id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 46901 McIntyre, J. Lewis (James Lewis) Giordano Bruno .txt text/plain 114569 6676 71 Long afterwards, at his trial, Bruno spoke of having the works of St. Thomas always by him, "continually reading, studying and re-studying three works together contain Bruno's finished philosophy of God and however far Bruno or Bacon or any of the nature-philosophers of the Bruno's thought: such are, for example, the idea of the Universal hand, while the outward form of Bruno's philosophy, and to a certain The universe to Bruno is transfused with spirit, soul or life, "the The method by which Bruno sought to know the nature of the souls of The two things which seemed to Bruno for his time the most desirable light of nature or reason, occurs again and again, not only in Bruno's and of the goodness of all things, but it is Bruno rather than Spinoza as by Bruno also:--Nature is infinite in the sense of "without limits ./cache/46901.txt ./txt/46901.txt