1. When we have this, we are freed from our anger and bitternes because of the actions and/or words of another. a forgiveness c. selfishness > b. hatred d. conceited 2. "Even if we grant that the senses yield no certainty in themselve so that we can always doubt their reports, one thing we canno doubt, and that is the fact that we doubt." a. St. Augustine c. St. Thomas b, St. Anselm d. St. Leo 3. For a hug, for every sunrise and sunset, to eat together as a family are our miracles. a. the beauty of hatred c. the beauty of a woman b. the beauty of nature d. the beauty of food 4. We need to acknowledge the help of other individuals in our live: Such moments of poverty and dependency on others are not a sig of weakness but being genuine with oneself a. Vulnerability c. selfishness b. loneliness d. failure 5. "Faith is to believe what you do not see; the reward of this faith i to see what you believe. a. St. Augustine c. St. Thomas Aquinas b. St. Anselm d. St. Leo the Great 6. Acceptance of it makes us hope and trust that all can be brough into good. a. Vulnerability c. selfishness b. loneliness d. failure 7. It can be rooted from our sense of vulnerability and fear of deati This experience is so common. a. Vulnerability c. selfishness b. loneliness d. failure 8. “Wisdom is not just an abstract logical construction; but it is substantially existent as the Divine Logos. Hence, philosophy is the love of God: it is then religious.” a. St. Augustine c. St. Thomas b. St. Anselm d. St. Leo 9. With our _, we can realize that our dependence on other people or gadgets is a possessiveness that we can be free from. a. Vulnerability c. selfishness b. loneliness d. failure 10. It is to experience richness, positivity, and transcendence. a. Vulnerability c. selfishness b. love d. failure 11. The union between body and soul helps us understand our totality as a person. a. St. Augustine c. St. Jerome b, Buddha d. St. Thomas Aquinas 12. Their concept of Transcendence has the preoccupation with the inner life - the road to enlightenment that stretches not outward but inward. To understand nature and the universe, we must turn within. a. Indian thought b. Great thinkers of Medieval philosophy c. Humanists d. Existentialists 13. Our spirituality separates us from animals; it differentiates moral dimension of our fulfillment in action. a. St. Augustine c. St. Jerome b. Buddha d. St. Thomas Aquinas 14. "The more we love, the more risks and fears there are in life.” a. St. Augustine c. St. Jerome b. Buddhist d. St. Thomas 15. The Indian's concept of Brahman has similarity with this German 19th century philosopher, who thinks that in the essence of Christianity, a person is God and God is in the person, . a. Herbert Mead c. Jean-Jacques Rousseau b. Thomas Hobbes d. Ludwig Feuerbach