Sentences with phrase «deutsch of»

According to the physicist David Deutsch of Oxford University it is, and he thinks it will come through the creation of a revolutionary new computing machine.
«This study uses a remarkable and original paradigm to reinforce arguments that both hemispheres are involved in processing different components of speech,» says Diana Deutsch of the University of California at San Diego.
«The current climate is at its optimum temperature,» says study co-author and biogeochemist Curtis Deutsch of the University of California, Los Angeles.
«There is no question Tom DiNapoli has been standing alone on this,» said Ron Deutsch of the Fiscal Policy Institute, a liberal think tank.
Ron Deutsch of the Fiscal Policy Institute, a fiscally progressive think tank, pointed to some state economic development spending as a place to consider trimming.
«Scandals and ensuing inaction seem to be the «new normal» in Albany... Yet another sad day in Albany politics,» said Ron Deutsch of the Fiscal Policy Institute.
«Given the damaging and destructive tax and budget policies coming out of Washington that seem to target poor and working class families, it's good to know that our state has some countermeasures in place that actually help struggling New Yorkers,» said Ron Deutsch of the Fiscal Policy Institute, a labor - backed group that lobbies for the working poor.
asked Ron Deutsch of New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness, which has been critical of other Cuomo tax cuts.
That money, added Ron Deutsch of the labor - backed Fiscal Policy Institute, might be better used in broadening anti-poverty initiatives.
Ron Deutsch of the Fiscal Policy Institute said the tax cut is meant to offset the damage caused to small businesses by an upcoming minimum - wage hike that's also part of the budget.
This presentation — by Frank Mauro of the Fiscal Policy Institute and Ron Deutsch of New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness — was made at a budget briefing for legislators, staff and advocates.
«We are not here today to be confrontational to call the governor out, or anything of that sort,» said Ron Deutsch of New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness.
«It's another sad day in Albany,» Ron Deutsch of the labor - backed Fiscal Policy Institute recently told Karen Dewitt of New York State Public Radio.
«What we are seeing is a governor who does not want a thorough and balanced review by an objective tax commission and who is creating what should be called the «Commission to Endorse the Governor's Tax Cut Plan,»» said Ron Deutsch of New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness, another progressive group that argues for government spending and, often, raising taxes.
«It's another sad day in Albany,» Ron Deutsch of the labor - backed Fiscal Policy Institute
«This bill is a lot like Frankenstein's monster,» said Ron Deutsch of the Fiscal Policy Institute.
Albany press conference: FPI's Frank Mauro and Ron Deutsch of New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness were among the speakers.

Not exact matches

In addition to donations from Bravo personality Andy Cohen, advertising pro Donny Deutsch, radio DJ Elvis Duran, and a host of private citizens, Frankel received money and supplies from Yieldstreet, Univision, Feeding America, and City Harvest, as well as friends and strangers.
If they're not happy, you can't hide,» says Howard Deutsch, CEO of Quantisoft, a survey and consulting company.
«When Deutsch presented a Super Bowl concept within the «Live Mas» framework, our extended client and agency team got to work,» said Draft, referring to an Interpublic team that consists of shops Amusement Park, Deutsch, Martin Agency and Weber Shandwick, which is led by DraftFCB to work on select projects.
The production itself was a highly polished affair held at Deutsch's Steelhead production studios in L.A., with the jurors seated around massive tables, glowing lights making them appear as if they were a circle of overlords deciding the fate of the universe.
Deutsch has been named one of the world's most innovative companies in advertising by Fast Company, and ranked on Advertising Age's Agency A-List for nine out of the past 10 years.
The issues of justice between men and women are so complex that a full discussion of them would require a shelf of books, and indeed a shelf has been appearing with Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex; Helen Deutsch's Modern Woman, the Lost Sex; and Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique, to mention some outstanding ones.
So too empirical evidence about the brain is more complex than the simple distinction about left and right processing (Sally P. Springer and Georg Deutsch, Left Brain, Right Brain [W. H. Freeman, 1981]-RRB- Take, as a prime example, the location of speech dominance in the left hemisphere.
Luther's translation of the Tanakh from Hebrew into High German would not be completed until 1534, but a decade earlier he had already brought out Der Psalter Deutsch, his first published edition of the complete psalter.
As Albert Deutsch showed in his monumental history of care of the mentally ill, some 19th century institutions did provide humane care, as well as general medical and surgical treatment for patients who needed it.
By placing Deutsch within the context of Whitehead, we can consider not only the relevancy of his model to the political phenomena it attempts to make intelligible, but we also can give thought to the organizing power of a communications model in terms of its coherence with the general character of the universe.
This very well could lead to a revised evaluation of Deutsch's political theory as well as provide for that theory a positive environment through which its implications and operations can be both refined and amplified.
(1) There is a substantial degree of analytical similarity between Deutsch and Whitehead.
The author states some of the analytical similarities between Deutsch (Karl W. Deutsch: The Nerves of Government) and Whitehead in the hope that they will provide an organic philosophy with a clearer sense of the terrain upon which can be discovered the form and content of its own particular political speech.
Surely Deutsch's concept of a politics of growth at the macro level is congenial to a universe in which, at every level, the most basic realities illustrate a similar process of self - causation, participation, and novel advancement.
Power, as suggested by Deutsch and Whitehead, is essentially a question of responsiveness in a context of mutuality and not control in a unidirectional process of extraction or coercion.
My procedure shall be to highlight a series of considerations prominently involved in the political view of Karl Deutsch and to attempt to relate them to the Whiteheadian philosophical stance.
Although the specific content of their responses is divergent, both Whitehead and Deutsch struggle to develop a model which is simultaneously relevant to that being represented and conceptually coherent.
This paper will not be a comprehensive, in - depth study of the Whitehead / Deutsch interrelationship of ideas, working through their contrasts and dissimilarities as well as their affinities.
Both Whitehead and Deutsch wish to speak of «quality» and «value» and both wish to be, at the same time, rigorously empirical.
Deutsch begins his discussion by focusing upon the limitations of power rather than the efficiency or potentialities for power as is most frequently the case today.
Deutsch says, «Quality is recognized by the matching of two structures» (NC 87).
As Whitehead and Deutsch imply, the ultimate goal of a fully interpersonal life is love, but justice is the necessary prior condition for the mutuality of love.
This paper has suggested significant agreements in perspective between Deutsch's communications model and Whitehead's metaphysics for humanity's political life in order to encourage the fashioning of an organic political philosophy.
Henry Nelson Wieman, for example, in The Issues of Life and Man's Ultimate Commitment, discusses many specific political questions in a style and with substance quite similar to that offered by Deutsch, but Deutsch gives no clues to indicate any consciousness of Wieman's work.
Deutsch argues that a process model — such as his communications model — offers the most significant theoretical analogue of political reality.
Deutsch refers to it and amplifies its implications through discussions of faith, humility, sin of pride, evil, curiosity, grace, and spirit.
Deutsch casts aspersions on «becoming entangled in the metaphysics of any absolute causality concept» and ridicules «metaphysical convictions» (NC 13f).
Whitehead's model explicitly illustrates this insight and its applicability to communications theory at both levels of analysis, although the microcosmic aspects are frequently undifferentiated, in Deutsch, from the macrocosmic ones.
If this does turn out to be the case, we will want to examine the possibility that the more comprehensive scope of Whitehead's thought may serve an important interpretative and supporting role for Deutsch's investigations of political life, which, in turn, may supply Whiteheadian studies with a focus for distinctly political problems.
Deutsch recognizes the organic character of reality which gives his political model its vitality.
In a broader context, the possibility of operationalizing Whitehead's metaphysics politically though the stimulation of Deutsch's model can only serve to relate Whitehead's abstract generalities more fully to the concrete world from which they spring.
(2) Although Whitehead's broader philosophical framework aids in an analysis of Deutsch by providing a richer, supportive philosophical context for evaluation of the Deutschian response, it is, likewise, aided by Deutsch's work.
Deutsch says, «In its crudest and simplest form, a «value» is a repetitive preference for a particular class of messages or data that is to be received, transmitted or acted upon in preference to others» (NG 178).
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