immaterial+substance

  • 101Incorporeality — Incorporeal or uncarnate means without the nature of a body or substance. The idea of incorporeality refers to the notion that there is an incorporeal realm or place, that is distinct from the corporeal or material world. Incorporeal beings are… …

    Wikipedia

  • 102nāman — ▪ Indian philosophy (Sanskrit), Pāli  Nāma        in Vedism and Hinduism, the characteristic sign or mark, most frequently used in the sense of the “name,” of an individual, or the word that stands for an object. The term has been appropriated by …

    Universalium

  • 103insubstantial — I adjective airy, baseless, bodiless, chimerical, ephemeral, fanciful, feeble, flimsy, fragile, frail, groundless, hallucinatory, illusive, illusory, imaginary, imagined, immaterial, impalpable, inadequate, inconsequential, inconsiderable,… …

    Law dictionary

  • 104spiritual — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. immaterial, incorporeal, insubstantial, fleshless; di vine, exalted, celestial, holy, sacred; religious; inspired, supernatural, virtuous, platonic; occult. See insubstantiality, piety, virtue. II… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 105Categories (Stoic) — The term Stoic Categories refers to Stoic ideas regarding Categories: the most fundamental classes of being for all things. The Stoics believed there were four categories (substance, quality, disposition, relative dispostion) which were the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 106phlogiston — /floh jis ton, teuhn/, n. a nonexistent chemical that, prior to the discovery of oxygen, was thought to be released during combustion. [1720 30; < NL: inflammability, n. use of Gk phlogistón, neut. of phlogistós inflammable, burnt up; see&#8230; …

    Universalium

  • 107Cosmogony — • By this term is understood an account of how the universe (cosmos) came into being (gonia • gegona = I have become). It differs from cosmology, or the science of the universe, in this: that the latter aims at understanding the actual&#8230; …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 108Blessed John Duns Scotus —     Bl. John Duns Scotus     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Bl. John Duns Scotus     Surnamed DOCTOR SUBTILIS, died 8 November, 1308; he was the founder and leader of the famous Scotist School, which had its chief representatives among the Franciscans …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 109Ethereal being — Water nymph by John Collier, 1923. Ethereal beings, according to some belief systems and occult theories, are mystic entities that usually are not made of ordinary matter. Despite the fact that they are believed to be essentially incorporeal,&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 110Henry of Ghent and Duns Scotus — Stephen Dumont LIFE AND WORKS Henry of Ghent Henry of Ghent was arguably the most influential Latin theologian between Thomas Aquinas and Duns Scotus, regent as a leading master of theology at the University of Paris for the better part of the&#8230; …

    History of philosophy