释义 |
immanence|ˈɪmənəns| [f. immanent a.: see -ence.] The fact or condition of being immanent; indwelling. Also attrib., as immanence philosophy, a theory evolved in Germany at the end of the nineteenth century that reality exists only through being immanent in conscious minds.
1816Coleridge Lay Serm. 341 Its state of immanence..is reason and religion. 1847Lewes Hist. Philos. (1867) II. 106 Bruno anticipated Spinoza in his conception of the immanence of the Deity. 1883A. Edersheim Life Jesus (ed. 6) II. 521 Conscious immanence in Him [Christ], and of His Word in us are the indispensable conditions of our privileges. 1901Baldwin Dict. Philos. & Psychol. I. 520/2 The immanence-philosophy (philosophy of the immediately given or science of pure experience) is the doctrine of a group of recent German thinkers. 1931W. R. B. Gibson tr. Husserl's Ideas ii. ii. 133 Apart from perception, we find a variety of intentional experiences which essentially exclude the real immanence of their intentional objects. 1953D. H. Freeman tr. Dooyeweerd's New Critique Theoret. Thought I. i. i. 112 It appears, that also modern phenomenology and Humanistic existentialism move in the paths of immanence-philosophy. 1970D. M. Levin Reason & Evidence in Husserl's Phenomenology i. 16 If we suppose that the absence of spatial profiles could be a sufficient condition for immanence, then it would seem that we should have to consider mathematical entities and axioms as immanent objects. |