This world is, it is true, only an intelligible world; for of such a systematic unity of ends as it requires, the world of sense gives us no hint.
Side-note: The Idea of Good rules the ideal or intelligible world, as the Sun rules the sensible or visible world.
There is a visible and an intelligible world[342]: and there are two different regions about which our knowledge is concerned.
According to him the Ideas which are the constituents of science form an Intelligible World, while the visible and tangible things which we perceive by our senses form the Visible World.
This I conceive to be the simplest and directest ground of two primary parts of the Theory of Ideas;--The Eternal Ideas constituting an Intelligible World; and the Participation in these Ideas ascribed to the objects of the world of sense.
And again, he also put the matter otherwise: there is an Intelligible World, of which the Visible and Sensible world is only a dim image.
The sense-world draws its existence from that intelligible World.
These he identified with the numbers and harmonies of Pythagoras, and united them in an Eleatic unity of many, as an intelligible world, or reason, which he owed to Anaxagoras.
The unity of man with the world is for this end broken, that it may be restored in a higher unity, that the world, as an intelligible world, may be received into God.
Thus this universe proceeds from the intelligible world, and is contained by the forms from beginning to end.
This vacant place is now filled by pure practical reason with a definite law of causality in an intelligible world (causality with freedom), namely, the moral law.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "intelligible world" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.