So our pseudo-standard is Inclusionism, and, if a datum be a correlate to a more widely inclusive outlook as to this earth and its externality and relations with externality, its harmony with Inclusionism admits it.
Let us then concentrate attention on that which we have that is at the same time the most removed fromexternality and the least penetrated with intellectuality.
As to the second, we will limit ourselves to pointing out that perfect spatiality would consist in a perfect externality of parts in their relation to one another, that is to say, in a complete reciprocal independence.
Sometimes the most complete historical enlightenment will not suffice to dispel the shadow which their moral externality casts over the mind.
Yet just at this lowest plunge of experience, in this drunkenness of the soul, does the overwhelming reality and externality of the other mind dawn upon us.
Primary contacts are those of "intimate face-to-face association"; secondary contacts are those of externality and greater distance.
How does "the stranger" include externalityand intimacy?
I do not believe that the real externality to us of anything, except other minds, is capable of proof.
Hence this substance is finite; for the separation andexternality of form and matter are precisely what constitute the nature of the finite.
Finitude consists in this, that a distinction as regards something else is an externalityto some other object.
Now, between this succession without externality and this externality without succession a kind of endosmotic commerce goes on.
Pure duration is nothing but a succession of qualitative changes fusing, interpenetrating, without outlines or tendency to externality by interrelation, without any kinship with number.
The ego touches the external world; and its sensations, though fused in each other, retain something of the reciprocal externalitywhich objectively characterizes their causes.
The literalism and externality of formulated theology are rebuked by the simplicity of the spiritual and internal forces which are here brought to light.
Our western civilization prides itself upon its practicality; but externality would better define it.
Now, externality is the distinguishing mark of things which occupy space, while states of consciousness are not essentially external to one another and become so only by being spread out in Time regarded as a homogeneous medium.
Irrationality andexternality cannot be the last truth about things.
Man being an outsider and a mere subject to God, not his intimate partner, a character of externality invades the field.
To this extent, then, externality is analogous to other relations; and only to this extent, in our previous arguments, has it been regarded as a relation.
The body, however, is a presented object like any other, and externality of objects to it is, therefore, a special case of the mutual externality of presented things.
We could never, in other words, infer the existence of diverse but interrelated things, unless the object of sense-perception could have substantival complexity, and for such complexity we require a form of externality other than time.
What is the relation to experience of a form of externality in general?
But this reducesexternality to the Self to externality to the body.
To prove this, however, we must first define the notion of a form of externality in general.
This element must be non-inferential, for from whatever number or combination of presentations, which did not of themselves demand diversity in their objects, I could never be led to infer the mutual externality of their objects.
What we really mean, therefore, by the relations defining a position, is, when we undo our previous abstraction, the relations of externality by which some thing is related to other things.
It has used a transcendental argument, so an opponent may contend, without sufficiently proving that knowledge about externality must be possible without reference to the matters external to each other.
The mediaeval economist believed in the externality of relations; he prosecuted for the offenses of forestalling and regrating the man who would make a profit by merely changing things in place.
So conceived the doctrine of external relations appears to be rather the doctrine of complete externality of things.
It is in virtue of this passive element that the ideal externality takes upon itself phenomenal or sensible form, and thus appears as spatial externality.
Bergson really means the same thing by "matter" as by "space" and that is simply mutual distinctness of parts and externality of relations, in a word logical complexity.
This qualitative flavour, however, is, of course, not a quality in the logical sense which implies distinctness and externality of relations.
These two logical characteristics of mutual distinction of terms and externality of relations certainly do belong to the abstractions employed in explanations, and we commonly suppose that they belong to everything else besides.
Parts" united by synthesis have not the logical characteristics of mutual distinction and externality of relations, they interpenetrate and modify one another.
For this reason, the sensuous externality of concrete form is accepted and represented, as in Symbolic art, as something transient and fugitive.
Next comes our ordinary vision of the external world--and this, again, is pushed to its highest degree of externality by the employment of artificial aids to sight.
To feel that sharp, cruel, implacable externalityof things melt, vanish, and dissolve!
On awakening, the implacable externality of things pressed upon his sight until he felt he knew what the mad feel, and then it seemed impossible to begin another day.
This new deception is exactly what the old ones were: its essence consists in the substitution of an externality for reason and conscience, and this externality is observation, as in theology it was revelation.
The name, as giving an existence to the content in intelligence, is the externalityof intelligence to itself; and the inwardising or recollection of the name, i.
The Soul, when its corporeity has been moulded and made thoroughly its own, finds itself there a single subject; and the corporeity is an externality which stands as a predicate, in being related to which, it is related to itself.
In both cases with a limitation caused by the externality and fragmentariness of the facts and the need of interpreting them through our own conscious experiences.
Conceived as having the inward purpose of the subjective soul thus imposed upon it, the body is treated as an immediateexternality and a barrier.
This externality can pervert his action and bring to light something else than lay in it.
As the interconnexion of the names lies in the meaning, the conjunction of their meaning with the reality as names is still an (external) synthesis; and intelligence in this its externalityhas not made a complete and simple return into self.
The spirit is not some one mode or meaning which finds utterance or externality only in a form distinct from itself: it does not manifest or reveal something, but its very mode and meaning is this revelation.
In the Principles of Human Knowledge, externalityin its ultimate sense as independence of all mind is considered.
In these works he attacked the existing theories of externality which to the unphilosophical mind is proved by visual evidence.
As Kaftan argues, we can escape the dreadful externality and artificiality of this scheme, only as redemption and regeneration are brought back to their primary place in consciousness.
It is clear that the whole matter of revelation is thus apprehended by Kant with more externality than we should have believed.
The poetry, the romance, the artistic criticism of this movement set themselves free at a stroke from theological bondage and from the externality of conventional ethics.
In point of externality there was not much to choose between views which were felt to be radically opposed the one to the other.
High Lutheranism had issued in the same externality in Germany before Kant and Schleiermacher, and the New England theology before Channing and Bushnell.
At their hands the doctrine was rescued from that forensic externality into which Calvinism had degenerated.
We do not invent the notion ofexternality or outsideness in space from an experience in which it originally has no part.
I see where I was heretofore, and the degree of externality which was mixed with the influences that I co-operated with, an externalityfrom which I now feel that I have been freed.
It is the same thing in the Greek Religion where the god present in devotion changes into prosaic statues and marble; or in painting, where thisexternality is likewise arrived at, when the god becomes mere canvas or wood.
A form of the imagination or an historical form, such as Christ, must for the spirit be spiritual; and thus it ceases to be an external matter, seeing that the form of externality is dead.
But one of the forms of externality is Time, and this form requires to be further examined both in the Philosophy of Nature and the finite Mind.
It postulates itself in the externality which is just the universal and the distinctive form of existence in Nature.
The difference is not so much that of externality or internality of origin, as it is a difference of character.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "externality" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.