释义 |
immanentism|ˈɪmənəntɪz(ə)m| [f. immanent a. + -ism.] Belief in immanence, esp. the immanence of the Deity. So ˈimmanentist a., holding or characterized by this belief; also as n., one who believes in the immanence of the Deity.
1907Hibbert Jrnl. July 919 Immanentism..explains away rather than explains that irrational fact of experience which we call evil. 1916C. C. Martindale Life Mgr. R. H. Benson II. 392 To this Immanentist school would thus belong St. Teresa, Dame Juliana of Norwich,..and Francis de Sales. 1918M. D. Petre Modernism x. 207 He has been charged with immanentism. 1930Times Lit. Suppl. 14 Aug. 648/2 Mr. Wright stands for a modern, liberalizing and immanentist theology. 1931Ibid. 22 Oct. 812/2 The pure phenomenology which resolves Being into Becoming by a sheer immanentism. 1945Mind LIV. 275 Immanence and transcendence are logical complementaries, and..few thinkers can long afford to remain mere immanentists or mere transcendentists. 1952Mind LXI. 102 Aristotle criticised Platonic doctrine, attacking the theory of Ideas from the ‘immanentist’ standpoint. 1965Rev. Eng. Stud. XVI. 94 Mr. Miller speaks of the feeling that God is near at hand as God's ‘immanence’... The Victorian age was notoriously a period in which immanentist theologies were fashionable. |