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Discover Ludwig"divine capacity" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
It is often used to describe a person's natural or inherent ability or power, often with a spiritual or god-like connotation. Example: "Her divine capacity for forgiveness and compassion was praised by all who knew her."
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The Egyptian pharaoh was represented, in his divine capacity as warrior, in larger-than-life dimensions (see photograph).
He believed that man's greatness was his share in this world of the spirit and in the divine capacity to create.
In the Middle Ages, one of the most important features of divine omnipotence was the capacity of annihilating, which was viewed as the necessary counterpart of the divine capacity of creating.
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In telephone interviews yesterday, each man was asked to reflect on the discussion, starting with a question one sponsor put to them beforehand: Have you felt tempted, or seen others tempted, to think a doctor might possess a near-divine capacity for healing?
But who could divine the capacity to shoot dozens of people in cold blood?
The hats that the children wear are drawn in such a way that they form halos around their heads, a touch Blake also uses in Songs of Innocence and of Experience to indicate the innate and divine visionary capacity of the child (see for example "The Ecchoing Green" and "The Little [B]oy Found").
I'd been to Ibiza once before, for work, because I was working with Divine, in my capacity as a club promotions man, and she was playing Ku [now Privilege], the biggest club there.
This is especially so when the sage later speaks of the divine faculty or capacity as "the eye of prophecy," (K 2 24) and later still as the "inner eye" which is "almost" the same as "the imaginative faculty as long as it serves the intellectual faculty".
Even the lowest things cannot simply be despised, for even in their dissimilarity from the divine, they bear the capacity to signify the divine more appropriately than supposedly worthier images.
Whatever the limits of our capacity to understand divine things rationally, he is certainly not an irrationalist or even an anti-rationalist if that is understood to mean someone who completely rejects inquiry and theorizing.
Such faith, which renders human beings divine, confers on them the capacity to perform operations on things and transform them according to their own desires (Del senso delle cose, pp. 221-22, 226-29).
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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