Sentence examples for but whose existence is from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

The drone attacks are part of a covert program that American officials officially refuse to talk about, but whose existence is an open secret.

The "clones" of the title are a genetically engineered army secretly commissioned for the Republic's defence, but whose existence is covered up a sinister convocation of plotters.

The end of this process of diminishing activities is matter which is entirely bereft of form and so of intelligibility, but whose existence is ultimately owing to the One, via the instrumentality of Intellect and Soul.

Or Meier's claim that the Pleiadians gave him a "laser gun" that he never shows anyone but whose existence is evidenced by burn-marks on the brush in the woods.

Similar(56)

For example, said James Turley, chief executive of Ernst & Young, the rules affecting special- purpose entities, like the partnerships that Enron used to borrow hundreds of millions of dollars but whose existence was hidden from investors, could be changed so that it is more difficult to keep those debts off a balance sheet.

Four years ago, after I spent a half-decade performing the token rites of green living in a series of large American cities, "the Environment" had begun to seem like an obscure deity you had to propitiate with curly light bulbs and brown napkins but whose existence was mostly speculative.

Moore concentrates here on the case of a 'sensation of blue' and maintains that this experience is a kind of 'diaphanous' consciousness or awareness of blue, which is not a 'content' of experience at all, but something real whose existence is not dependent on experience.

Local labourers may have guided gangs to some places, but the looting of unexcavated sites, whose existence is largely unknown, suggests expert collusion.Iraqi officials accuse Dhiqar's American administrators of indifference to the unfolding catastrophe.

Especially since Ibn Sina, the deity was widely identified with wajib al-wujud, "that whose existence is necessary"; but, as a philosophical category, is "necessary existence" necessarily unique?

For Leibniz the world is the collection of all the actual contingent beings -- that is, all of the actual beings whose existence is possible but not necessary (Leibniz 1714 [1969]: 646).

Christians and Platonists also agreed on the assumption that the first principle itself cannot be part of the natural world but must be a transcendent entity whose existence is wholly independent of and prior to this world, and upon which the world's existence wholly depends.

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