| Evelyn Fox Keller - Psychology - 1995 - 220 pages
...sometimes quite explicit in articulating the consonance between scientific thought and Gods "Sensorium": "There is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...in infinite space, as it were in his sensory, sees things intimately . . . of which things the images only . . . are there seen and beheld by that which... | |
| Beatrice Bruteau, Bede Griffiths - Religion - 1996 - 422 pages
...medium of God's omniscience was Absolute space, which was, in other words, the divine sense organ: "[T]here is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent, omnipresent, who in infinite space, as it were with his sensory, sees the things themselves intimately, and thoroughly perceives them, and comprehends... | |
| William Carl Placher - Religion - 1996 - 240 pages
...referred to "infinite space" as the "Sensorium of a being incorporeal, living, and intelligent, who sees the things themselves intimately, and thoroughly...perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself." Even as the book was being published, he evidently got nervous about... | |
| Connie Robertson - Reference - 1998 - 686 pages
...arises all that order and beauty which we see in the world? ... does it not appear from phenomena that ardly any women at all. 642 Mansfield Park A large...ever heard of. It certainly may secure all the myrtle 8183 Opticks The changing of bodies into light, and light into bodies, is very cornformable to the... | |
| Daniel Garber, Michael Ayers - Philosophy - 1998 - 992 pages
...to account for physical causation. 'Does it not appear from Phaenomena', he asks in Query 28, 'that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...intimately, and thoroughly perceives them, and comprehends them?'215 The aetiological point of this is revealed in Query 31, where God 'is more able by his Will... | |
| Max Jammer - Science - 1999 - 290 pages
...in animals? . . . And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from phenomena that there is a being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...perceives them; and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself? ie "Henry More, "PsychathanasU," booh n, canto I, p. 108, in Psychodia... | |
| Roberto Torretti - Philosophy - 1999 - 532 pages
...there they may be perceived by their immediate presence to that Substance"; and he goes on to speak of "a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent, omnipresent,...in infinite Space, as it were in his Sensory, sees things themselves intimately, and throughly (sic) perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their... | |
| W.L. Craig, William Lane Craig - Philosophy - 2000 - 276 pages
...that Substance? And these things being rightly dispatch'd, does it not appear from Phaenomena that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself: Of which things the Images only carried through the Organs of Sense... | |
| Dirk Evers - Philosophy - 2000 - 464 pages
...349 Nach M. JAMMER, Das Problem des Raumes, 49. 350 Vgl. aaO., 118f. so Newton, geht hervor, „that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...sensory, sees the things themselves intimately, and throughly perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself '351 .... | |
| Edwin Arthur Burtt - First philosophy - 2000 - 368 pages
...eirimmediatepresencetothatsubstance ? And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from phenomena that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...sensory, sees the things themselves' intimately, and tnoroughly perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to Jiimself ; of... | |
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