Get Free Checker

palingenesis

NOUN
  1. emergence during embryonic development of various characters or structures that appeared during the evolutionary history of the strain or species

How To Use palingenesis In A Sentence

  • The eliminationist project is in many ways the signature of fascism, partly because it proceeds naturally from fascism's embrace of what Oxford Brookes scholar Roger Griffin calls palingenesis, or a Phoenix-like national rebirth, as its core myth. Crooks and Liars
  • Palingenesis has been used for the exact reproduction of ancestral features by inheritance.
  • It grew in conjunction with the theory of palingenesis, taken from the words "born" and "anew", which argued that the external representation of the "seed" of Christianity, contained in the Gospels, had periodically "died", merely to be revived in new and better form, Socialism representing its latest and best expression. Catholic Social Thought: Europe
  • There was no obvious palingenesis bone shown in. the X-ray images.
  • palingenesis," the Sermon on the Mount, the apotheosis of the weak, the love of the people, regard for the poor, and the re-establishment of all that is humble, true, and simple. The Life of Jesus
  • In a process the philosopher Ernst Cassirer, in his Essay on Man, called palingenesis, the past is recreated as a living organism in which every separate element is connected.
  • Belief in rebirth is almost worldwide—it is also sometimes called reincarnation, metempsychosis, palingenesis, or transmigration of souls. Experiencing the Next World Now
  • (what Roger Griffin calls "palingenesis" -- a phoenix-like rebirth from the ashes). T r u t h o u t
  • I never believe palingenesis, but this Ah Q was really the copy of the old one.
  • The body dies, and the Lord of life compares it to the death of the seed in the earth; and then comes the palingenesis — the rising in glory. Wylder's Hand
View all