This question, though one of fact, cannot be determined by us, by our experience; it must be shown to follow logically from certain a priori first principles.
We could find no more in it, and deduce no more from it, than that our existence was involved in our experience.
This sudden and continued complete change of direction is new to our experience.
Well, we have done our best and bought our experience at a heavy cost.
The protection is a direct result of our experience of last year, and it is good to feel that we reaped some reward for that disastrous journey.
Hope is no fringe on the garment of human life; it is part of the solid texture of our experience; without it men may exist, but they cannot live.
But still more bitter and humbling, O Father, is our experience of failure, so frequent, tragic, and unpardonable.
II One major reason for this necessary place of faith in our experience is clear.
Our experience of the hummocks of Victoria Strait was not one that we were anxious to repeat.
This was altogether the pleasantest part of our experience in the Arctic.
January proved the coldest month of our experience, with a mean thermometer of -53.
A word suggests itself which, apart from expressing adequately the peculiar self-mobility which we have just brought to our experience, goes well alongside the word 'inert' by forming a kind of rhyme with it.
Here in an external phenomenon we meet the same weakening in the light's tendency to expand that we recognized in the shortening of our experience of depth on looking through a dense medium.
It will be well to remember here the discussion of our experience of temperature through the sense of warmth in Chapter VIII (p.
It is enough that a given characteristic should be generally present in our experience, for it to become an indispensable element of the ideal.
Particularly important are they for the value of our experience.
Space would have to consist of a finite number of juxtaposed blocks, if our experience of extension carried with it essentially the realization of limits.
So far as the actions are for the eye of sense alone they are merely spectacular; so far as they express desires and energies, they are dramatic, and these we do not see but feel according as our experience permits us so to comprehend them.
We do not merely contemplate it: we are immersed in it, it is vital in us, it is that wherein we live and move and have our being, ever more and more in proportion as the soul's life outvalues the body in our experience.
Now is renewed and fulfilled, what is written in the gospels, and what in the Bible was not understood, receives light by our experience.
Even to-day science and philosophy are still laboriously trying to part fancies from realities in our experience; and in primitive times they made only the most incipient distinctions in this line.
The simplest case of new truth is of course the mere numerical addition of new kinds of facts, or of new single facts of old kinds, to our experience--an addition that involves no alteration in the old beliefs.
In the elaboration of our experience, they may also be employed with great advantage, as heuristic [Footnote: From the Greek, eurhioko.
The postulate of the possibility of things requires also, that the conception of the things agree with the formal conditions of our experience in general.
Nevertheless, in respect of all phenomena, consequently of all things which come within the sphere of our experience, it is necessarily objective.
But if the eye gives us the truth, then why do we, in the case of color, correct it again by another phase of our experience?
Not the completest sense of all, because the essence of life is in personal responsibility to a situation, and this is exactly what in our experience of literature disappears.
It is the tendency of one note to progress to another which is the basis of the vividness of our experience.
We want to know in the physical and psychical sciences whatever is involved in the object of our experience, and in the historical and normative sciences whatever is involved in the demands which reach our will.
For the unity of things is never, for us mortals, anything that we find given in our experience.
It would be absurd to hold that the distinction is a mere blunder, and has no foundation in our experience.
Are not things presented in our experience only as we have sensations?
Thus, it is maintained that there is a real external world presented in our experience--not a world which we have a right to regard as the sensations or ideas of any mind.
The physical changes involved in action are as apprehensible in our experience as are any other natural facts, and are remembered and anticipated in each new act.
But in the rest of us a consolidation substantially similar should be going on in some section of our experienceas long as we live.
If such a state of things can be imagined, and if something like it occasionally occurs in our experience, it does not represent our normal condition.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "our experience" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.