"Although my knowledge increase more and more, nevertheless I am not, therefore, induced to think that it will ever be actually infinite, since it can never reach that point beyond which it shall be incapable of further increase. But I conceive God as actually infinite, so that nothing can be added to his perfection. And in fine, I readily perceive that the objective being of an idea cannot be produced by a being that is merely potentially existent, which, properly speaking, is nothing, but only by a being existing formally or actually."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Meditations_on_First_Philosophy
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Meditations on First Philosophy
76 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Meditations on First Philosophy →
Related Quotes
"There remains only the inquiry as to the way in which I received this idea from God; for I have not drawn it from the…"
"He [God] cannot be a deceiver, since it is a dictate of the natural light that all fraud and deception spring from so…"
"I observe that there is not only present to my consciousness a real and positive idea of God, or of a being supremely…"
"The unity, the simplicity, or inseparability of all the properties of Deity, is one of the chief perfections I concei…"
"The mind in conceiving turns in some way upon itself, and considers some one of the ideas it possesses within itself;…"
"When I make myself the object of reflection, I not only find that I am an incomplete, [imperfect] and dependent being…"
"I was readily persuaded that I had no idea in my intellect which had not formerly passed through the senses."
"I do not find that, from the distinct idea of corporeal nature I have in my imagination, I can necessarily infer the …"
"In all fraud and deceit there is a certain imperfection: and although it may seem that the ability to deceive is a ma…"
"Just as we learn by faith that the supreme felicity of another life consists in the contemplation of the Divine majes…"