Capitolo 4
exponent. The Franciscan and Dominican one that each has possessed great
schools of the philosophy and the dogmatic theology, and in sum there
it was a dozen individual line of speculation, each vitalized by some
the one personality, audacious, original, enthusiastic. This prodigious
mental and spiritual activity was widely raised from the schools,
the universities and the universities that had appeared entirely suddenly on
Europe. It was not never such activity long instructive lines. Almost
every cathedral had his/her school and a lot of the abbeys as good, as
for example, in France alone Cluny, Citeaux and Bec Martin of Street of
Turns, Laon, Rentals, Rheims and Paris. To these students of schools
poured in from all over the world in numbers that climb on to many
thousand for as Paris for example, and the mutual rivalries
it was intense and sometimes messy. Groups of students are able
chooses their his/her own masters and follows them from place to put, also
submitting them for disciplinary if in the their their opinion they didn't live
above to the their intellectual mark you/they had put as their standard. As
there were not only a religion and a social system but one
universal language as well, this gathering from all the four
quarters of Europe were perfectly possible, and it had a lot to do with
the maintenance of that unity that society marked for three centuries.
To the duration of Abelard the schools of Rentals and Paris were to
the height of their fame and the power. Fulbert, Bernard and Thierry,
all of Rentals, mended his/her fame from the one long period, and to Paris
Hugh and Richard of St. Victor and William of Champeaux were names
to implore with, while Anselm of Laon, Adelard of Bath Alan of
Lille, John of Salisbury, Pietro Lombard both entirely at times
students or teachers in one of the schools of the Cathedral, the
Abbey of St. Victor or Ste. Genevieve.
First in the Centuries Averages the identity of the theology and the philosophy
you/he/she had been proclaimed, while following the Mole-platonic one and Augustinian