noun
- A philosophical doctrine holding that God or ultimate reality is inherent in the world and nature rather than transcendent or external to it.
- The belief that all knowledge and meaning are derived from experience within the world rather than from external or supernatural sources.
Usage: philosophy; theology
Usage: epistemology; philosophy
Examples
- Immanentism contrasts with traditional theology by locating the divine within creation itself.
- Some modern philosophers embrace immanentism as a way to ground ethics in natural human experience.
- The debate between immanentism and transcendentalism has shaped Western religious thought for centuries.
- Immanentism suggests that ultimate reality is accessible through the material world, not beyond it.
- Critics of immanentism argue that it fails to account for transcendent moral principles.