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Showing results for concomitance. Search instead for concomitances.
Definitions

concomitance

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




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Leibnitz, the eminent Protestant divine, observes: “It cannot be denied that Christ is received entire by virtue of concomitance, under each species; nor is His flesh separated from His blood.”

From The Faith of Our Fathers by Gibbons, James

That which we call "explanation" of natural process is, in fact, in all cases, merely a finer analysis of concomitance or sequence, or the analysis of some new phase of it.

From A Review of the Systems of Ethics Founded on the Theory of Evolution by Williams, C. M.

Nature made health, and at the same time it was necessary by a kind of concomitance that the source of diseases should be opened up.

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

Permanence expresses in general time, as the persisting correlate of all existence of phenomena, of all change, and of all concomitance....

From Kant's Theory of Knowledge by Prichard, Harold Arthur

In the first place, our knowledge of the concomitance of brain-process and consciousness, or at least of the constant uniformity of this concomitance, is only comparatively recent.

From A Review of the Systems of Ethics Founded on the Theory of Evolution by Williams, C. M.




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