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immanens

Immanens is a term rooted in Latin that conveys the sense of something remaining within or inherent to a given thing. In English, the related noun immanence and the adjective immanent derive from this idea, describing qualities that are present inside a system rather than originating from outside it. The form immanens itself appears in Latin texts as a present participle meaning “remaining in.”

In philosophy, immanence is contrasted with transcendence. It denotes the presence or operation of a property,

In theology, the doctrine of divine immanence holds that God is present within creation and continually acting

The term immanens may appear in Latin quotations or in languages that preserve the Latin form. In

power,
or
divinity
within
the
imbodied
world
rather
than
beyond
it.
Historical
usages
include
Spinoza’s
pantheistic
view
in
which
God
or
Nature
is
immanent
in
all
things,
as
opposed
to
a
separate,
transcendent
divine
being.
In
phenomenology
and
continental
philosophy,
immanence
is
used
to
stress
that
meaning,
perception,
and
existence
are
given
within
the
field
of
experience,
without
appealing
to
forces
outside
that
field.
Thinkers
such
as
Merleau-Ponty
and
later
post-structuralists
have
elaborated
on
immanence
as
a
principle
of
thought
or
reality
generated
within
its
own
conditions.
within
it.
This
stands
in
tension
with
or
alongside
notions
of
divine
transcendence,
which
emphasize
a
God
grounds
beyond
the
world.
Some
religious
and
philosophical
traditions
reconcile
immanence
with
transcendence
through
positions
such
as
panentheism
or
process
theology,
which
maintain
ongoing
divine
presence
while
retaining
a
sense
of
God’s
otherness
or
dynamism.
modern
English
scholarship,
immanence
and
immanent
are
the
common
terms
used
to
discuss
inherent
presence
within
a
system
or
reality.