I would like to believe that we are all driven by some spiritual impulsion of which we are perhaps not even aware. |
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The horse went above the bit means an absence of contact with the rider's hands, legs, and seat, also leading to loss of impulsion. |
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Man feels the same impulsion, but he knows that he is free to acquiesce or to resist. |
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This converging process has two polarities: mind or spirit on the one hand, and impulsion on the other. |
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Thus, whereas Husserl's phenomenology was methodological, Scheler's, because of the technique of suspension of impulsion, was intuitional. |
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For an impulsion to lead to expression there must be conflict, a place where inner impulse meets the environment. |
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As an alternative to the pneumatic impulsion there are also pure electrical impulsions available. |
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The horse needs sufficient impulsion for the work that is being asked of him, i.e. cantering a 20 metre circle requires much less impulsion than performing a canter pirouette. |
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The totality of the organs of a body constitutes a sort of mechanism which receives its impulsion from the active or vital principle that resides in them. |
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Côte d'Ivoire recommended that experiments on detainees with electric impulsion weapons provoking acute pain, which can constitute a form of torture, be avoided in penitentiaries. |
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The core of the insert is made of a soft and highly resilient elastomer material for enhanced feel and impulsion to get the ball rolling. |
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And while the vital principle gives impulsion to the organs in which it resides, the play of those organs develops and keeps up the activity of the vital principle, somewhat as friction develops heat. |
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She tries to be pure and transparent, the powerful arm of God, letting itself be carried along by the impulsion of the Spirit, making sacramental the action of Jesus in the world. |
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