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Example sentences for "immanent"

Lexicographically close words:
imitator; imitators; immaculate; immaculately; immanence; immaterial; immateriality; immature; immaturity; immeasurable
  1. He therefore does not, like Ricardo, conceive of the crises as merely incidental, but as essential, as eruptions of the immanent conflicts on ever grander scale and at determinate periods.

  2. He has a perfect picture of the contradictions immanent in bourgeois production, yet he does not understand them, and therefore fails also to understand the process of their disintegration.

  3. In every system of mechanical forces an adjustment of the same must finally be arrived at through the removal of all immanent oppositions.

  4. The general province of education includes the development of the individual into the theoretical and practical reason immanent in him.

  5. The Oriental-theocratic education is immanent in Christian education through the Bible.

  6. The logical forms must be known explicitly in their pure independent forms, and not merely in their implicit state as immanent in objective forms.

  7. As in the case of religion, Immanent Idealism is a theory that gives life an invisible basis, but the invisible has been regarded as that which lies at the root of the present world, and not as a separate higher world outside our own.

  8. A sense of immanent grief was on her, grey loneliness and fear of the future.

  9. One is reminded of the American story in which a bright and intelligent wife asks her cultured but indifferent husband, "Is it true that God is immanent in us all?

  10. Nor do matters grow simpler when we ascend in the scale: we may trace the immanent Deity in all that is good and fair in nature, in all its smiling and beneficent moods--but what of nature's uglinesses and cruelties?

  11. The question is asked--again, quite naturally and inevitably--In what sense can we speak of God as immanent in the inorganic world?

  12. Bruno did not, however, speak of it as separate from the finite minds, but as immanent in them: nor did he regard it as the only immortal element in man.

  13. Thus God as principle is immanent in all things, and is the higher source from which they proceed.

  14. It has always been immanent in human thought even when not articulately expressed in human language.

  15. God is the immanent ground of men's spiritual being.

  16. These are mainly the immanent attributes of God, conceptions which flow from the very idea of the Absolute and Infinite Being.

  17. Is He the immanent Conservator of the universe--is his omnipotence the force, his reason the law, and his omnipresence the life of all nature?

  18. But if we say that Spirit is the originator and matter the recipient of force, or "the recipient of impulse and energy," and that the immanent God is the life of all nature, we are pure Theists.

  19. These are the immanent attributes of God.

  20. The vital theory regards nature as the product and the continued work of an ever-living and ever-creating Spirit, who is the immediate fountain of all force, and the immanent life of all that lives.

  21. Or is God still immanent in nature, upholding all substance, the power of all force, the life of all life, shaping all forms, and organizing all systems?

  22. Matter and its immanent force is immortal and indestructible.

  23. The immanent attributes of God are a necessary inbeing; the moral attributes of God are a voluntary outgoing, an eternally free, alternative forth-putting of choice for the right and the good.

  24. The intuition of reality is immanent to our own consciousness.

  25. As such, it can not have been conditioned by any immanent necessity in the Divine nature itself, nor by any necessary existence out of and extraneous to the Divine nature.

  26. We must open our minds to the stupendous fact that God is immanent in his universe and that it is literally and exactly true, as we were taught long ago, that, during every moment of our lives, in Him we live and move and have our being.

  27. The ideal is immanent in them; for the ideal means that environment in which our faculties would find their freest employment, and their most congenial world.

  28. And so long as we exist and recognize ourselves individually as persons or collectively as human, we must recognize also our immanent ideal, the realization of which would constitute perfection for us.

  29. To speak about an immanent purpose is very good sense; but to speak about a purpose behind which there is no Will is nonsense.

  30. I have seen evolution betray one of its greatest secrets to the soul of man--an immanent teleology, an invisible direction towards deeper consciousness, an intelligent movement towards greater understanding.

  31. For him, God is the Universal Spirit, the Absolute Reality immanent in all phenomena, the Love which reason finds in Goodness and intuition discovers in Beauty, the Father of men, the End and the very Spirit of Evolution.

  32. In its view Morality is an immanent phenomenon which occurs only within humanity--or to define it more accurately, within humanity organized as a society.

  33. If they are in a sense immanent in the life of an individual, he has neither a reason nor the means for learning them, reflecting upon them and forming them into distinct ideas.

  34. Yet it is an impersonal god, without name or history, immanent in the world and diffused in an innumerable multitude of things.

  35. But this does not mean that he resides in one subject in particular: he is immanent in all at once; he is diffused in the species as a whole.

  36. We already know that this principle is immanent in each of the members of the clan.

  37. Then, each of these gods is thought of as immanent in a special species of animal.

  38. But behind what is seen there is what may be surmised--two powers, immanent in life and originally intermingled, which were bound to part company in course of growth.

  39. A law connects changing terms and is immanent in what it governs.

  40. It would have been necessary to regard space itself, and the geometry which is immanent in space, as an ideal limit in the direction of which material things develop, but which they do not actually attain.

  41. Does not each living being thus realize a plan immanent in its substance?

  42. For the nature of a purely logical existence is such that it seems to be self-sufficient and to posit itself by the effect alone of the force immanent in truth.

  43. If the force immanent in life were an unlimited force, it might perhaps have developed instinct and intelligence together, and to any extent, in the same organisms.

  44. Either the hypothesis of a finality immanent in life should be rejected as a whole, or it must undergo a treatment very different from pulverization.

  45. If the mathematical order were a positive thing, if there were, immanent in matter, laws comparable to those of our codes, the success of our science would have in it something of the miraculous.

  46. The process of the development of the Idea or Absolute is in one regard the immanent process of the all.

  47. They are not to be used as premises but as immanent laws of thought, save only when an inference from true or admitted premises and correct in form is challenged.

  48. Hegel's treatment of the categories or thought determinations which arise in the development of the immanent dialectic is rich in flashes of insight, but most of them are in the ordinary view of logic wholly metaphysical.

  49. Logos was a faculty of God, the divine reason, immanent in God eternally, but not in distinct personality prior to the historical manifestation in Christ.

  50. It expresses the idea of an immanent reason in the world, and, under various modifications, is met with in Indian, Egyptian and Persian systems of thought.

  51. Hence, instead of being merely immanent in the Cosmos, it has an independent existence.

  52. Logos, produced of God's own substance, is both the divine intelligence that appears in the world as the Son of God, and the idea of the universe immanent in God.

  53. The relations of Christ to God were, of course, distinctly and definitely personal; but it must not be forgotten that we are not permitted, on any careful theological view, to transfer these directly to the immanent relations of the Godhead.

  54. Nothing requires more complete personality than love, which the view affirms to exist between the persons of the immanent Trinity, between the distinctions in the very Godhead.

  55. The unity and consistency of the immanent will of God, then, are the ultimate metaphysical ground of all reciprocal action.

  56. Education, we saw, may be made actual in a thousand different ways, only always on condition that we observe the law which proceeds from its innermost essence and constitutes its immanent ideal.

  57. This way we must follow if we are ever to acquire a thorough comprehension of the principles of the several theories of education, principles which are but the laws immanent to the life of education itself in its effective development.

  58. The latter, admitting only what is derived from the developing life of the spirit, can conceive of culture solely as an immanent product of this very life, and separable from it only by abstraction.

  59. What the poet here maintains as regards esthetics only is applicable to all the organic forms of creation--that is to those ruled by an immanent logic, and, like them, resembling works of Nature.

  60. The subject is at first comprehended as a whole; development is organic, and we may compare it to the embryological process that causes a living being to arise from the fertilized ovum, analogous to an immanent logic.

  61. This is what happens when transcendental knowledge is brought within the boundary of immanent knowledge; in doing this some sort of violence is done to the latter, since it is used for things for which it was not intended.

  62. To answer transcendental questions in language that is made for immanent knowledge must assuredly lead to a contradiction.

  63. It remains to ascertain whether the institutions of this period are really, as has been said, only temporary, or whether they are the result of laws immanent in society and eternal.

  64. But the indispensable truth that is involved in Immanent Idealism must be brought into wider relations, and thus made clear and modified, so that it may be more secure and more fruitful in its effect.

  65. Otherwise the way of Immanent Idealism leads to an anthropomorphism of a more refined kind; and there is a danger that the whole world which this system champions may be criticised hostilely and rejected as simply human.

  66. It is the aristocratic nature of this Immanent Idealism which first awakens suspicion and opposition.

  67. The conflict between Immanent Idealism and modern life is still more keen in regard to the problem whether reality is rational.

  68. Immanent Idealism seems to treat the problem of life much too summarily and not to penetrate sufficiently to ultimate depths.

  69. Immanent Idealism, therefore, also points to the problem of substantial spiritual life.

  70. In any case, it follows here that, as the immanent and universal form of truth requires more activity and power, it is also able to grant more free movement and multiplicity.

  71. This relation is no other than that of man to the spiritual world, which is immanent in him and at the same time transcends him.

  72. We are to "conceive of God as at once transcending and immanent in nature.


  73. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "immanent" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    accessible; actual; attendant; available; being; contemporaneous; contemporary; current; esoteric; existent; existing; extant; fresh; immanent; immediate; implanted; implicit; inalienable; indwelling; infixed; ingrained; inherent; inner; instant; internal; intrinsic; inward; irreducible; latest; modern; new; present; private; resident; running; secret; subjective; topical; unalienable; unchallengeable; unquestionable