Feeling is atheistic in the sense of the orthodox belief, which attaches religion to an external object; it denies an objective God--it is itself God.
If it is my disposition, my faith, which alone makes the divine body a means of sanctification to me, which transubstantiates the dry bread into pneumatic animal substance, why do I still need an external object?
Love has God in itself: faith has God out of itself; it estranges God from man, it makes him an external object.
The clearest examples of sensation are furnished by the study of man, and are taken from cases where we perceive an external object.
Looking at an external object, we remain in communion with our fellows, for we receive, or think we receive, identical sensations.
The image results from a partial cerebral excitement, which sensation results from an excitement which also acts upon the peripheral sensory nerves, and corresponds to an external object--an excitant which the image does not possess.
This shows an evident tendency to refer our sensations at once to an external cause, or indicates that our sensations always carry with them an implicit reference to an external object.
When, however, under the same stimulation, in place of these random movements, the child reacts mentally in a definite way, it signifies on his part the recognition of an external object.
Perception, on the other hand, signifies the recognition of an external object as presented to the mind here and now.
The work of art has no feeling in itself, and is not through and through a living thing, but, regarded as an external object, is dead.
Artistic contemplation accepts the work of art just as it displays itself qua external object, in immediate determinateness and sensuous individuality clothed in colour, figure, and sound, or as a single isolated perception, etc.
In this way is generated the feeling of contact with an external object, and this is what is commonly called the sense of touch, which is simply a feeling produced in the great nerve-center of the brain.
At the surface of the body and limbs, the external termini of the nerves are exposed to disturbance by contact with an external object.
What is differentiated from it is as yet no external object (as in consciousness), but only the aspects of its own sentient totality, &c.
Mind is just this elevation above nature and physical modes, and above the complication with an external object--in one word, above the material, as its concept has just shown.
Abstract self-consciousness is the first negation of consciousness, and for that reason it is burdened with an external object, or, nominally, with the negation of it.
As the Adwaitees hold that an external object is merely the product of our mental states, Prakriti is nothing more than illusion, and Purush is the only reality; it is the one existence which remains eternal in this universe of Ideas.
The sexual life of the child exhausts itself in the exercise of a series of partial instincts which seek, independently of one another, to gain satisfaction from his own body or from an external object.
It originates in unemployed libido and replaces the object of love that is lacking by an external object or situation.
In virtue of continued practice and effort, the need of an external objecton which to rest the meditation is outgrown.
In the first stage of the consideration of an external object, the perceiving mind comes to it, preoccupied by the name and idea conventionally associated with that object.
Those who have died, entered the paradise between births, are in a condition resembling meditation without an external object.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "external object" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.