Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "this conception"

  • This conception has, however, no longer much significance.

  • This conception is certainly not the prevalent one to-day; and even if it should be the proper one, it would still leave the cell as an extremely complicated machine.

  • It would seem, however, that the constantly varying proportions of the materials themselves, and the lack of homogeneity of cell contents, afford insurmountable difficulties to this conception as a basis for the study of cell activities.

  • This conception seems, therefore, to fit most closely the actual conditions under which the protoplasm exists and carries on its vital functions.

  • This conception of "outside" is, as we have seen, an abstraction evoked by the isolated activity of the logical reason.

  • To this conception are we driven, when in isolation from the soul's other attributes our self-consciousness gives itself up to its own activity.

  • This conception has a double element of truth.

  • This conception of derived utility leads to certain complications which we shall have to notice later.

  • This conception of ultimate costs encounters an instinctive repugnance, arising from a mistaken sense of logical symmetry, which it will be well to examine.

  • They show no attempt to combine the various elements of this conception in the unity of an Absolute Principle, an Ultimate and Fundamental Idea.

  • By this conception of God, and of his relation to the world, we are debarred from supposing the coeval existence of any thing besides God (e.

  • This conception of force will materially aid us in the conception of matter.

  • Practically, this conception gives us a universe without a God; for the world, once created, and stocked with the necessary forces and adjustments and laws, will henceforth govern itself.

  • In the Phaedrus this conception of a former existence is embodied in one of the Myths in which Plato's imaginative powers are seen at their highest.

  • This conception he formulated in the correlatives, Potentiality and Actuality.

  • Blood magic, which by itself constitutes an extensive chapter in the history of magic beliefs, and which is prevalent in all periods of culture, has its source in this conception.

  • Thus, this conception recurs, in a sense, to its beginning.

  • This conception, however, remains indefinite and of a demoniacal character, just as does that of the soul.

  • For, one of the most characteristic marks of this conception is that magical, demoniacal powers are believed to issue from the body of the dead person.

  • This conception of a further Evolution carries with it the final answer to the charge that, as regards morality, the Spiritual world has nothing to offer man that is not already within his reach.

  • This conception, that Life consists in correspondences, has been so abundantly illustrated already that it is now unnecessary to discuss it further.

  • Speaking of conception, it would be necessary to explain the origin of this term; then, unless a creative force be predicated of this conception, it would be necessary to show how a conception can constitute a real being.

  • Indeed, this conception of the world embraced all its parts.

  • The precise definition of this conception can be better explained hereafter in the consideration of the combat.

  • This conception of the origin and development of a comet will also account, and that on a logical and philosophical basis, for another fact which is associated with cometary phenomena.

  • In this Aether medium we have, according to this conception, something that can both push and pull, or exert force upon any body with which it comes into contact.

  • In this conception he was supported by Euler the mathematician, and in 1690 he was able to give a satisfactory explanation of the reflection and refraction of light, on the hypothesis that light was due to wave motion in the Aether.

  • Still further, when children enter school imbued with this conception of work, they feel that the work of the school is imposed upon them as a task from which they would fain be free.

  • The number of the first type is still very large in spite of all the books that inveigh against this conception.

  • This conception of education is not a figment of fancy but a reality whose verification can be attested by a thousand examples.

  • This conception, which to a great extent was brought about by conclusions from analogy, provided a method of inference concerning various other phenomena.

  • This conception of pathological processes was a very ancient one.

  • This conception of early Scripture teaching as elementary and suited to the childhood of the race would make it possible, if the facts so required, to interpret the early chapters of Genesis as mythical or legendary.

  • This conception of the state, which is as much a part of our life as is the blood in our veins, is nowhere to be found in the English Constitution, and is quite foreign to English thought, and to that of America as well.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "this conception" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    pale grey; this account; this book; this business; this circumstance; this connection; this county; this department; this end; this expedition; this form; this meeting; this office; this operation; this planet; this play; this prince; this proposition; this region; this road; this same; this sense; this sort; this thing; this tree; this trip