Sentences with phrase «at definite places»

To science «a thing is where it immediately acts,» and our minds do act immediately, by all the evidence, and at definite places — upon parts of our bodies.
A proposition is on Whitehead's terms what we consciously experience, specific sensory qualities located at a definite place and time.
Instead, man stands according to the divine plan at a definite place among temporal events, which are directed toward a determined goal.

Not exact matches

This union of history and the moment involves a tension and a contradiction, for although redemption takes place at every moment, there is no definite moment in the present or the future in which the redemption of the world could be pronounced as having taken place once for all.
But, on the other hand, it is quite unjustified for theists to hold that we must tolerate or swallow the paradoxes or explain them away (by feats of ingenuity so subtle, and verbal methods so remote from intuitive insight or definite logical structures, that only deity could know with any assurance what was taking place), giving as justification the claim that the alternative position of atheism is even more paradoxical (lacking, it may be urged, any principle of cosmic explanation at all).
In the first place it can be taken as axiomatic in the Catholic view of faith that where the Church's magisterium has once unambiguously required at any time an absolute, ultimate and unconditional assent of faith to a definite doctrine as revealed by God, the doctrine in question is no longer subject to revision and is irrevocable.
Must we not say that of course God is the cause of the soul, because by definition he is the cause of everything, but that he is cause in the way in which it is proper to him, and to him alone, to be a cause, but not in such a way that this causing of the soul can be ascribed to him in a manner that is different from everything else in the world which originates within the world at a definite moment and place?
Well Gooners, I was wrong in my last article about our definite 3rd place finish, we ended up getting 2nd at the expense of Spurs, which I had hoped Newcastle would do us a favour — and boy did they give them a beating!
Lacazette in place of Perez and will [hopefully] get more game time than Perez means Giroud and Walcott are not nailed on, Kolasinac is a definite upgrade on Gibbs and is versatile enough to fill in at CB or DM, Chambers started more PL games last season than Gabriel.
The Match Online Dating survey conducted by Chadwick Martin Bailey shows a definite shift where more singles are meeting their spouses online than at bars, social clubs, and churches or places of worship.
The text seems quite explicit and matches the question I originally asked Muller, albeit I placed a definite boundary that the cooling must end at the present.
At the end of his judgment he pointed to a clear need for reconsideration of this point at the highest level and also mentioned one definite loose end — in this case there had been no consideration of how the narrow principle fits in (if at all) with the statutory duty to mitigate loss in s 123 (4) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (ERA 1996) which, after all, had been the basis for Hardy v Polk in the first place (rather than the later decision of the House of Lords in DunnachieAt the end of his judgment he pointed to a clear need for reconsideration of this point at the highest level and also mentioned one definite loose end — in this case there had been no consideration of how the narrow principle fits in (if at all) with the statutory duty to mitigate loss in s 123 (4) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (ERA 1996) which, after all, had been the basis for Hardy v Polk in the first place (rather than the later decision of the House of Lords in Dunnachieat the highest level and also mentioned one definite loose end — in this case there had been no consideration of how the narrow principle fits in (if at all) with the statutory duty to mitigate loss in s 123 (4) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (ERA 1996) which, after all, had been the basis for Hardy v Polk in the first place (rather than the later decision of the House of Lords in Dunnachieat all) with the statutory duty to mitigate loss in s 123 (4) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (ERA 1996) which, after all, had been the basis for Hardy v Polk in the first place (rather than the later decision of the House of Lords in Dunnachie).
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