Sentences with phrase «essence there»

In essence there is no back cover - the back cover is a screen.
In essence there are three options.
Ken, I agree in essence there is no difference between pre-emptive and combative snark.
Let's keep this one short, because in essence there's nothing new.
It didn't help that each class of vehicle only actually has one ride to choose from, so in essence there's only five different vehicles to drive, although they do at least have quite a few different paintjobs to choose from.
With time being of the essence there are half day and full day tours to the Great Barrier Reef that families can go on.
Apple on the other hand just has a few different phones in varying price ranges but in essence there is only one.
In essence there is a definite reasoning behind the concept, in the sense that this «MTV» generation are often not able to concentrate for as long as previous generations.
In essence there's kind of directing the electricity into their target by leaping out of the water.
What I do nt see is the God, the presence of any spiritual essence there... I see nothing but MAN.
Christianity is a revealed religion so of its essence there is a given, a revealed something or someone that can not be replaced or superseded.
For example, she volunteered after Hurricane Katrina (and during Rita) and used essences there.

Not exact matches

It inspires me to go out there and talk to more customers to discover what my brand essence is.»
In essence, if correct, this means there is less price risk in government debt securities than corporate fixed income issues, and therefore the extra 10 % should largely be made up of government bonds rather than corporates and preferred shares.
«We're hearing from college coaches, college administrators, and the NCAA directly, and their view is, if these young men don't want to be in college longer than, in essence, one season, then they probably shouldn't be there
«The sales teams asked... how to get Twitter involved in things like the Essence Festival or to get black influencers to support product launches — but there were some Beyoncé and twerking questions,» he says with a sigh.
This could actually be arguments 1 through 10, but its many nuances are being boiled down to the essence of «there's just too much of it, and most of that is because all E.U. citizens have the right to come and work here.»
Time is usually of the essence in such scenarios, so there can be no dillydallying or feet dragging.
You could see the essence was there.
That is the essence of today's «paper gold,» and there is little Europe or Asia can do about the situation except reject the dollar and create their own alternative financial system.
Great messaging is achieved when there is nothing left to take away; it is achieved when the essence of your company is clearly communicated.
In essence, there are lots of advantages to forex trading as a career, but there are disadvantages as well.
My sense is watching octogenarians age, there's 99 % more often doom and gloomers as an essence overcomes them and their world head - view is increasingly doomed, even the most seemingly vital.»
Running a startup company is one of the most demanding jobs out there, but is nonetheless the very essence of the American dream; millions of Americans fantasize about being their own bosses.
There is no article in the Greek text before the word spirit, and that emphasizes the quali - ty or essence of the word.
Therefore there are three distinct Persons, equal in glory and majesty; yet there is only one divine essence....
to claim that is the essence of your belief (and it is a belief) about the nature of existence & live as though there is actually some subjective purpose... it's simply existential schizophrenia.
There are, in essence, as many Christian denominations as there are self professed ChristThere are, in essence, as many Christian denominations as there are self professed Christthere are self professed Christians.
And the response of the assembled archbishops was, in essence: «A global church, but there's a lot of work to do before we get there
The human element in religion is imperfect and flawed; there is no shame in admitting this, for reason can help refine religious passion: «Religions need always to be purified according to their true essence in order to correspond to their true mission.»
This guy is, in essence, asserting that at that time no one knew anything about places they didn't live, therefore if anything they said about Israel is accurate then they were there and eyewitnesses to everything and the gospels are correct and magic happened, which is completely moronic and without evidentiary support.
If a person thinks that nature is wholly corrupt, that there is no natural morality knowable by human reason, that grace completely supplants nature, that the basis of morality is the divine command and not the essences of things as created by God — and some Protestant theologians can plausibly be read as having said such things — then all bets are off.
What sense, if any, could there be in speaking, as process philosophers do, of the essence of experience?
To that assessment this essay will contribute modestly by arguing (1) that an account of experience must be compatible with the fact that there is no one thing which is what experience is or is the essence of experience, (2) that no philosophically adequate account of what experience is can be established merely by appeal to direct, personal, intuitive experience of one's own experience, (3) that generalization from features found in human experience is not sufficient to justify the claim that temporality is essential to experience, but (4) that dialectical argument rather than intuition or generalization is necessary to support the claim that experience is essentially temporal.
Or one might claim that, even though there are different uses of the term «experience», there is still something common to all or many of those uses and that process philosophy and theology are constructed around and from an account of an essence common to many different kinds of experience.
Where this word detaches itself from life and from the relationship to the concrete other person, where «the truth is told» without regard for the person to whom it is said, there it has only the appearance of truth but not its essence
It is conceivable, e.g., that, instead of one essence common to everything properly called experience, there might be different essences corresponding to some or all of the different uses of the term.
Sometimes the wound is apparently random and meaningless; to teach us there isn't a reason for everything, that we can't get our heads around it all, that not understanding and just trusting is the essence of faith — faith that takes us beyond our concept of God, which is always limited, towards a place of knowing the unknowable.
There is a further objection to the appeal to one's own privileged and direct access to the essence of experience as encountered immediately and from within.
Or, if there are different and conflicting conventions, how could there be a single essence common to all cases of experience?
This does not mean there aren't any consequences for our actions — just means that I believe that God's essence is pure love and that, at the end, «love wins.»
Both are weighty issues that deal explicitly with «high cosmic justice,» so if he argues that a government overreaches its authority to execute justice by attempting to «balance the books of the universe» in repaying blood with blood, then does that mean there can never be any just criteria for one nation to retaliate against another after an unprovoked attack» an attack that in essence would repay blood with blood?
So, in essence, I think you are right — there is a fallicy in the logic... but I love the laughter that it pulls from my mind....
The sophisticated response to this string of questions is to assert that there is no such thing as a human totality or essence, and leave it at that.
Camus, probably with Sartre in mind, rejects the notion that existence always precedes essence (Rb 296) and states that there is a creative source for rebellion against injustice in a «moral or metaphysical rule to balance the insanity of history» (Rb 251).
It is to be found in the love of that unique, boundless Essence which penetrates the inmost depths of all things and there, from within those depths, deeper than the mortal zone where individuals and multitudes struggle, works upon them and moulds them.
Yet... in essence, he's saying nothing different than all the mega church morons out there selling their swill to the gullible masses.
He writes, in the translator's introduction, that «there is an analogy between the unity of essence and existence in creatures and the unity of essence and existence in God.»
Put briefly, Leithart was skeptical that there is such a thing as a historical essence to Protestantism, at least one that deserves to be jealously preserved.
There would be no need to «make» God share in man's adventure or be affected by human actions according to Whitehead, for such is the nature of God: «Decay, Transition, Loss, Displacement belong to the essence of Creative Advance» (Al 368 - 69).
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