Sentences with phrase «indivisible unity»

Since beginning and end are both temporally separated and qualitatively different, and since it is possible to analyze what must take place for the qualitative difference to come into being, it is appropriate to speak of the act of decision as a process in spite of its indivisible unity.
It concerns a one which is just one and nothing else, a simple indivisible unity without parts.
it is necessary to say something about this context in which it is embedded and which has both a historical and a religious aspect in indivisible unity.
As time went on, the indivisible unity of experience which lay behind the preaching of the apostles was broken.
The doctrine that experience comes in drops or pulses, each of which has a unique character and an indivisible unity, is to be found in the writings of William James; but James never outlined a metaphysics on this basis.
It is in accord with Whitehead's emphasis upon the subjective unity of an actual entity, that an entity acts as a whole, and with the indivisible unity of polar opposites, particularly God and the world.

Not exact matches

The spiritual renewal of our communities, their missionary activity, their service to society, and their quest for visible unity are, we are confident, indivisible aspects of the Holy Spirit's work in our day.
The unity between them is of a different order: they «form a single, indivisible «cosmic» event which brings judgment to the world and opens up for men the possibility of authentic life.»
Even within the Forms there must be relative nonbeing, existence not only in itself (as an indivisible and hence incommunicable unit) but in relation as a divisible whole of parts, a generic unity communicable to its species.
The Forms are units, but the meanings of «unity» are two, the simply indivisible unit of arithmetic and the infinitely divisible whole of parts of geometry.
It is an act, one with a specific phenomenological shape: an indivisible apperceptive unity and intentionality, a logically prior and transcendental simplicity that organizes the many into one, a subjective vantage formally constitutive of the totality it perceives.
These variegated insights increasingly illumine that unity of religions that Schleiermacher intuitively grasped when he stated in his Reden: «The deeper one progresses in religion, the more the whole religious world appears as an indivisible whole.»
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