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Return to Great Conversation 8e Student Resources
Chapter 13 Self-Quiz
Quiz Content
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Augustine claims to be able to refute skepticism by
arguing that God would not deceive us.
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showing that it is absurd to think we could be mistaken about everything.
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pursuing that skeptical infinite regress right to its end.
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a direct appeal to Christ, the Interior Teacher.
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Augustine
agrees with Socrates that virtue is knowledge.
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agrees with Socrates that the explanation for wrongdoing is ignorance.
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agrees with St. Paul that our wills are divided and that we cannot heal ourselves.
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agrees that the self-reliance of the Stoics is the key to happiness.
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Augustine was attracted to the Manicheans because they
seemed to deal with the problem of evil rationally.
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held that there is one God, omnipotent, omniscient, and perfectly good.
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took the Scriptures literally.
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thought, as Augustine himself did, that will was more fundamental than intellect.
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Augustine solves the problem of natural evil by
feeding the hungry and providing for the poor.
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accepting that there is, always has been, and always will be an evil power in conflict with the good.
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arguing that without evil there couldn't be any good.
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denying that evil is a positive reality.
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One crucial step in Augustine's argument that God must exist is this:
Truth exists and is superior to all.
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Whatever is superior to us is God.
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Either nothing is superior to truth or there is something superior to truth.
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As the measure of all that is and of all that is not, there is nothing superior to us.
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Unlike Plotinus, Augustine holds that
all of being streams incessantly in an eternal emanation from the One.
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the created world is not continuous with the being of God.
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worldly things differ from each other in both being and goodness.
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all that is arises mysteriously out of the primal nothingness.
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In meditating on the puzzling nature of time, Augustine concludes that
time is an illusion and only God's eternity exists.
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neither the past nor the future nor the present can have any reality at all.
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time came into being with the creation.
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God endures through all past and future time, as well as in the present.
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Sin, according to Augustine, is
having a disordered love life.
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not to be attributed to babies, who are truly innocent.
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something that just happens to us-- a fate we cannot help.
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a mistake we make when we don't know better.
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Why do we sin? Augustine answers that
we were created with a flaw that tends toward evil.
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we are made to sin by the Evil One, who tempts us and leads us into evil.
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there is no cause for it.
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it is because we have a body dragging us down from the spiritual plane.
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A good and happy life, Augustine thinks, is
the result of an act of free will that straightens out our disordered loves.
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one of those things that are in our power, as opposed to things not in our power.
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the result of God's grace.
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reached by identifying yourself with the pure, unsullied soul within.
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Citizens of the heavenly city
have a dual citizenship.
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live lives of quiet perfection, in contrast to the citizens of the earthly city.
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pursue peace, in contrast with the citizens of the earthly city.
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are those who have died and gone to heaven.
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