Prudential Macintosh grew up in Texarkana and is the author of the novel and magazine articles currently living in Dallas, where he raises his family. In the 1960 's, McIntosh entered the university of the University of Texas. She wrote an article about the feeling of being a mother in Texas with a woman in Texas and has not written yet. Prudential Macintosh has influenced the world's perception of Texas and Western countries through humorous writing about everyday life in Texas. Cautious Macintosh has three sons, and now she grew up in Highland Park.
47, 13-14: The next two articles discuss sinners and saints and encourage them to think about the difference between natural (supernatural) cautiousness and supernatural (injection) cautiousness. In answering the question as to whether the sinner is cautious, St. Thomas says the wrong cautiousness specific to sinners (effective reasoning for evil purposes) and limited warnings (effective in certain areas other than the end Inference) is distinguished. This is both good and evil, and the Bible is truthful and complete attention paid. On the other hand, everyone in an elegant state is cautious, but this does not guarantee a degree of perfect cautiousness. .
To be persistent in good faith, to be carefully educated and inspiring will determine the way between the extremes, embarrassment, gold between irony and rash. However, taking a moderate approach carefully is a cautious approach; for example, with musicians' fingers dexterity is inferior to music art in actual intelligence. In deciding the relationship between cautiousness and moral virtue, St. Thomas is guided by Aristotle's principle: "As a character of man, his judgment is also true." If we are ambitious, This is our pride. To put it briefly, it is good at agreeing to humility. Therefore, unless he coaches him through justice, temperament, perseverance, loyalty, and humility, as long as the coach does not train a horse, no one should carefully make a decision You can not do.
Attention is the most necessary to distinguish unfair things, and there is a good judgment there, so no one can pay attention. And if she is not led to attention her work harms better than good 101 110 Schoenfeldt, 60. 111 Schoenfeldt, 66. 112 Schoenfeldt, 61. 113 This term in Renaissance philosophy dominates passion 3 It refers to a part of a person's soul. - "Organic", so physiologically, psychological functions will differ if the organs are different. Catherine Park, "Organic Souls", "History of the Cambridge Renaissance Philosophy", Editor. Charles B. Schmitt et al. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 469