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Historical Idealists:
St.  Augustine

"Too late have I loved thee, O thou Eternal beauty"

 

 

"Ideas are certain original forms of things, their archetypes, permanent and incommunicable, which are contained in the Divine intelligence. And though they neither begin to be nor cease, yet upon them are patterned the manifold things of the world that come into being and pass away. Upon these ideas only the rational soul can fix its gaze, endowed as it is with the faculty which is its peculiar excellence, i.e. mind and reason [mente ac ratione], a power, as it were, of intellectual vision; and for such intuition that soul only is qualified which is pure and holy, i.e., whose eye is normal, clear, and well adjusted to the things which it would fain behold" (De diversis quaest., Q. xlvi, in P.L., XL, 30).

WHAT OTHERS HAVE SAID

Otto Willmann
"In this sense St. Augustine developed the Platonic teaching, and in his philosophy is idealism in the genuine meaning of the term."