Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigDictionary
corporality
noun
The state of being or having a body; bodily existence; corporeality.
Exact(9)
Such books have no answer to the mind-body division between the high mystery of the art and the gross corporality of the artist.
The sly Boris is a memorable creation, a testament to Ms. Tartt's ability to create people who have the sort of physicality and psychological depth that Saul Bellow's characters possessed, a vitality and corporality that make the reader feel that they have a life beyond the page.
(Even so, the dead men in Melville's poem lack any physicality or bloated corporality. They are presented simply as "patriot ghosts").
So did the song celebrate the enduring incorporality of war's aims or the vivid corporality of war's effects?
She'd thought herself prone to wilt under the smelly reality of human corporality.
News will be sensational as long as the U. N. is essentially a sounding board for national feeling and has no reality, no corporality, no power, of its own.
Where "The Museum Project" often graphically illustrated ideas — of preservation and decay, corporality and spirituality — the new pictures subtly embody them.
Here, Frith's (1992) attempt to 'neuralizing' consciousness, subjectivity and agency by causally tracing them back to neurophysiological correlates is challenged by a view that places strong emphasis on the notion of "lived corporality".
Philosophically, Neoplatonism provides answers to most major questions within the context of Islam, such as how multiplicity came from unity and how corporality emanated from an incorporeal God, as well as explaining the ascending and descending order of beings.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com