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Origen

NOUN
  1. Greek philosopher and theologian who reinterpreted Christian doctrine through the philosophy of Neoplatonism; his work was later condemned as unorthodox (185-254)

How To Use Origen In A Sentence

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  • Origen has recourse too easily to allegorism to explain purely apparent antilogies or antinomies. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • A tumorigenic ovarian cancer cell line failed to form tumours in athymic mice.
  • Aggressive cancer cells, expressing a multipotent, embryonic cell-like phenotype, engage in a dynamic reciprocity with a microenvironment that promotes plasticity and tumorigenicity.
  • Using a microRNA microarray, developed in collaboration with Scott Hammond at the University of North Carolina, He compared the expression of microRNAs-known as the mir-17-92 polycistron-suspected of playing a role in tumorigenesis in cancerous and normal cell lines. News from The Scientist
  • This process is thought to stimulate tumorigenic growth and to allow the intraductal proliferations to progress to carcinoma.
  • Invitro, oncogenes cooperate to transform cells and render them tumorigenic.
  • In the end, this is the argument that Origen made to his Jewish critics (and to Christian chiliasts): their view of what it means for the prophecies to be fulfilled is too restricted.
  • It should be noted, however, that the Valentinian, Ptolemy, ascribes freedom of will to the psychic (which the pneumatic and hylic lack), and therefore has sketched by way of by-work a theology for the psychical beside that for the pneumatic, which exhibits striking harmonies with the exoteric system of Origen. History of Dogma, Volume 1 (of 7)
  • For it is only when we discover the living link which bound them to the Apostolic Tradition of which they are witnesses, that we shall understand their writings and establish the heterodoxy of some passages, as for instance, the Origenistic apocatastasis in the writings of Gregory of Nyssa. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
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