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    PATEROS CATHOLIC SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT The effects of Gadgets in the Academic Performance of IV – St. Thomas Aquinas SY 2012 – 2013 I. INTRODUCTION What are the possible effects of gadgets in the academic of the students of St. Thomas Aquinas? Is it positive or is it negative? Both sides are possible. It can be positive in the view of the students but negative on the view of the teachers. Either way‚ the researchers wants to view all

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    on the existence of God. He strongly believed and propagated that God was dead. The “death of God” often came up in several of Nietzsche’s philosophical contributions. It was often the backdrop which he used for describing human tendencies and carving pathways for human nature. “The best passage on God’s death is offered by Nietzsche in The Gay Science in section 125‚ entitled “The Madman”. There Nietzsche describes a man who enters the town market or bazaar and cries out loudly‚ “I seek God! I seek

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    1. Examine the strengths and weaknesses of the argument for the existence of God based on religious experience. (18) 2. ‘The argument merely indicates the probability of God and this is of little value to a religious believer.’ Discuss. (12) In contrast to the classical arguments for the existence of God‚ namely the ontological‚ cosmological and teleological arguments‚ the argument from religious experience doesn’t just entail a set logical of points arriving at a conclusion on a piece of paper

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    authority is given to every individual person. John Locke’s primary argument is that all people are born with equal rights‚ termed natural rights‚ that allow them to be treated the same and should be treated as such throughout their lives. He believed that all people have the natural right to govern themselves and their surroundings‚ free from outside duress. He stated that each of us has an equal right to the food‚ land‚ etc. that God has supplied us and we should all take it freely‚ but just what we

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    St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) St. Thomas Aquinas was a Dominican Monk‚ gifted scholar & a defender of Roman Catholicism against the spread of Islam & Greek philosophy in Europe. He was born to an aristocratic family Roccasecca‚ Italy‚ where he joined the Dominican order while studying philosophy and theology at University of Naples. He lived during a time where a collection of Aristotelian texts in Latin that reopened the question of the relation between faith & reason

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    "Is the Existence of Evil incompatible with the existence of God?" "Without darkness there can be no light (Shestov)." This quote says a lot about our world as we know it. To truly know something we must also know it’s opposite. We would not know silent if there was not sound. There would be no young if we did not know old. So how could we believe that there is a good without an evil? To believe in the existence of a greatest good‚ which we call God‚ there must also be exist a source of evil as

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    Theory of Natural Law According to Thomas Aquinas The natural law is a moral theory that is said to be written on the hearts of all humans and is a guide for behavior. Thomas Aquinas held this theory to be part of the divine or eternal law that God made known and applied. Humans‚ as recipients of the natural law‚ from this and through reason‚ derive their natural inclinations on how to act properly. So‚ according to Aquinas‚ to practically achieve their proper end‚ these rational souls desire self-preservation

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    St. Thomas Aquinas agrees that god exists. He uses the A Posteriori approach to explain his arguments. One of St. Thomas Aquinas arguments is known as Efficient cause. Everything has a cause and nothing could happen with out one. Aquinas explains that it is impossible for anything to have its own cause. If something were to have its own cause it would have had to existed prior to itself‚ which would be impossible. Even if you were to believe in the Big Bang theory their has to be a first efficient

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    In class we discussed Thomas Aquinas’s idea of the hyman act. Which there are two parts of the human act that Thomas discusses. The first being external‚ the physical appearance. The second part‚ which is the internal‚ the psychological side. The external part is how we express ourselves in a physical matter‚ like what we wear‚ our hygiene‚ and many different ways to examine someone by their physical appearance. the external part of the human act is almost like a personal brand. We learned

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    Descartes Argument of God

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    God Does Not Necessarily Have to Exist In Descartes’ Meditations‚ he makes the strong claim that God must exist. I will first explain what Descartes’s argument for God’s existence is‚ and then I will attempt to support the argument that God does not need to necessarily exist through objections and replies. Premise 1: “We have an idea of God as an infinite and perfect being.” First‚ Descartes believes that there are properties that are inherently perfect. For example‚ being good is a perfection

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