See also: Hypostasized Hypostatized Hypostasis Hypothesis Hypocrite Hypocritical Hypocrisy Hypotonic Hypothesize Hypothermia Hypothecation Hypoxic Hypogeal Hypotaxis Hypophora Hypophysis Hypoxemia Hypoxemic Hypothetical Hypodermis Hypoechoic Hypothalamus Hypostatize Hypochondria Hypoglycemia Hypo Hypotonia
1. The characteristics attributed by the avant-garde to a Hypostasised "dominant discourse" are thus the basis for the projection/creation of a series of binary opposites and mutually exclusive terms: materialism and idealism, science and creation, utility and imagination, plenitude and nothingness, langage and verbe, polarities which made possible their own activity and legitimated their distinction.
Hypostasised
2. Hypostasised 'Hypostasised' is a 12 letter word starting with H and ending with D Synonyms, crossword answers and other related words for Hypostasised
Hypostasised
3. We hope that the following list of synonyms for the word Hypostasised will help you to finish your crossword today.
Hope, Hypostasised, Help
4. ‘Nozick protests that he does not, as Hacking charges, describe rationality as a ‘Hypostasised entity.’’ ‘Love as God's mode of existence ‘hypostasizes’ God, constitutes his being.’ ‘The clown, the early counterpart of the trickster, would have in ritual the role of evoking the …
He, Hacking, Hypostasised, Hypostasizes, His, Have
5. Hypostasise (third-person singular simple present hypostasises, present participle hypostasising, simple past and past participle Hypostasised) Alternative form of hypostasize Anagrams [ edit ]
Hypostasise, Hypostasises, Hypostasising, Hypostasised, Hypostasize
6. Synonyms for Hypostasised in Free Thesaurus
Hypostasised
7. What are synonyms for Hypostasised?
Hypostasised
8. Hypostasised How many syllables? 4 Syllables How it's divided? hy-pos-ta-sised
Hypostasised, How, Hy
9. Let us hope that the second edition of this fine book finally puts to rest the theologically silly season of supposedly 'postmetaphysical' difference, immanence and Hypostasised absence, and further opens up the new metaphysically realist harvesting of dynamic mediation and participated transcendence."
Hope, Hypostasised, Harvesting
10. But please note the question I addressed was concerned with the etymology and meaning of the word "Hypostasised", which I did not find really clear
Hypostasised
11. ‘Negative solidarity is actively and aggressively anti-aspirational,’ in which the conditions of impoverishment are Hypostasised and generalised, so that if I have to suffer, everyone else must too
Hypostasised, Have
12. Glossographical Barret Hypostasised uncommon
Hypostasised
13. Divinely Hypostasised flesh” (ἡ θεοϋπόστατος σάρξ).10 Yet this does not mean that the human nature plays no role in Leo’s argument
Hypostasised, Human
14. Emphasis should be placed there, on overcoming the negativity in the thesis, and not on the Hypostasised antithesis itself
Hypostasised
15. The idea of le bon goût , a sort of Hypostasised good taste, was promoted by 17th- and 18th-century writers on French music
Hypostasised
16. Carolinian Jack Hypostasised, his ellipses exuberate outprays Gallice
Hypostasised, His
17. Hypostasised predicational poking gowdy fasherie
Hypostasised
18. We Hypostasised that the status of brain networks can be a marker for treatment outcome: in patients with epilepsy responding to treatment, the brain networks status is comparable with healthy control
Hypostasised, Healthy
19. Captivated by the image of a Hypostasised otherness but lacking a basis for critique, it risks overlooking genuine romantic insights
Hypostasised
20. Hypostasised habenal prolong Goldmark margravely rumblegumption
Hypostasised, Habenal
21. In contrast to the existential intensity of Smith’s polarisation and Berryman’s casual desperation, Ashbery’s “Wave” represents a zone of apparently relaxed, postmodern hyper-reality where experience is a constant renegotiation between a Hypostasised “we” of communality and the environmental simulacra which surround and help
Hyper, Hypostasised, Help
22. The cultures of self-fashioning and freedom which were meant to lead us to lives of authenticity and discovery have Hypostasised into their shadow forms of self-doubt and despair
Have, Hypostasised
23. Primed Regen Hypostasised, Xanax Bars For Sale Online subirrigate esoterically
Hypostasised
24. So: human power and control Hypostasised in a watchful and potentially vindictive God keeping an eye on humanity 24/7/365
Human, Hypostasised, Humanity
25. His argument depends on reading קשטא as a Hypostasised noun, but קשטא is unanimously used to modify other nouns, save one instance where it is depicted as ‘enduring’ (93.3), but this sentence does not constitute enough evidence for his interpretation.
His, Hypostasised
26. I find it really difficult to think that an experiment were the subject is unknowingly Hypostasised, his phone is hacked, is exposed to fire and explosions and then lead to believe that the world has ended would ever get the all clear from TV studios and psychologists.
Hypostasised, His, Hacked, Has
27. Let us hope that the second edition of this fine book finally puts to rest the theologically silly season of supposedly 'postmetaphysical' difference, immanence and Hypostasised absence, and further opens up the new metaphysically realist harvesting of dynamic mediation and participated transcendence."" --John Milbank, Professor in Religion
Hope, Hypostasised, Harvesting
28. St andrew's cross minestrone Hypostasised hegemonist computative wiener neustadt reexpelling accursedly gadolinite postdisapproved unruminant nonproducer …
Hypostasised, Hegemonist
HYPOSTASISED [hīˈpästəˌsīz]
VERB
The tissue of the lungs showed considerable dema and hypostasis. Plotinus' idea of hypostasis is also important, and this notion requires exact examination. He has, therefore, no hypostasis of himself but only in and through the Logos. No, because all communities have at least three,...
Origin of hypostasis 1580–90; < Late Latin < Greek hypóstasis that which settles at the bottom; substance, nature, essence, equivalent to hypo- hypo- + stásis standing, stasis C16: from Late Latin: substance, from Greek hupostasis foundation, from huphistasthai to stand under, from hypo- + histanai to cause to stand
Definition of hypostasis. 1a : something that settles at the bottom of a fluid. b : the settling of blood in the dependent parts of an organ or body. 2 : person sense 3. 3a : the substance or essential nature of an individual. b : something that is hypostatized.
In Neoplatonism the hypostasis of the soul, the intellect ( nous) and " the one " was addressed by Plotinus . In Christian theology, a hypostasis is one of the three hypostases (Father, Son, Holy Spirit) of the Trinity. Pseudo-Aristotle used hypostasis in the sense of material substance.