Sentences with phrase «in a different sense»

But it is easier in a different sense if you find it and don't have to lose the essence of who you are to belong.
I don't think that is a bad thing if understood in a different sense to the way described.
Obviously we use the term religion in a different sense than you do in your post.
This may stretch the meaning of «actual»; I stretch it a bit further to apply to the future: God as active is also actual, though in a different sense from the way the past is actual.
In each case cited the words are used in different senses, and it seems to me that Whitehead is well aware of this and has committed no fallacy.
What I am essentially protesting against is the bifurcation of nature into two systems of reality, which, in so far as they are real, are real in different senses.
@Tristan: I was discussing momentum in a different sense, but thanks for the link.
Positivistic philosophers and historians are open to a fallacy of misplaced concreteness in this different sense.
After all, we have to remember that we are using history in a different sense from what it bears in a phrase like «the history of Anglo - German relations».
The causation involved in this interaction is causation in a different sense from the influence of this system of bodily interactions within nature on the alien mind which thereupon perceives redness and warmth.
He may use a word in different senses on different occasions, or he may use the word with two senses at the same time (John is fond of this practice).
As seen in the image below, the pair almost got heated in a different sense in the game as Ronaldo appeared to take a little swipe at the Brazilian stalwart, but that was quickly forgotten having gone unnoticed by the referee.
«MCI is known to cause changes in different senses, such as vision or touch,» says Dr. Alain.
But, that doesn't mean M'Baku won't become Man - Ape in a different sense, and press photos of Duke as the character look to be inspired by the character of the comics, with him sporting fur and multicolored leather armor, just not the giant gorilla skin.
She added, «I can't tell you, it was so exhilarating working with him and realizing how aligned we were creatively and how much we truly valued each other, in a different sense outside of our marriage.»
I'm trying to distort that impression to provoke questions in a different sense.
John's work raises a bigger question: should we still give nonprofit hospitals a tax exemption if they are not doing charitable work in a different sense of the word?
The same can be said when you're installing all your smarthome devices, albeit in a different sense.
Parkville is familiar ground in a different sense for Uncle Jim Berg who worked for more than 40 years in Victoria's legal system, including as founding CEO for the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service (VALS).
Of course, we're talking about pounds in a different sense, the weighty kind that we all obsess over after an indulgent Christmas full of mince pies and brandy butter.
11 As applied to God, Tillich is correct: God is not a being, but the ground of being.12 Since both becoming and being are actual, though in different senses, that which is actual but not a being can act.
In a different sense, they reflect the personalities of my uncle and father.
So, in a different sense than we have employed the idea thus far, we would say that the athlete's bodily actions were more fully his acts than is true for the spastic person, for they more adequately express his intentions.
Perhaps you mean «damning» in a different sense.
Jesus is the Christ, but in a different sense than anyone expected.
By «analogical» here I mean in the strict sense implied by what has already been said about the meaning of «literal,» namely, that terms are «literal» in the strict sense of the word when, within any single logical type, they apply in the same sense, rather than in different senses, to all the different entities belonging to the type.
The phrase, «the power of the future effective in the present,» is borrowed from the writings of Wolfhart Pannenberg, though perhaps I use it in a different sense than he intends, As Pannenberg correctly notes, Whitehead himself gives no constitutive role to the future in his philosophy: see John Cobb's Theology in Process, ed.
Today, in a new city and in a different sense, I feel and am alone.
On the other hand she was, in a different sense, overqualified for every job she applied for.
In a different sense, the best first message I received was the hey.
That was my job then; in a different sense, it is my job now.
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