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Page "Conscience" ¶ 55
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universal and connection
We see a universal, comprehensible connection, and with that individuality likewise attains another character and nature, for it is no longer the plastic individuality of the ancients.
Meher Baba said that his silence was not undertaken as a spiritual exercise but solely in connection with his universal work.
Similarly a January visit to Britain by a team of Israel Defense Force ( IDF ) was cancelled over concerns that arrest warrants would be sought by pro-Palestinian advocates in connection with allegations of war crimes under laws of universal jurisdiction.
According to Rank ( 1929 – 31 ), " Birth fear remains always more universal, cosmic as it were, loss of a connection with a greater whole größeren Ganzen, in the last analysis with the ' All ' All ...
The principle of an all embracing, universal and omniscient Great Spirit, a connection to the Earth, diverse creation narratives and collective memories of ancient ancestors are common.
Immanuel Kant, a central figure of the Age of Enlightenment, likewise claimed that two things filled his mind with ever new and increasing admiration and awe, the oftener and more steadily they were reflected on: " the starry heavens above me and the moral law within me ... the latter begins from my invisible self, my personality, and exhibits me in a world which has true infinity but which I recognise myself as existing in a universal and necessary ( and not only, as in the first case, contingent ) connection.
Walzer also argued that attempts by courts to define conscience as a merely personal moral code or as sincere belief, risked encouraging an anarchy of moral egotisms, unless such a code and motive was necessarily tempered with shared moral knowledge: derived either from the connection of the individual to a universal spiritual order, or from the common principles and mutual engagements of unselfish people.
Spherical harmonics were first investigated in connection with the Newtonian potential of Newton's law of universal gravitation in three dimensions.
This was within a scheme of Vaticinium Eliae or three periods of 2000 years for universal history, to which he had little commitment, though indicating its connection with the three climate regions and their predominance.
If the homology groups are torsion-free, the Betti numbers are independent of F. The connection of p-torsion and the Betti number for characteristic p, for p a prime number, is given in detail by the universal coefficient theorem ( based on Tor functors, but in a simple case ).
The connection with the definition given above is via three basic results, de Rham's theorem and Poincaré duality ( when those apply ), and the universal coefficient theorem of homology theory.
Andrew B. Newberg and others describe neurological processes which are driven by the repetitive, rhythmic stimulation which is typical of human ritual, and which contribute to the delivery of transcendental feelings of connection to a universal unity.
Traditional metaphysics, which is, according to Guénon, beyond any contingency ( knowledge of universal principles ), lies at the very source of all orthodox and legitimate traditions, making a connection between the heart of these traditions and a unique spiritual origin, the " Primordial Tradition ".
Third-genders have no connection with sex among men ( which is universal ).
Lead wire resistance can also be a factor ; adopting three-and four-wire, instead of two-wire, connections can eliminate connection lead resistance effects from measurements ( see below ); three-wire connection is sufficient for most purposes and almost universal industrial practice.
To make this connection clear, the pope concluded each of these passages in Evangelium Vitae with a reference to the " ordinary and universal magisterium " and a footnote that cited Lumen Gentium § 25.
Only the major roads are paved and the rate of electricity connection is almost universal.
The roots of historiography in the 19th century are bound up with the concept that history written with a strong connection to the primary sources could, somehow, be integrated with " the big picture ", i. e. to a general, universal history.
He published his design in August 1965 Popular Science magazine, and although it did not show any connection between the rig and the board ( i. e., a universal joint ; the mast simply rested in a depression on the board ) it did refer to a " more complex swivel step for advanced riders not shown.
Potential readers were advised that they would need " an Internet connection, a World Wide Web ( WWW ) browser and a universal resource locator for GNN or a local copy of the GNN ' home page ' ( which is available via electronic mail ).

universal and referred
All such examples may be referred to as peripheral buses, although this terminology is not universal.
It is also referred to as MWI, the relative state formulation, the Everett interpretation, the theory of the universal wavefunction, many-universes interpretation, or just many-worlds.
These innate constraints are sometimes referred to as universal grammar, the human " language faculty ", or the " language instinct ".
The entire universal process that gives rise to the cycle of death and rebirth, governed by karma, is referred to as Samsara while the state one is born into, the individual process of being born or coming into the world in any way, is referred to simply as " birth " ( jāti ).
In English, a ship is traditionally referred to as " she ", even if named after a man, but this is not universal usage ; some journalistic style guides advise using " it ", others advise " she " and " her ".
* Water is a good polar solvent and is often referred to as the universal solvent.
Commonly referred to as a universal museum, encyclopedic museums have collections representative of the world and typically include art, science, history, and cultural history.
Limits are also referred to as universal cones, since they are characterized by a universal property ( see below for more information ).
Colimits are also referred to as universal co-cones.
In 1993, Belgium's Parliament voted a " law of universal jurisdiction " ( sometimes referred to as " Belgium's genocide law "), allowing it to judge people accused of war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide.
In any case, the context and / or units of the gas constant should make it clear as to whether the universal or specific gas constant is being referred to.
The " Eternal Jew " became an increasingly " symbolic ... and universal character " as the struggle for Jewish emancipation gave rise to what came to be referred to as " The Jewish Question ".
This pattern of naming is not universal, however ; Chinese doctrines, for example, are often referred to by number.
The Poor Man's Guardian in the 1830s, edited by Henry Hetherington dealt with questions of class solidarity, universal suffrage, property, and temperance, and opposed the Reform Act of 1832, The paper explored the rhetoric of violence versus non-violence, or what its writers referred to as moral versus physical force.
Hale and Noy became close friends, to the point where he was referred to as " the young Noy ", and more crucially he also met and befriended John Selden, a " man of almost universal learning, whose theories were to dominate much of later thought ".
Through the use of this palm healing ( sometimes referred to as " tenohira " ( 掌, meaning " the palm "), practitioners believe that they are transferring universal energy ( reiki ) in the form of ki through the palms that allows for self-healing and and a state of equilibrium.
The concept of universal suffrage originally referred to all male citizens having the right to vote, regardless of property requirements or other measures of wealth.
This is sometimes referred to as two-tier health care or universal health care.
The service obligations of USPS under current law are commonly referred to as the " universal service obligation " or " USO ".
The concept that all are saved regardless of belief is referred to as universal reconciliation.
* Koine Greek-also referred to as " the common dialect " or " Alexandrian dialect ", " common Attic " or " Hellenistic Greek "-the universal dialect spoken throughout post-Classical antiquity ( c. 300 BC – 300 AD )

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