According to the analysis that G.K. Chesterton makes in his book "The Permanent Philosophy", about the philosophical ideas of St. Thomas Aquinas, one of the principal and best known characteristics of his philosophy was the idea that the mind was meant to know the world outside, expand outwards and gather all possible ideas and information from what it outside of man himself. He believes that belief itself comes from what is seen and touched, from the outside world, more than just the inner reflections within the human mind. In this particular excerpt, St. Thomas is reconciling the ideas put forth by faith and by logic and that at first would seem unreconcilable. On the one hand, there is faith, the faith in what the Church teaches about the world having a beginning and an end, and the sense of a Creator, who cannot be seen but only known through His creations. To Aquinas, there is no dispute of this belief taught by the Church, simply because it is the Church that teaches it. That is his faith. Moreover, to him, regardless of whether the world has a beginning and an end, or not, it would have need of a Creator from whom it all came to be, because things cannot simply spring from nothing. But for those who base their lives in only logic, there is no logical reason to believe that the world was created and will end or that there is a Creator. But Aquinas simply says that the ideas of a world with beginning and end, and of a Creator, cannot be disproven by those who do not believe and reason itself does not provide evidence that the Church´s teachings are wrong, which logically leads to know that unless proven that these ideas are wrong, they must be logically right.