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diremption

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus 0.01 sec.
See: split


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This takes place through a diremption of the evil from the good in the psyche so that it can be externalized and purged, or even exorcised by hatred rather than overcome and redeemed by love.
What needs investigation is the fate of modern law - the diremption and discrepancy between its formal promises and the social actuality they presuppose and reproduce.
As long ago as 1908, the Viennese art critic Hermann Bahr had noted a certain diremption of the task of modern painting: along with any specifically formal and artistic problems it negotiates, it is also called upon "to be its own poster.
 
 
 
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