Sentences with phrase «crucial sense»

And Heidegger was a philosopher of twilight in a more crucial sense, too.
The Eucharist was, in an important and literally crucial sense, part of it all from the beginning.
This book is an important element of my campaign against the litigious Dr Mann - not just in the obvious sense that its profits go toward the cost of this legal battle, but in the more crucial sense that it's part of my pushback against the malign effects of his rotten science.
This is a good thing: the off beat choices of a few guests create the crucial sense that anything could happen.
If God takes part in constituting all events, God is of universal scope and in a crucial sense transcends all things as well as being immanent in all things.
Simply «moving up in the world» does not provide that crucial sense of purpose for most Russians.
For it has nothing to do with the verb «to be,» and derives rather from the Latin, «substantia», denoting something «standing under» another, although, as we shall see, this is in a crucial sense not what Aristotle meant by ousia!
Virtues, in contrast, are in a crucial sense always circumstantial.
Revelation reminds the church that in a very basic and crucial sense it is not about us.
Modern Gnosticism differed from ancient Gnosticism in one crucial sense, however: rather than promoting escape from the world, it called for transformation of the world though human action.
It lacked the crucial sense of «epic - ness» that movies of this ilk need.
«Lemon» was co-written by Bravo and Gelman, and receives a crucial sense of atmosphere and comedic timing from «Moonlight» editor Joi McMillion (who recently made history as the first black woman to be nominated for an editing Oscar).
Although it might seem obvious, sight is a crucial sense when it comes to learning, especially for visual learners who use this sense the most.
Vision is a crucial sense for everyone.
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