His belief on God is seen in his understanding of the word wisdom. In chapter 1 of the book 8 of the City of God, Augustine stated that wisdom is God. So if philosophers were lovers of wisdom, as described by Pythagoras, then they are lovers of God. A wise man is to set example to what is living the good life and that is to balance the different thrusts in life. This pursuit of loving wisdom then, is a pursuit of loving God.
This philosophy can also be seen in the way Augustine interprets the
philosophy of the Greek philosophers. He showed that their ideas about the
principle of things needed another reality that can cause the dynamism of these
matters. Augustine’s trace of the history of thought of the Ionic school ended with Diogenes and
Archelaus whom explained that their principle of things answers the question of
the original substance of the world and why it needs to change and produce
other things. Augustine did not end until he found an answer in which can prove
principle of things and what causes it to transform and form another thing.
Diogenes and Archelaus’ answers then prove that there is
another reality which is the divine mind that causes the production and change
because of its capacity of imagining the possibilities of the world. Something
urges the matter to change and produce the other things in the world in which
he calls the divine mind present in the original substance.
The idea of the divine mind is the idea of someone or
something greater than the material world for it is something that causes the
more important factor of the original substance which is the reason to why it
changes and produces.
Philosophy for Augustine is asserting God's influence in everything. It can be seen through his definition of wisdom, which he refers to as God, and through his trace of the history of thought of the Ionic school, where he stopped answering the problem of the original substance with Diogenes and Archelaus who attributes a principle thing and a divine mind.
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Source:
Schaff, P. (1896). Augustine on Ancient Philosophy (M. Dods,
Trans.).
In Klima, G., Allhoff, F., & Vaidya, A. (Ed.). Medieval
Philosophy: Essential Readings with Commentary
(pp. 31-32). Blackwell Publishing: Australia.
In Klima, G., Allhoff, F., & Vaidya, A. (Ed.). Medieval
Philosophy: Essential Readings with Commentary
(pp. 31-32). Blackwell Publishing: Australia.
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