Skip to content

immutability

noun

  1. inability to modify data after it has been created
L322295 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

noun

Etymology: Borrowed from Middle French immutabilité, itself borrowed from Latin immūtābilitās. By surface analysis, immutable + -ity.

  1. The state or quality of being immutable; immutableness.

    But, one might ask, how can the temporal event of God in our midst be the same as God's event to himself in his eternity if so absolute a distinction is drawn between the enarrable contents of history and the "eternal dynamism" of God's immutability, apatheia, and perfect fullness?

  2. The state of being unchangeable in the memory after creation.