I am maintaining that it only does so because it reveals the possibility (excluded by the hypothesis of sudden or special creation) of the structure having been proximately due to the operation of physical causes.
The motion at any subsequent instant is proximately caused by the motion which took place at the instant preceding.
The laws of this portion of our nature—the varieties of our sensations, and the physical conditions on which they proximately depend—manifestly belong to the province of Physiology.
We replied, that it is derived from the sun of the angelic heaven, which is not fire, but divine love proximately proceeding from God, who is love itself.
Chrysostom and Augustine) speak, as the context evinces, of the withdrawal of efficacious and proximately sufficient grace in punishment of Peter’s presumption.
Whether the supreme intelligence has only been exerted proximatelyor remotely on inorganic matter; space being the necessary medium of creation, and organization being the result?
Of this time no instant is to be taken as proximately preceding the last one, because time is not made up of successive instants, as is proved in Phys.
The proportion of expenses due to these enterprises and results may, in like manner, beproximately calculated.
What seems to be proximately wanted in the church is a good sanctuary-- something in keeping with the general design of the building and really worthy of the place.
For, although it is proximately at work on the congenital variations of organisms after birth, it is ultimately, and through them, at work upon the variations of germ-plasm out of which the organisms arise.
The rapid development of vegetation after the disappearance of the snow, is no doubt also proximately due to the heat of the soil, quite as much as to the increased strength of the sun's direct rays in lofty regions.
Wherever the pecuniary culture prevails, the selective process by which men's habits of thought are shaped, and by which the survival of rival lines of descent is decided, proceedsproximately on the basis of fitness for acquisition.
This it definitely does, for the first time proximately in man, and completely in the stars.
It is proximately reached in man, for man is the existent reason.
We are told that the world-process moves towards an end, and that this end is the self-realization of reason, and that it is proximately attained in man, because man is a reasoning being.
From the Phaedrus you may learn all the intelligible and intellectual genera, and the liberated orders of the gods, which are proximately established above the celestial circulations.
Hence the one principle produces many principles, many simplicities, and many goodnesses, proximately from itself.
The same remark is proximately true of the literary life of the First Empire.
Exaggerated though this statement was, in relation to secondary and advanced education, it was proximately true of the elementary schools.
Just as faith rests proximately on the reliability of God and remotely on His perfection of being, so hope rests proximately on God's almighty power and radically on His goodness and perfection.
The method of the moralists of this period differs from that of the Fathers in that the former is systematic and philosophical, and more proximately adapted to the use of confessors.
And if we seek to understand this ontogenetic agreement in the light of the biogenetic law, we find that it proves clearly and necessarily the descent of man from a series of other mammals, and proximately from the primates.
Although, therefore, ontological truth is for us proximately and immediately the conformity of reality with our own conceptions, it is primarily and fundamentally the essential conformity of all reality with the Divine Mind.
The school of Tuebingen was the outcome of a movement that proximately began in English Deism; and even the personal bias of Frederick counted for much less in the evolution than the general contagion of European debate.
Men are proximately ruled by their passions or emotions; and the supremacy of the economic factor consists in its being, for the majority, the most permanent director or stimulant of feeling.
Portuguese and Spanish literature and drama alike deriveproximately from the Italian Renaissance.
He may even, indeed, have taken his idea proximately from the practice of the rebels in Normandy before the Conquest, when deputies from all the districts met in general assembly and bound themselves by a mutual oath.
The laws of this portion of our nature--the varieties of our sensations, and the physical conditions on which they proximately depend--manifestly belong to the province of Physiology.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "proximately" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.