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Example sentences for "inhering"

Lexicographically close words:
inhered; inherence; inherent; inherently; inheres; inherit; inheritability; inheritable; inheritance; inheritances
  1. The burden of realizing the intellectual possibilities inhering in work is thus thrown back on the school.

  2. In other words, it made explicit the consequences inhering in any doctrine which makes mental life a self-inclosed thing, instead of an attempt to redirect and readapt common concerns.

  3. But the substance as ground and the complete set of laws as inhering in the ground, and being its organization when combined, become a spiritual person who thinks.

  4. Inhering in Supreme, is root of power of divinities, v.

  5. The ("seminal) reasons" when inhering in matter are by it corrupted and filled with its nature.

  6. The evil things here below originate in the mixture inhering in the nature of this world.

  7. Power of divinities lies in their inhering in the Supreme, v.

  8. Unquestionably its manner of presenting the contradictory opinions of the Fathers, without any attempt to reconcile them, tended to bring into view the difficulties inhering in the formulation of Christian belief.

  9. In the first half of the twelfth century, a profoundly meditative soul, Hugo of St. Victor by name, attempted a systematic exposition of the symbolical or sacramental plan inhering in God's scheme of creation.

  10. There is a subtle and positive balm to weak nerves and sore lungs inhering in the atmosphere of pine forests, wholly unknown to that of any other.

  11. The difference inhering to the benefit of the public, between the two routes, has been estimated, amounts to about one dollar per barrel in favor of this new outlet.

  12. This gives a clear view of the will power inhering in the mental man, and its wonderful influence on the body.

  13. An animal, besides having parts situated in place, has co-inhering functions in the same parts, exerted by the very same masses and molecules of its substance.

  14. The Mind, which affords no Propositions of Order in Place, has co-inhering functions.

  15. Whiteness was an entity, inhering or sticking in the white substance: and so of all other qualities.

  16. The illustrations of the vital connection which the savage assumes between himself and his name show how easy is the passage from belief in life inhering in everything to belief in it as capable of power for good or evil.

  17. A dravya may be caused by the inhering of the effect in it, for because of its contact with another thing the effect is produced.

  18. So also karma or action is supposed to be a separate entity, and even the class notions are perceived as separate entities inhering in substances.

  19. Do they by attaching to the soul and inhering in her at last bring her to death, and so separate her from the body?

  20. They never become destructive unless some other force than that inhering in themselves drags them into its service and hurls them along a devastating path.

  21. In either case the change that ensues is manifestly due to vital properties, whether the same be inhering in the seed, or in necessary environing conditions.

  22. But "Dynamism" simply implies that force inheres in, or appertains to, all material substance, without specifically designating either the quantity or quality of the inhering force.

  23. The supreme consideration is that the money of a country shall be so regulated as that prices may not fall from any cause inhering in the money system.

  24. But value is not a property inhering in any article itself.

  25. The predication respecting the six dice denotes nothing real, independent, absolute, inhering in them: for they have undergone no change.

  26. Let then the second alternative be adopted according to which Brahma-hood (brahmatva) constitutes a genus inhering in Brahman as well as in non-sentient matter, just as fire constitutes the common genus for light and luminous bodies.

  27. Its flexibility is seen in its ready yieldance to the entire range of implications inhering in the process of cognition, fitting the simplest as well as the highest and most complex.

  28. So that as matter has evolved added characteristics and properties, each answering to a given need and arising out of the necessities inhering in the stage at which it appeared, so has the intellect evolved faculties to correspond therewith.

  29. Accordingly, space is a form of intuition arising out of and inhering in the constitution of mind.

  30. I own myself entirely satisfied, that they are all equally apparent, and that there is no such thing as colour really inhering in external bodies, but that it is altogether in the light.

  31. And have true and real colours inhering in them?

  32. It is a material substance with the sensible qualities inhering in it.

  33. His view of it as inhering in objects, and as having duration and simultaneity as two of its modes, is bound up with his phenomenalism.

  34. The transcendental conception of appearances in space, on the other hand, is a Critical reminder that nothing intuited in space is a thing in itself, that space is not a form inhering in things in themselves .

  35. To regard the changes in this way as attributes inhering in substance directly contradicts the view developed in the second Analogy.

  36. He allows their validity in general not as products but as accidents inhering in an original Being; and to this Being, as substrate of those natural things, he ascribes not causality in regard to them but mere subsistence.

  37. He regarded the world whole as a complex of manifold determinations inhering in a single simple substance; and thus reduced our concepts of the purposive in nature to our own consciousness of existing in an all-embracing Being.

  38. So too is substance absolute being, compared with accidents as inhering and existing in substance.

  39. Relation, then, considered formally as such, is not an absolute accident inhering in a subject, but is a reference of this subject to some other thing, this latter being called the term of the relation.

  40. Both alike are substances, for both alike have that mode of being which consists in their existing in themselves, and not by inhering in other things as accidents do.

  41. Or do we mean that the organism can elicit these various acts only by means of several accidental realities, really distinct from, and inhering in, itself?

  42. As a permanently inhering quality, sanctifying grace must be a habit.

  43. Justification in the Catholic sense, therefore, is not a mere outward imputation of the justice of Christ, but a true inward renewal and sanctification wrought by a grace intrinsically inhering in the soul.

  44. There are several such modi, which, though inhering in nature and really distinct therefrom, depend solely on the Holy Ghost, and consequently transcend the natural powers of man, e.

  45. Now, a thing which has its existence by inhering in some other thing is in philosophic parlance an “accident.

  46. To such an extent was this opposition carried, that the church of the middle ages did not hesitate to provide itself with eunuchs in order to supply cathedral choirs with the soprano tones inhering by nature in woman alone.

  47. From the qualities inhering in the atoms the qualities belonging to the binary compounds are produced, just as the qualities of the cloth result from the qualities of the threads.

  48. If, in the second place, the unseen principle is assumed as the cause of the original motion of the atoms, we ask: Is this unseen principle to be considered as inhering in the soul or in the atom?


  49. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inhering" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.