0 impossible to damage or hurt in any way:
Such a position is invulnerable against charges of excessive revisionism that have been brought against extreme versions of subjectivism that extend to results.
The sensorimotor or control function, in contrast, operates only in the here-and-now, without sensitivity to context, but it is therefore invulnerable to illusions.
Of particular importance to the creation of a brain system which is "invulnerable" or "vulnerable" to future psychopathology are steroid hormones associated with stress responses.
She may not have the option of dying of old age, but she is not invulnerable and can die of other causes.
Yet, in 1993, a party that had seemed invulnerable for almost forty years suddenly found itself in opposition for the first time in its history.
The theory adopted here deals with that issues by hypothesizing that the group may or may not feel invulnerable depending on threat perception.
It proved invulnerable to a long process of privatization.
Individuals who avoided the maladaptive outcomes associated with risk were traditionally referred to as invulnerable or invincible.