The Collaborative International Dictionary
Realizer \Re"al*i`zer\ (-[imac]`z[~e]r), n.
One who realizes.
--Coleridge.
Wiktionary
n. Something or someone that realizes, or that brings about realization
Wikipedia
Realizer may refer to:
- For its use in mathematics see Order dimension
- Realizer, a programming tool created by Actum Solutions of the Netherlands for micro-controllers, based on the concept of converting a block schematic diagram into software
- CA-Realizer, the programming language similar to Visual Basic created by Computer Associates
- Realisor, the software for benefits management and business cases created by BRM Fusion
Usage examples of "realizer".
Christians were undeniably Jews in almost every thing except in asserting the Messiahship of Jesus: they claimed to be the genuine Jews, children of the law and realizers of the promise.
This is not to imply that Plotinus or Aurobindo were ultimate Realizers in a permanent or perfected sense, but rather that they are superb representatives of a full-spectrum approach to human growth and development based on their own experiential disclosures of the higher domains.
Christians were undeniably Jews in almost every thing except in asserting the Messiahship of Jesus: they claimed to be the genuine Jews, children of the law and realizers of the promise.
Church dogma handled the case of the extraordinary Realizer from Nazareth in a very ingenious way, using all the powers of rationality to prop up the myth.
This is not to imply that Plotinus or Aurobindo were ultimate Realizers in a permanent or perfected sense, but rather that they are superb representatives of a full-spectrum approach to human growth and development based on their own experiential disclosures of the higher domains.
Bruno and Origen and a long line of subsequent Realizers, to a grizzly death for both political and religious reasonsit was simultaneously a threat to the state and to the old religion.
The Church would produce many great philosophers (reason), and many great psychic and subtle mystics, but no matter how much these realizers tried to downplay the myths, no matter how much they allegorized them or as-iffed them or interpreted them away, there was always the one fundamental dogma that hung like a weight around their attempts to transcend, that crashed down on their shoulders and pinned them to the ground and never but never budged an inch: the utterly unique and nonreproducible realization of Jesus.