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Definition of Immanency
1. Noun. The state of being within or not going beyond a given domain.
Definition of Immanency
1. Noun. the state of being immanent; inherence or subjectivity ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Immanency
1. [n -CIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Immanency
Literary usage of Immanency
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Philosophy of History by Augustus Schade, Rudolf Rocholl (1899)
"Now intelligence became enabled to elaborate the truth, that both forms of
existence are congruencies in a living, organic interrelation and immanency, ..."
2. What is Reality?: An Inquiry as to the Reasonableness of Natural Religion by Francis Howe Johnson (1891)
"The advocate of the immanency of the Deity has felt it necessary to ... But in
our symbol we find immanency and transcendency united in a living and abiding ..."
3. Evolution: Its Nature, Its Evidences, and Its Relation to Religious Thought by Joseph LeConte (1891)
"THE doctrine of the Divine immanency carries with, it the solution of many vexed
questions. In fact, in its light these questions simply pass out of view as ..."
4. A Study of Religion, Its Sources and Contents by James Martineau (1888)
"Did we extend the immanency of God over this higher realm also, so as to render
it absolutely universal, the effect would be the reverse of the objector's ..."
5. The Biblical Repository and Classical Review. by American Biblical Repository (1849)
"But although knowledge as a have-known is self-immanency of the subject, it is
nevertheless as present perception realizable only by a self-egression of the ..."
6. Introduction to Philosophy by Friedrich Paulsen (1906)
"set forth above and say : immanency and transcendency do not exclude each other.
Theism cannot exclude the immanency of God in the world. ..."