But an angel cannot know all things by his essence; and his intellect must be perfected by some species in order to know things.
Hence to know things thus by their likeness in the one who knows, is to know them in themselves or in their own nature; whereas to know them by their similitudes pre-existing in God, is to see them in God.
It's our business to know things, sir," was Sage's quiet reply.
On the other hand, he knows that to perceive things we must have sense organs and sensations, and he cannot quarrel with the psychologists for saying that we know things only in so far as they are revealed to us through our sensations.
Can it be that we know things independently of the avenues of the senses?
Very early in the history of speculative thought it occurred to men, however, to ask how it is that we know things, and whether we are sure we do know them.
It may be held that the positive side of Kant's position, though indefensible in the form that we know things as they appear to us, is valid in the form that we know what things look or appear.
One doesn't need to stand up to one's neck in experience, in a perfect muck of experience, in order to know things, in order to know they are there.
To know ill is worse than not to know at all, and Montaigne says that we ought to know things well.
People did not want toknow things as they truly were, but only as they wished them to be.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "know things" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.