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Entelechy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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; Lise Carlson. Enso. 2006. Oil on canvas, 20x24. ... This site is best viewed through Internet Explorer. ( scroll down issue; past and current contributors' names are linked) ; ... entelechy is not accepting submissions at this time.
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Britannica online encyclopedia article on entelechy (philosophy), (from Greek entelecheia), in philosophy, that which realizes or makes actual what is otherwise merely potential. The concept is intimately connected with Aristotle’s distinction between matter and form, or the potential and the actual. ... ADD TO YOUR SITE...
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entelechy (en-TEL-uh-kee) noun ... 2. In some philosophies, a vital force that propels one to self-fulfillment. ... "It concerns our final end, our entelechy, the purpose of our existence, where we are going to go." Gray Henry; The First Prophet; Parabola (New York); Spring 1996.
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After nearly three hundred clinical hours in the local hospital, I finally had my first two shifts riding along with the Paramedics at the city Fire Department. They were not particularly busy nights, but the handful of patients we had left me feeling both assured that learning paramedicine is ... equinox :: entelechy...
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An entelechy is that which realizes or makes actual, what is otherwise merely potential. ... Ragged Entelechy by Fiona Webster ... An entelechy is that which realizes or makes actual, what is otherwise merely potential. This entelechy is ragged because no process is ever complete. There is always a further unfolding.
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The entelechy of a living being is conceived of as the inner telos (end) of its internal material process of becoming, and, as such, it is clearly distinguished from any external teleological relation. (NC I, 60-61;
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The three self-tests present a broad spectrum of personality characteristics that describe the unique human prisms through which giftedness radiates. ... The Personality Giftedness self-test- Do any of these personality traits describe you? ... Do you feel that a significant number of these traits apply to you?
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It is useful to point out another deficiency in Aristotle regarding the concept of form, or entelechy, as he calls it. For Aristotle entelechy is the form immanent in matter, in which it develops itself according to its own nature.
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