Shorr today, more than ever before, is stressing artificiality over realism, the virtual over the veristic, intellection over intuition. |
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At his most masterly, Kinsella elides naturism and intellection in the structure of his phrases. |
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Writing was the great discovery, her process of intellection, the frontier. |
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Averroes and Avicenna both teach that the human and active intellect conjoin in the moment of intellection. |
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Artists are the journeymen and women of the mind, labouring on the construction sites of perception, intellection and exchange. |
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There are different kinds of intellection, and I think some of them are much more canny about tacit, implicit knowledge, than about scientific or explicit knowledge. |
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Any definition of intellection or perception, therefore, that splits them into two disparate parts, misunderstands the nature of knowledge and of reality. |
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God's omniform essence is always the content of perception, intellection and passion. |
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But how in the first place do we get from potential intellect to actual intellection? |
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As we can see, these superuniverses have no direct representation of the Father, and possibly their tendency to empathy and intellection dilutes their sense of spiritual purpose. |
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When Banerjee talks about the artist's thinking about the music, she is not referring to an intellection about the mechanics of technique. |
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The purpose of philosophy is to unite oneself with the objects of the intellect, and even at last with the One that is above all intellection. |
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It's a book that clatters and whirs like a Rube Goldberg device, spitting out, on every page, perfectly formed pellets of intellection, rude humor, grief and longing. |
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With Neoplatonism, intellection is not an intentional act since all the objects of knowledge, insofar as the person perceives the truth, are intrinsic to the intellect itself. |
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