Date: 1580
The Pyrrhonist's mind "is a white sheet prepared to take from the finger of God what form soever it shall please him to imprint therein."
preview | full record— Montaigne, Michel Eyquem seigneur de (1533-1592)
Date: 1588
"Men do not know the natural infirmity of their mind: it does nothing but ferret and quest and keeps incessantly whirling arounnd building up and becoming entangled in its own work, like our silkworms, and is suffocated in it."
preview | full record— Montaigne, Michel Eyquem seigneur de (1533-1592)
Date: 1606
To properly prepare a soul for God, one must "qualify it, cleanse it, strip it, and denude it of all opinion, belief, inclination, make it like a white sheet of paper, dead to itself and the world, so that God may live and operate in it."
preview | full record— Charron, Pierre (1541-1603)
Date: 1641
A geometrical argument fills the mind and allows one to see everything at a single glance
preview | full record— Mersenne, Marin (1588-1648)
Date: 1641
A calm mind, free from the hurly-burly of external things, may fix its gaze on itself
preview | full record— Arnauld, Antoine (1612-1694)
Date: 1641
"But if the entire soul is something of this kind, why should you, who may be thought of as the noblest part of the soul, not be regarded as being, so to speak, the flower, or the most refined and pure and active part of it?"
preview | full record— Gassendi, Pierre (1592-1655)
Date: 1641
The self may be imagined as a "pure, transparent, rarefied substance like a wind."
preview | full record— Gassendi, Pierre (1592-1655)
Date: 1641
"Now if we are to become aware of something, it is necessary for the thing to act on the cognitive faculty by transmitting its semblance to the faculty or by informing the faculty with its semblance. Hence it seems clear that the faculty itself, not being outside itself, cannot transmit a semblan...
preview | full record— Gassendi, Pierre (1592-1655)
Date: 1641
"If you do not accept this, then you must untie the knot which in your view must be binding us with adamantine bonds and preventing our mind from soaring above every kind of body."
preview | full record— Mersenne, Marin (1588-1648)
Date: 1641
"You may say that you occupy the citadel in your brain and there receive whatever messages are transmitted by the animal spirits which move through the nerves, and sense-perception thus occurs there, where you dwell, despite the fact that it is said to occur throughout the body."
preview | full record— Gassendi, Pierre (1592-1655)