The ban, who had no immediate knowledge of the political conditions at Budapest, briefly acquainted himself with the situation and resigned his commission as he saw his situation utterly hopeless.
12.
This love may manifest itself through brief ecstatic experiences, such that one may be engulfed by God and gain an immediate knowledge of Him, which is unknowable through the intellect alone.
13.
To satisfy an electorate eager for immediate knowledge, a massive, collaborative system has been developed over more than three decades by the news and communications industry to whip out projections of winners and losers even before all the votes have been cast.
14.
In The Triptych Papers, Morris summarises his argument in this way : " The immediate knowledge and experience of a displaced peoples have value which is undisclosed to the dominant culture necessarily, and this knowledge and experience is largely unrecognized, even by the displaced themselves.
15.
There is also some activity there from User : Mfd79, and although there is less evidence on this one, and it appears that they are two people who possibly know each other in real life, User : Mfd79 also has immediate knowledge of how Wikipedia referencing works.
16.
In the West, heaven is spoken of as the beatific vision : those to whom God reveals himself in heaven " see him face to face " The Catholic Encyclopedia defines the beatific vision as " the immediate knowledge of God which the angelic spirits and the souls of the just enjoy in Heaven.
17.
The upshot of this discovery results in the highest degree of ethical awareness, " an immediate knowledge of what I am and may not do . " The awareness of one being " really alone " in the universe, as he put it, marks the final point of discovery which is followed by the upward ascent to spiritual life.
18.
Ranke later wrote " I see the time approaching when we shall base modern history, no longer on the reports even of contemporary historians, except insofar as they were in the possession of personal and immediate knowledge of facts; and still less on work yet more remote from the source; but rather on the narratives of eyewitnesses, and on genuine and original documents ."