Immanent

Word IMMANENT
Character 8
Hyphenation im ma nent
Pronunciations /ˈɪmənənt/

Definitions and meanings of "Immanent"

What do we mean by immanent?

Existing or remaining within; inherent. adjective

Restricted entirely to the mind; subjective. adjective

Remaining within; indwelling.

Remaining within; inherent; indwelling; abiding; intrinsic; internal or subjective; hence, limited in activity, agency, or effect, to the subject or associated acts; -- opposed to emanant, transitory, transitive, or objective. adjective

Naturally part of something; existing throughout and within something; inherent; integral; intrinsic; indwelling. adjective

Restricted entirely to the mind or a given domain; internal; subjective. adjective

Existing within and throughout the mind and the world; dwelling within and throughout all things, all time, etc. Compare transcendent. adjective

Taking place entirely within the mind of the subject and having no effect outside of it. Compare emanant, transeunt. adjective

Being within the limits of experience or knowledge. adjective

Of a mental act performed entirely within the mind adjective

Of qualities that are spread throughout something adjective

Naturally part of something; existing throughout and within something; intrinsic.

Restricted entirely to the mind or a given domain; internal; subjective.

(of a deity) Existing within and throughout the mind and the world; dwelling within and throughout all things, all time, etc. Compare transcendent.

(of a mental act) Taking place entirely within the mind of the subject and having no effect outside of it. Compare emanant, transeunt.

Being within the limits of experience or knowledge.

Present as a natural part of something;present everywhere - Oxford Dictionary. Urban Dictionary

The phenomenology of the mind as emergent from the geometric center of the human body and ending at the border between the human body and external space. Mind-body contiguity (congruity). Distinct from consciousnesses which is postulated to radiate from the space external to the human body and cross the space-body border to be contiguous with the mind (body). Urban Dictionary

A Monstrous Massive Inexorable Force That Crushes Whatever Is In Its Path Urban Dictionary

IMMANENTIZE THE ESCHATON!! Urban Dictionary

A typical sentence used by math teachers to call someone to correct an exercise Urban Dictionary

A phenomenon of perception which fools human beings into concluding that consciousness has material origins ie. consciousness emerges from cognizANCE. A fallacy of scientific (mechanistic) materialism in which consciousness is assumed to be emerge from the mind itself. Immanence is implicitly stated in Descartes' duality of mind and body. Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Immanent

The word "immanent" in example sentences

Concepts were not in his eyes the static self-contained things that previous logicians had supposed, but were germinative, and passed beyond themselves into each other by what he called their immanent dialectic. ❋ William James (1876)

Of course I meant "immanent" -- a rather different thing. ❋ Unknown (2009)

The first problem hinges on what is known as the immanent Trinity, or the Trinity before the creation of the world. ❋ William Harryman (2009)

Marty himself came to have misgivings about the notion of immanent objects and his term “content of judgment” in his main work must not be taken as an indication of something that actually or ❋ Rollinger, Robin (2008)

Therefore, the genera in the particulars do seem to represent, on Italos™ view, what they represent for Proclus and Syrianus, namely immanent forms that are particular. ❋ Ierodiakonou, Katerina (2008)

It is, from the standpoint of their propaganda or from the standpoint of what Adorno calls immanent critique I should say that Adorno took that from Herman Dooyeweerd who first mentioned immanent critique back in 1922 , a lousy speech. ❋ As'ad (2006)

Thus, vital action, as well in the physiological as in the intellectual and moral order, is called immanent, because it proceeds from that spontaneity which is essential to the living subject and has for its term the unfolding of the subject's constituent energies. ❋ 1840-1916 (1913)

When, however, this finality is called immanent, this expression must not be understood in a pantheistic sense, as if the intelligence which the world manifests were to be identified with the world itself, but in the sense that the immediate principle of finality is immanent in every being. ❋ 1840-1916 (1913)

Personally, I could have just about accepted some kind of immanent spirit of humanity trying to move the pieces around, or even some kind of overmind, just about anything except god and angels. ❋ Unknown (2009)

These arguments do not refute the kind of immanent realism defended by the early Maddy (1990). ❋ Balaguer, Mark (2009)

A belief, above all, that the way other people see us is not motivated by a kind of immanent, low-level ill-will. ❋ Adam Roberts Project (2007)

But I suppose you're one of the people who when Bush says, "We can't wait until the danger is immanent", hears only the single word "immanent". ❋ Ann Althouse (2006)

The modern theological expression "immanent" has done harm in this direction. ❋ John Cowper Powys (1917)

By the term "the immortal companions" I do not mean to indicate any "immanent" power or transcendental "over-soul." ❋ John Cowper Powys (1917)

Both start from the conception of a whole -- an absolute -- which is "immanent" in human life. ❋ Unknown (1916)

They say that this Fact is "immanent"; dwelling in, transfusing, and discoverable through every aspect of the universe, every movement of the game of life -- as you have found in the first stage of contemplation. ❋ 1875-1941 (1915)

To him God was, to use more modern language, 'immanent' as well as 'transcendent.' ❋ Alexander Maclaren (1868)

[God] is an immanent being because He is [present] [everywhere]. ❋ God's Friend. (2013)

[Immanence] delineates the hard problem of consciousness: the feeling of consciousness as meta-emergent ([fatalistic]) or "alien" to perception. Ie. Consciousness overlaps with (is) the mind but the mind does not [overlap] with (is not) consciousness. ❋ Tomorrowtomorrow (2018)

[Immane Juggernaut] is going to destroy your [feeble] [server]. ❋ Raven (2004)

[Hurry], so that [we can] [IMMANENTIZE THE ESCHATON]! ❋ Solomaxwell (2004)

x: “today we’[ll] [correct] an [exercise], imman vieni tu” ❋ Imeinnen (2021)

[Descartes] noted that thoughts are not necessarily functions of reality. He wondered if the mind was truly contained in the body. Explicitly, [immanence] would argue that Descartes' inquiry was incomplete as he was able to separate feelings from perception but he was too limited by technology to separate senses (thoughts) from feelings. Hinduism approaches imanence by arguing that senses appear from consciousness rather than from [cognizance] as Descartes conjectured. Resolving the fallacy of Descartes' mechanistic sense (sense as emergent from perception) allows sense and "thoughts" to meta-emerge from consciousnesses itself. ❋ Sandrashine (2018)

Cross Reference for Immanent

What does immanent mean?

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