re-
Etymology: From Middle English re-, from Old French re-, from Latin re-, red- (“back; anew; again; against”), from Proto-Indo-European *wret-, a metathetic alteration of *wert- (“to turn”). Displaced native English ed-, eft-, a-, with-/wither-, gain-/again-.instantiation
Etymology: From Middle French instance, from Latin instantia (“a being near, presence, also perseverance, earnestness, importunity, urgency”), from instans (“urgent”);
See also: instantinstant
Etymology: From Middle English instant (“infinitely short period of time”), from Old French instant (“assiduous, at hand”, adj), from Latin instans, instant- (“present, pressing, urgent”, literally “standing near”), from in + stāre (“to stand”).spiritual
Etymology: From Middle English spiritual, spirituel, from Old French spirituel, from Late Latin spiritualis, from Latin spiritus.(All etymologies from wiktionary.com)Latin, spiritus
Etymology: From spīrō (“I breathe, I respire; I live”)
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What might it take to re-instantiate the spiritual - or the perceived validity (maybe even primacy?) of the spiritual - of, in and through the wider world?
I’ve been thinking about this.