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    The ultimate ground must envelop all beings while allowin... — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    Supports→The place of true nothingness is both the epistemic source of consciousness and the ontological origin of beings.

    The ultimate ground must envelop all beings while allowing each being its own principle of self-determination.

    Modality & PossibilityNatural Theology
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    Natural TheologyModality & Possibility

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    Consciousness & Mind1 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Only a ground that is neither a determinate entity nor an empty void can serve a...The place of true nothingness is both the epistemic source of consciousness and ...This groundless ground is not a determinate being, yet it is not a mere static v...

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    SEP: kyoto-school
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    Ultimately, however, there is a crucial limit to the subjective “field of consciousness.” As Kant demonstrated, subjective consciousness cannot reflect things as they are in themselves, but only as they appear when schematized according to subjective categories. What, then, is the ultimate place wherein the encounter between subjects and objects takes place, wherein persons and things coexist? According to Nishida, this must be the place wherein persons and things not only undergo changes in acc

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