To hold to transcendence but not immanence is deism, while to hold to immanence but not transcendence is pantheism.
All thought breathes in immanence, whereas faith and the paradox are a qualitative sphere unto themselves.
Immanence and transcendence are the contrapletes of personality.
A life is the immanence of immanence, absolute immanence: it is complete power, complete bliss.
Pure immanence is thus often referred to as a pure plane, an infinite field or smooth space without substantial or constitutive division.
Men succeed in the world by transcendence, but immanence is the lot of women.
Pure immanence therefore will have consequences not only for the validity of a philosophical reliance on transcendence, but simultaneously for dualism and idealism.
Immanence, meaning existing or remaining within generally offers a relative opposition to transcendence, that which is beyond or outside.