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    immanence

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 4 days ago · Definitions of immanence. noun. the state of being within or not going beyond a given domain. synonyms: immanency. see more.

  3. 4 days ago · The second part of the paper scrutinizes three interrelated concepts proposed by Santner, too muchness, the surplus of immanence, and manatheism, which provide conceptual tools to address the break of modernity. The three concepts are brought into relation with the historical placement of psychoanalysis in modernity, the dialectic of “what ...

  4. 2 days ago · Political atheism is often associated with organizations like the Freedom from Religion Foundation that defend the rights of unbelievers. In the United States, such groups have played an important role in resisting theocratic forms of Christianity. However, advocacy of this kind remains limited by its focus on religious and nonreligious beliefs.

  5. 1 day ago · In the gathering there was an expectation of immanent direct divine revelation to worshipers (6:1–4); penitence and confession of unworthiness (6:5); assurance of cleansing and forgiveness (6:6–8); new receptivity to the voice of God (6:8); and the human response (6:9b) of turning one’s life over to the Lord, “Here I am; send me.” 40 Of course, “high church” worshipers find the ...

  6. 2 days ago · Every sensual detail pulses with divine immanence. Winding through these poems like a thread is the specter of the pit that swallowed the poets’ progenitor. “Abyss calls to abyss through the din of Your conduits” ( Psalms 42:8 ).

  7. 2 days ago · The Process is one univocal, seamless production of new things. In A Thousand Plateaus, the BwO is a full egg. And, finally, in Pure Immanence, Deleuze asserts that "events" and "singularities" are lacking in nothing.

  8. 3 days ago · That which ‘holds together’, in the development of the immanence relation, is thus transformed into that which ‘binds’ the successive transitions of the transformative relation. The relation insofar as μετᾰξῠ́ progressively becomes νόμος ἔμψυχος , or ‘living law’, until it becomes a formal constraint ‘incorporated’ in the matter of which the entity itself ...