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Showing results for concomitance. Search instead for konkomitierendem.
Definitions

concomitance

[kon-kom-i-tuhns, kuhn-] / kɒnˈkɒm ɪ təns, kən- /




Example Sentences

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First, concomitance is an accomplished fact, and we may consider it as an organic manifestation parallel to that of the mind.

From Essay on the Creative Imagination by Baron, Albert Heyem Nachmen

Thus the evil, or the mixture of goods and evils wherein the evil prevails, happens only by concomitance, because it is connected with greater goods that are outside this mixture.

From Theodicy Essays on the Goodness of God, the Freedom of Man and the Origin of Evil by Huggard, E.M.

The two sorts of concomitance are alike only in the one point.

From An Introduction to Philosophy by Fullerton, George Stuart

The first presumption in favour of the position is grounded in the concomitance of the cheerful temperament with youth, health, abundant nourishment.

From Practical Essays by Bain, Alexander

Yet we must know that there is something of Christ in this sacrament in a twofold manner: first, as it were, by the power of the sacrament; secondly, from natural concomitance.

From Summa Theologica, Part III (Tertia Pars) From the Complete American Edition by Thomas, Aquinas, Saint