God Can not be Understood. God's Incomprehensibility in the Liber XXIV philosophorum (Chapters XVI & XVII) and its Roots in the Western Philosophical Tradition.

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Jan G. J. ter Reegen
The Liber XXIV Philosophorum in its XVIth e XVIIth thesis tells us about the ineffability of God as a consequence of His excellence and also in view of the fact that God can only think Himself. In this paper we will try to examine the base and dimensions of this statement, studying it as a part of a long tradition in ancient and medieval philosophy, i. e. Neoplatonism, and especially in the Liber de Causis.

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Reegen, Jan G. J. ter. “God Can not be Understood. God’s Incomprehensibility in the Liber XXIV philosophorum (Chapters XVI & XVII) and its Roots in the Western Philosophical Tradition”. Mirabilia: electronic journal of antiquity and middle ages, no. 2, pp. 150-7, https://raco.cat/index.php/Mirabilia/article/view/283662.