the Heretics. Nothing, then, can be more clearly seen than those, who know, making affirmations about what they know, and the others respecting what they hold on the strength of opinion, as far as respects affirmation without proof.
Greek
Book V (478-479)
True. Of not-being, ignorance was assumed to be the necessary correlative; of being, knowledge? True, he said. Then opinion is not concerned either wi...
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Sufi
The Man who prayed earnestly to be fed without work (1-11)
Knowledge or conviction, opposed to opinion. Little is known by any one but the spiritual man, The others, hovering between two opinions, Knowledge...
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Greek
Book V (477)
Certainly, he said; for opinion is that with which we are able to form an opinion. And yet you were acknowledging a little while ago that knowledge is...
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Neoplatonic
The Intellectual-principle, the Ideas, and the Authentic Existence (7)
Knowledge in the reasoning soul is on the one side concerned with objects of sense, though indeed this can scarcely be called knowledge and is better...
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
On Divine Names, Caput II (2)
For, if there is any one who has placed himself entirely in opposition to the Oracles, he will be also entirely apart from our. philosophy; and, if he...
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Greek
Book V (476)
He is wide awake. And may we not say that the mind of the one who knows has knowledge, and that the mind of the other, who opines only, has opinion? C...
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Neoplatonic
II, Chapter XI (1)
In what follows, in which you think that ignorance and deception about these things are impiety and impurity, and in which you exhort us to the true...
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Greek
Book VII (533)
Custom terms them sciences, but they ought to have some other name, implying greater clearness than opinion and less clearness than science: and this,...
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