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Answer for the clue "The state of being within or not going beyond a given domain ", 9 letters:
immanence

Alternative clues for the word immanence

Word definitions for immanence in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1816; see immanent + -ence . Immanency is from 1650s.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Immanence refers to those philosophical and metaphysical theories of divine presence in which the divine encompasses or is manifested in the material world. Immanence is usually applied in monotheistic , pantheistic , pandeistic , or panentheistic faiths ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. the state of being within or not going beyond a given domain [syn: immanency , inherence ]

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Immanence \Im"ma*nence\, Immanency \Im"ma*nen*cy\, n. The condition or quality of being immanent; inherence; an indwelling. [Clement] is mainly concerned in enforcing the immanence of God. Christ is everywhere presented by him as Deity indwelling in the ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 The state of being immanent; inherency. 2 The state of dwelling within and not extending beyond a given domain. 3 (context philosophy metaphysics theology English) The concept of the presence of deity in and throughout the real world; the idea that ...

Usage examples of immanence.

It is true that Hegel restores the horizon of immanence and takes away the uncertainty of Knowledge, the irresolution of action, and the fideist opening of Kantianism.

The absoluteness of imperial power is the complementary term to its complete immanence to the ontological machine of production and reproduction, and thus to the biopolitical context.

In his shorter tales an affinity may be felt with the parables of Hasidism, that pietist movement within Judaism which emphasized, over against the law of orthodoxy, mystic joy and divine immanence.

Tawhid, unicity, remains true: on Mir as on Earth, in the past as in the future, there is no god but God, and every particle of the universe, every leaf on every tree, is an expression of His immanence.

Going beyond modernity means going beyond the barriers and transcendences of Eurocentrism and leads toward the definitive adoption of the field of immanence as the exclusive terrain of the theory and practice of politics.

In his shorter tales an affinity may be felt with the parables of Hasidism, that pietist movement within Judaism which emphasized, over against the law of orthodoxy, mystic joy and divine immanence.

Having no conception of the creative act, they could have none of its immanence, or the active and efficacious presence of the Creator in all his works, even in the action of second causes themselves.

It moves through the angularities of logic, the vectors of analysis, the immanence of the unfolding speculation.