Now if the parts of the universal Organism were often in mutual disagreement, the universal Organism, nevertheless, remains in perfect accord with itself because it is universal, and it is universal by the Reason that inheres in it.
Neither should they confine themselves to externalities after having admitted that he turns his whole attention on things that he bears within himself; in short, not to believe that the goal of his will inheres in external objects.
By dwelling with the divinities he means being united to the intelligible objects; for it is in them that inheres immortality.
We said that the light inheres in colored bodies, so far as that which produces the colors inheres in the bodies.
Such is the question which applies both to the light which inheres in the illuminated objects (and colors them), as well as to the life inherent in the body, and which we call the characteristically bodily life.
Though the soul be not form begotten in matter, the soul might be a separable form; but this theory would still have to explain how this form inheres in the body, since the soul is separable from the body.
It is said, "Power inheresin the people," and the nation is shorn of half its power for progress as long as the ballot is not in the hands of women.
And singular to say, while this inheres in all people alike, the privilege of exercising it is withheld from women by a class who have no right to say whether they are willing or not that women should vote.
A minimum wage is demanded and in several states made a legal requirement, but to name a definite sum per week puts a stated figure where a movable and changeable condition inheres in the situation.
The basic test of all proposed changes in any inherited institution is from henceforward, we must believe, that whichinheres in the spiritual essence of democracy.
The basic principle of the Trade Union, the right and usefulness of collective bargaining, inheres in the conditions of machine-dominated and capitalized industry.
Major Powell gives the following outline of the civil and military government of this tribe: The civil government inheres in a system of councils and chiefs.
That dignity, then, which inheres in logical ideas and their affinity to moral enthusiasm, springs from their congruity with the primary habits of intelligence and idealisation.
Yet memory rather than sense is knowledge in the pregnant acceptation of the word; for in sense object and process are hardly distinguished, whereas in memory significance inheres in the datum, and the present vouches for the absent.
It inheres in him because it is his actualization, and completes his potentiality, without, itself, producing anything; for it belongs exclusively to the subject whose complement it is.
When it possesses magnitude, and quantity inheres in it, it is destroyed, while when it possesses unity, it possesses itself.
Further, as the desire of living can be no more than the desire to exist, the latter desire can refer to the present only, inasmuch as real existence (essence) inheres only in the present.
The ties of the tribe are kinship, and authority inheres in superior age; but in order to adjust these rules so that the abler men may be given control, artificial kinship and artificial age are established.
The ownership of the great bulk of the property inheres in the clan, such as their houses, their patches of land, the food raised from the soil, and the game caught in the chase.
Nothing common, nothing of this human daily world, inheres in it; but sacrosanct destinies were involved, and the martialed might of the Invisible.
Virtue inheres in the Brotherhood of Man; vice in the separate personal and individual units.
The same ambiguity of course inheres in the corresponding English word, Borrow.
The idea of growth and increase inheres in the very word, which is derived from the Latin noun, caput, a head, a source, and gives intimation in its etymology of its scientific meaning.
An additional advantage inheres in this Northern Pacific line of prime importance, and that is in the fact of its offering to commerce a shorter route by several hundred miles to the Pacific coast than that which now exists.
O thou of great effulgence, only men of wisdom succeed in knowing that Brahma which is Unmanifest, which inheres in its real nature to all that is seen and unseen, and which, O son is the one independent essence in the universe.
Sound inheres like the Supreme Being in all space though attached especially to drums and other instruments.
I have all the time favored that: not because he was an African, but because he was a man; because this right of voting, which is the symbol of everything else in civil power, inheres in every human being.
Its theme is unerringly chosen, for drama inheres in Mary's being.
He is, indeed, in a deeper sense than politics could make him, a democrat: perhaps that inheres in the poetic temperament.
That, however, inheres in the episode: it is not emphasized, nor even formulated, as a problem.
T Subba Row * Adishtatha--that which inheres in another principle--the active agent working in Prakriti.
It might here be objected that if Jiva was not a force per se, in the sense which modern science would attach to the phrase, then how can it survive unchanged the grand change called death, which the protoplasms it inheres in undergo?
Karma (motion) is also a cause since it inheresin the cause.
Contact is also a cause since it inheres in the cause.
A contact which inheres in the cause of the cause and thereby helps the production of the effect is also a cause.
Karma is devoid of gu.na, cannot remain at one time in more than one object, inheres in dravya alone, and is an independent cause of contact or disjoining.
I am that divine intellect which inheres alike in all flavours, which is devoid of pain and pleasure and which I perceived in my mind by my consciousness.
The pure intellect eternally inheres in every thing as its soul and essence, tell me then O Kacha, whence you derive the belief of your egoism and personal existence (as an embodied person).
The divine power which inheres in the embryos of our desires, causes them to develope in their various forms).
Liberty inheres in some sensible object; and every nation has formed to itself some favorite point, which by way of eminence becomes the criterion of their happiness.
It inheres in good and steady government, as in its substance and vital principle.
Grace inheres in the substance of the soul, while charity has its seat in one of its several faculties.
This notion was combatted by St. Thomas(983) and implicitly rejected by the Tridentine Council when it declared that sanctifying grace inheres in the soul and may be increased by good works.
Internal grace (gratia interna) inheres or operates invisibly in the soul, and places it in relation with God as its supernatural end.
We have interpreted the power of contagion which inheres in the taboo as the property of leading into temptation, and of inciting to imitation.
Thus something like the concept of reserve inheres in taboo; taboo expresses itself essentially in prohibitions and restrictions.
In each we are thinking of the pay as something apart from the work, while, in fact, the only pay we can have inheres in the doing of the work.
And it is to be regarded as though this part were specially added to each, so that it inheres in, and pervades, them all.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inheres" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.