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transcendency

/tran-sen-duhns/US // trænˈsɛn dəns //

超越性,超越,超度,超脱

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the quality or state of being transcendent.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It expresses overcoming fear, perseverance and transcendence.

  • They talk about transcendence, the potential for us to upload ourselves into some new form, perhaps into a computerized form.

  • As usual, her story and art are about so much more — the realities of aging, the quest for transcendence and the drumbeat of mortality.

  • He embodies a sort of transcendence because he stays with Cora and lives on in spirit, encouraging her to pursue the liberation and freedom she desires.

  • It illuminates a path toward tradition, and also possibly transcendence.

  • We see detoxing as a path to transcendence, a symbol of modern urban virtue and self-transformation through abstinence.

  • “We are working towards transcendence,” the cardinal said to the packed press room before quickly correcting his mistake.

  • If they can manage that, they will have indeed achieved transcendence.

  • Transcendence, starring Johnny Depp, is the latest in a series of Hollywood films with what you might call a transhumanist flair.

  • But Transcendence, despite having all these things going for it, has bombed at the box office and with critics alike.

  • There can be only feeling; and the least self-transcendence, even in memory, must be an illusion.

  • The transcendence of time beyond nature gives some slight reason for presuming that causal nature should occupy time.

  • Moreover, it affords unusual scope for the religious sentiment, freed from its mysticism and transcendence.

  • Instead of this transcendence modern preaching emphasizes immanence, often to a naïve and ludicrous degree.

  • Immanence and transcendence are merely theistic terms for identity and difference.