0 the act of bringing something that had disappeared or ended back into use or existence --
1 In the Christian religion, the Resurrection is Jesus Christ's return to life on the third day after his death, or the return of all people to life at the end of the world. --
2 the act or fact of bringing someone back to life, or bringing something back into use or existence: --
An alternative materialist account of resurrection is offered, one in which immanent causation is not necessary.
My reason for rejecting immaterialism has less to do with resurrection than with the natural world.
We have argued for a physicalistic resurrection theory.
The third develops a more naturalistic account of the many universes needed for resurrection.
The process by which the tree of resurrection universes is generated is itself naturalistic.
It follows that, (4) you ought to care about your resurrection counterparts.
Each earthly body is followed by a set of first-generation resurrection counterparts (in first-generation universes).
There are some interesting parallels and differences in the physiology of desiccation tolerance of seeds and resurrection angiosperms.