Coherence also knowns as the quality of being logical and consistent was something everyone wanted to reach in the medieval times. The medieval quest for coherence was a goal for a lot of people and a goal people wanted their work to reach, some of them were Augustine (354-430), The Quran (610-632), and Dante Alighieri (1265-1321). Augustine, The Quran, and Dante Alighieri created their work to try and understand what being logical and consistent meant and to help people understand it along the way as well. Augustine was born in 354 and died 430, he lived in a transitional period – a time of great instability and, simultaneously, cultural and religious ferment. Mystery and cult religions were particularly popular, as witnessed by Augustine (Norton, 1177). Augustine began his work on Confessions in 397 when he was 43 years old. Confessions is, as the name suggests, autobiographical, the story of one man’s life in his own words. (Norton, 1178). Augustine’s work is an example of how he reached coherence. In his book Confessions he tells the story of his childhood, how he turned away from god, his experience in being a student in Carthage, moving to Rome to teach, his love to a girl who he could not be with, converting to Manichees, and his mothers’ death. He tells the events he went through and how he coped with them, which helped him understand life and gain the qualities of being logic and consistent in his own way. The Quran is another great example of the quest for coherence, except this time the quest for coherence is offered to everyone who believes in the Quran. The Quran was written between 610 and 632, it was received by Muhammad through the meditation of the angel Gabriel (Jibreel) over a period of about 23 years and ending with his death in 632. During that time the Quran only existed as an oral recitation by Muhammad and the growing community of Muslims. When he died the Muslim community believe the oral text should