The hypothetical
omnipresent nature of the killer shark is meant to foster a claustrophobic sense of anxiety.
Not exact matches
He is: • Supernatural in
nature (as He exists outside of His creation) • Incredibly powerful (to have created all that is known) • Eternal (self - existent, as He exists outside of time and space) •
Omnipresent (He created space and is not limited by it) • Timeless and changeless (He created time) • Immaterial (because He transcends space) • Personal (the impersonal can't create personality) • Necessary (as everything else depends on Him) • Infinite and singular (as you can not have two infinites) • Diverse yet has unity (as
nature exhibits diversity) • Intelligent (supremely, to create everything) • Purposeful (as He deliberately created everything) • Moral (no moral law can exist without a lawgiver) • Caring (or no moral laws would have been given)
God is: • Supernatural in
nature (as He exists outside of His creation) • Incredibly powerful (to have created all that is known) • Eternal (self - existent, as He exists outside of time and space) •
Omnipresent (He created space and is not limited by it) • Timeless and changeless (He created time) • Immaterial (because He transcends space) • Personal (the impersonal can't create personality) • Necessary (as everything else depends on Him) • Infinite and singular (as you can not have two infinites) • Diverse yet has unity (as
nature exhibits diversity) • Intelligent (supremely, to create everything) • Purposeful (as He deliberately created everything) • Moral (no moral law can exist without a lawgiver) • Caring (or no moral laws would have been given)
As a result, the seeds of conceptual confusion about the
nature and purpose of theological education, if not seeds of outright incoherence, are as
omnipresent as they appear to be historically unavoidable.
If accidents of that
nature occur, it means that God is not omnipotent / omniscient /
omnipresent / omnibenevolent.
Luther gave the answer of the communicatio idiomatum, or the interpenetration of attributes of each
nature.16 On the basis of the communicatio idiomatum, the Lutherans could say that the body of Jesus Christ is
omnipresent and thereby affirm a real presence in the sacraments.
And although his theories were not yet mature, he was completely aware of their explosive
nature: By dissociating intellect and morality from god's power of creation, and attributing them instead to self - evolving forces, Darwin undermined the very foundations of a society shaped by the Anglican Church, with its hopes of eternal life and the
omnipresent threat of punishment.
To understand these complex and
omnipresent phenomena in
nature, researchers recently conducted experiments involving the propagation of light waves, and leading to the formation of ultrafast pulses on a picosecond timescale (a millionth of a millionth of a second).
The ideal place to completely submerge oneself right in the middle of
nature, Fraser Island features an almost
omnipresent sun and an abundant wildlife.
Blue,
omnipresent in
nature, here also represents the sky and the Mediterranean.
For those who travel from the city to the country during the summer months, the landscape is a place not only for recreation but also for viewing, a place to nourish the body and mind through the act of perception, through the process of coming down, of slowing down, and thus removing oneself from the diurnal routines and
omnipresent anxieties that many assume to be second
nature — the simulated «
nature» of the urban environment.
Maybe, we can find the explanation for this in the philosophy of Postmodernism and in the
nature of the world around us that demands all of us to be
omnipresent and shape shifting.
In the Western societies, it was the abundance of advertising and mass media and in China and the Soviet Union it was the
omnipresent symbolical universe of propaganda (read more on the (un) changing
nature of Pop Art in Is Urban Art The New Pop Art?).
Since then, it has been verified that this behavior is almost
omnipresent in several processes in
nature (e.g., hydrology), technology (e.g., computer networks), and society (e.g., economics).