On pragmatist principles therefore, a dispute over self-transcendency is a pure logomachy.
2
In this case there is no self-transcendency implied in the knowing.
3
The transcendency of the mind over the brain shows itself here as elsewhere.
4
For this signifies transcendency, and an exemption from the indigent.
5
Or maybe this touch of transcendency is a reminder of how fleeting life is.
6
What would the self-transcendency affirmed to exist in advance of all experiential mediation or termination, be KNOWN-AS?
7
Why not treat the working of the idea from next to next as the essence of its self-transcendency?
8
A spy they will not suffer; a lover, a poet, is the transcendency of their own nature,-himthey will suffer.
9
This transcendency on their part inspired them with pride, and they would have liked to make a display of it.
10
In the final success of Reeves, it is the man himself who confronts one in the unique transcendency and victoriousness of personal merit.
11
There is elevation, transcendency, like that of the eternal heavens, high, boundless, the home of light, the storehouse of beneficent influences which fertilise.
12
The humanist sees all the time, however, that there is no absolute transcendency even about the more absolute realities thus conjectured or believed in.
13
He was so transcendency unconscious of the emotions going on in Mr. Bernard's mind at the moment, that he had only a single thought.
14
The poet lies a little, perhaps, in a very sane suspicion of his own transcendencies.
15
They are "Introductory;" "Poetry;" "Imagination;" "Veracity;" "Creation;" "Melody, Rhythm, Form;" "Bards and Trouveurs;" "Morals;" "Transcendency."
16
"Well, I think that all this has no transcendency.... That is to say...."