It is not a question of using either the palpable world or the intellect when trying to prove God s existence. Anselm apprehends being s very intelligibility as making it amenable todivine traces that turn out to be God s -muted- communication. Anselm practices in this sense -a blending of horizons- i.e. tradition (Plotinus, Augustine, Benedict). We human beings owe our own rationality to the same God who created the universe, us and our minds. The appreciation of a thus constituted reality unleashes a remarkable and refreshing fecundity (Mohler, Guardini, Barth, von Balthasar)....
It is not a question of using either the palpable world or the intellect when trying to prove God s existence. Anselm apprehends being s very intellig...