Definitionn. an impermanence that suggests the inevitability of ending or dying
Last update: August 31, 2015
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Transience is not common in some elements in that state. [Please select]
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This theory gives birth to a sort of ethical by-product whose dominant note is Harmony, the subordination of the individual to the universal reason; moral failure is proportionate to the degree in which the individual declines to recognize his personal transience in relation to the eternal Unity. [Please select]
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A haunting transience mocked him from these rolling gray hills. [Please select]
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As I sank down in my chair that odd feeling of uneasiness, of transience and unreality, of unsatisfaction I had had ever since we had moved suddenly became intensified, and at the very moment when I had gained everything I had once believed a man could desire. [Please select]
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Both in Plato and Aristotle we note the illusion under which the ancients fell of regarding the transience of pleasure as a proof of its unreality, and of confounding the permanence of the intellectual pleasures with the unchangeableness of the knowledge from which they are derived. [Please select]
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