View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Immanent.
Immanent meaning
Naturally part of something; existing throughout and within something; intrinsic. | Of something which has always already been. | Restricted entirely to the mind or a given domain; internal; subjective.
Synonyms of Immanent
Example sentences (17)
No immanent threat to public safety.
After decades of focusing on an economistic notion of equality, the need also for cultural equality, immanent in “cultural citizenship”, remains unappreciated.
The language of this ethnic group is always focused on the present, they do not have a specific term for “past” or “future”, which reflects their relationship with nature and a more immanent approach to their existence.
This belief that the best way to live was immanent in the natural order of the cosmos was deeply influential.
The baseline message of these three books is that technology is immanent in the human being.
Both religions agree that God shares both transcendent and immanent qualities.
British Liberal Judaism affirms the "Jewish conception of God: One and indivisible, transcendent and immanent, Creator and Sustainer".
Each moment of consciousness is simply the Absolute itself, infinitely immanent and self reflecting.
For Habermas, only a subjective form of liberty could be conceived, to the contrary of Deleuze who talks about "a life", as an impersonal and immanent form of liberty.
He stressed the historicity and cultural construction of concepts while simultaneously advocating the necessity of an atemporal and immanent apprehension of them.
In Sikhism, God is described as both Nirgun (transcendent) and Sargun (immanent).
It presents the nature of Purusha or the cosmic being as both immanent in the manifested world and yet transcendent to it.
Systems have immanent capacities but only as an outcome of the institutionalized processes of action-systems, which in the final analysis consists of the historical effort of individual actors.
The ontological (or essential or immanent) Trinity speaks of the interior life of the Trinity —the reciprocal relationships of Father, Son, and Spirit to each other without reference to God's relationship with creation.
The Reality is immanent in the entire creation, but the creation as a whole fails to contain God fully.
The Tao also is something that individuals can find immanent in themselves.
They start where the reader finds himself, in immanent ethical possibilities, aesthetic repetitions, and are themselves vulnerable to the lure of poetic sirens.