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Preexistence   Listen
noun
Preexistence  n.  
1.
Existence in a former state, or previous to something else. "Wisdom declares her antiquity and preexistence to all the works of this earth."
2.
Existence of the soul before its union with the body; a doctrine held by certain philosophers.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Preexistence" Quotes from Famous Books



... a-doing it they are manning a yard. What did the people call one-third of their salute in 1675? And are we to suppose that they were never led to give "one more" cheer, as they do nowadays? And have the LL.D.s of Cambridge—old Cambridge—yet to learn that the compound always implies the preexistence of the simple, and that "a cheer" is, by logical necessity, the antecedent of "three cheers"? Can they fail to see, too, as "cheer" meant originally face, then countenance, then comfort, encouragement, that, before it could be used as a verb to mean the expression ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 8, No. 47, September, 1861 • Various

... stands before His guilty judges and their suborned witnesses and while they mock and deride Him He breaks His hitherto amazing silence not to demonstrate to them the truth of His incarnation nor the proof of His preexistence, but in calm and measured utterance to tell them that after they shall have put Him to death He will come the Second time; and they shall see Him descending from heaven seated upon the cloud of shekinal glory and ...
— Why I Preach the Second Coming • Isaac Massey Haldeman

... an idealist in the Platonic sense of the word, a spiritualist as opposed to a materialist. He believes, he says, "as the wise Spenser teaches," that the soul makes its own body. This, of course, involves the doctrine of preexistence; a doctrine older than Spenser, older than Plato or Pythagoras, having its cradle in India, fighting its way down through Greek philosophers and Christian fathers and German professors, to our own time, ...
— Ralph Waldo Emerson • Oliver Wendell Holmes



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