In contrast with this Uncreated, First Cause, all the other causes we have now to investigate are called created or second causes (causae secundae, creatae).
All that is and happens is absolutely determined by its causes, and nothing, nocausae finales for instance, can co-operate with these causes in determining the result.
How can it be explained as the necessary result solely of causae efficientes, of blindly working causes without a definite aim?
How account for the adaptiveness, both general and special, without causae finales, without intention and purposes, without guidance towards a conscious aim?
Natuerliche Schoepfungsgeschichte," as well as the passage before referred to in which it is asserted that we know only causae efficientes, nevercausae finales.
If it could have been arranged that he could meet magistrates and Senate on his arrival at Page 60 Romae offenderet, magno usui causae nostrae fuisset.
One of these was recently edited under the title Beatae Hildegardis causae et curae.
Nothing could be more unlike the ecstatic but well-ordered and systematic work of the prophetess of Bingen than the prosy disorder of the Causae et curae.
As in the Causae et curae, there are linguistic difficulties that prevent us attributing the Liber subtilitatum to Hildegard.
Thus God knows the world which he has made, but to us is vouchsafed merely an insight into mediate or second causes, causae secundae.
This we cannot but call reasonable and to the purpose, although it is all carried out by causae efficientes without there being any causae finales.
In the light of this teaching it is easy to decide the question, raised by Vasquez, whether perfect contrition justifies the sinner merely per modum dispositionis or per modum causae formalis.
Ostrogothis colitur mixtisque Gruthungis Phryx ager: hos parvae poterunt impellere causae Page 195 this shameful name and kept Rome unsullied by an unheard of crime.
Woide instances it as an example of the force of prejudice, that Wetstein "apparitionem lineolae aliicausae adscripsisse, quia eam abesse volebat.
Their skill in exploiting with his Imperial Majesty the causae irritatrices stood them in good stead.
All my supplications were in vain, for at courts and in large townscausae perduntur quae paupertate reguntur.
Does he credit me with so short a memory as to forget in three or four days the status causae vestrorum principum, or does he imagine that our affairs leave me sufficient leisure to listen to his never ending litanies.
This trick is an application of the fallacy non causae ut causae.
This is the diversion, and it is another application of the fallacy non causae ut causae.
Both rest exclusively upon mechanical or unconscious causes (causae efficientes), in no case upon prearranged or conscious causes (causae finales).
Two, then, of the greatcausae norborum, or disease inducers in this country are cold and indigestion.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "causae" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.