Sentences with phrase «following an expression of»

Brightman was as intellectually honest as any philosopher I know of, and the following expression of his uncertainty seems to suggest that he knows Hartshorne has raised issues his philosophy can not handle:

Not exact matches

They share details of how they've built and grown brands, developed creative means of self - expression, found and followed their passions and cared for themselves in the process.
You should not treat any opinion expressed by Cramer as a specific inducement to make a particular investment or follow a particular strategy, but only as an expression of his opinion.
In many cases, the expression of gratitude comes with the follow - up.
French NGOs lodged complaints against her following the comments, but she was acquitted of «inciting hatred» because her statement did not «target all of the Muslim community» and was protected by freedom of expression.
As I've explained more than once in this forum, this expression is merely economists» shorthand, serving to describe the process that begins with banks crediting borrowers» accounts with lent sums, is followed by the borrowers» drawing on their borrowed deposit credits by writing checks or otherwise transferring funds to various payees, and finally, other things equal, by a transfer of reserves from the lending bank to the payees» banks, for the sake of settling inter-bank dues.
The expression Avakain followed press reports from late February, reported that SEC has sent invitations to companies suspected of violating the securities laws through their participation in the ICO.
Statements preceded by, followed by or that include words such as «may,» «should,» «expect,» «plan,» «anticipate,» «believe,» «estimate,» «predict,» «potential» or similar expressions are intended to identify some of the forward - looking statements.
During the Reformation, Anabaptists insisted on following literally Jesus» command not to swear any oath, while Calvinists and Lutherans adhered to the traditional Roman Catholic use of religious oaths as an important expression of the religious foundations of political obligations.
The antiwar domestic American politics of the Sixties were a volatile expression of what might be called, following the existentialist fashions of the time, the «politics of authenticity.»
In essence, faithful members of the Mormon faith, or the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints, wear the garment as an outward expression of an inner commitment to follow the Lord, Jesus Christ.
The relationship can stand moments of anger if they are followed by forgiveness — feelings and expressions of love.
It can be an expression of faith and also a way to invite others to follow and know Christ.
That site has some really excellent posters you might want to take a look at as well (oh, and it might help get the extra layer of meaning if you know that «po - mo» is also slang for «post modern» which is a term used to describe the meta - level / self - satirize / surreal sort of cultural expression that followed the «modernist» movements): http://www.spurgeon.org/~phil/posters.htm
On this assumption, the pastor does well to examine not only the initial expression of regret over guilt, but beyond that whatever long - term behavior patterns may follow after it.
Their membership ceremony is very baptismal, no water, but it's definitely a public expression of a new life, following Jesus, in The Army.
If I follow the first direction, which is the one favored by Hartshorne, I must suppose that each successive «total temporary state,» to use Grice's expression, is also the «total temporary state» of a «subject.»
These, then, are the several levels of unity that bind together the diverse topics of the chapters to follow: first, the curriculum of education; second, the major problems of contemporary civilization; third, the values by which education is seen as a moral enterprise; and fourth, a concept of value as devotion to worth rather than to satisfaction of desire, together with an ideal of democracy as the social expression of basic moral commitment.
Section 2 of the Charter claims to guarantee the following fundamental freedoms to all Canadians: «(a) freedom of conscience and religion; (b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication; (c) freedom of peaceful assembly; and (d) freedom of association.»
In this view, it is intolerable that the largest and most influential moral authority in the world persists in rejecting the sexual expression of the cultural commandment to «follow your bliss.»
«31 The idea of the particularization of the validity of expressions of religious experience will have to be followed out in epistemology and in the theory of religious experience.
How ironic is it that Limbaugh would apply to this pope and his efforts the name of a man who once had the following to say about religion: «Religious distress is at the same time the expression of real distress and the protest against real distress.
In Mark (followed by Matthew and Luke) the traders, or rather their priestly patrons, are accused of having turned the temple into a «robbers» cave» — not a «den of thieves»; that expression, which has passed from the King James Version into our current speech, is a mistranslation.
We are praying he will follow through with this promise and commit to protecting freedom of religious expression,» he said in a press release.
The following year, Sovereign Grace Ministries president C. J. Mahaney stepped down due to «various expressions of pride, unentreatability, deceit, sinful judgment and hypocrisy.»
There follow verbose passages about union, mutual love, and support, etc., sentiments one finds in romantic poetry and in the sincere expressions of homosexual lovers for each other.
When Jesus is led to trial, the only recorded expression of lament or sorrow is by the women in the multitude that followed Jesus (Luke 23:28).
«2 What follows, as the witness of the Nineteenth Century, is only plausible as a confident expression of the extraordinary belief in Western - style Progress that Rauschenbusch and his generation and social stratum breathed daily.
But if the order of nature is the expression of the Divine Will it follows that God wills health, that He means his creatures to be healthy, and that He is opposed to pain, disease, abnormality of every kind, just as He is opposed to sin and vice (Elwood Worcester, Samuel McComb, and Isador H. Coriat, Religion and Medicine: The Moral Control of Nervous Disorders [New York: Moffat, Yard & Company, 1908], p. 292).
Jesus» expression of surprise is followed in Matthew by a statement given by Luke in a different connection (Mt 8:11 - 12; Lk 13:28 - 29).
For despite the profundity and profuseness of the purely theoretical or philosophical expressions of Buddhism, these expressions, at least in their Zen and Madhyamika forms, follow a totally negative way.
But the greatest lesson to take away from Benedict's momentous act is its fearlessness and expression of freedom» above all, the freedom to follow one's conscience as the Lord leads it, regardless of secular expectations.
From this, however, it does not follow that the ethical is to be abolished, but it acquires an entirely different expression, the paradoxical expression — that, for example, love to God may cause the knight of faith to give his love to his neighbor the opposite expression to that which, ethically speaking, is required by duty.
The most that follows is the need for the philosopher or natural theologian to remember with Whitehead that «the accurate expression of the final generalities is the goal of discussion and not its origin.»
A proposed revision to the new DSM, due out next year, lists the following as a mild impairment of interpersonal intimacy, and thus a criterion for the neurotic / personality disorders: the patient has the «[c] apacity and desire to form intimate and reciprocal relationships, but may be inhibited in meaningful expression and sometimes constrained by any intense emotion or conflict.
No good purpose is served by concealing this fact, as is often done today when things that are really incompatible are combined by the following type of over-simplified reasoning: that whatever in early Christian teaching appears to us irreconcilable with the immortality of the soul, viz. the resurrection of the body, is not an essential affirmation for the first Christians but simply an accommodation to the mythological expressions of the thought of their time, and that the heart of the matter is the immortality of the soul.
In what follows I suggest how knowledge of brain processes and patterns of belief might converge, and then how that constellation might enhance an understanding of Byzantine and medieval architecture as tangible expressions of those beliefs.
«The facts which are grouped together under these expressions, and which give them their meaning, are as follows:... With our two hemispheres we think singly; with the identical parts of our two retinæ we see singly....
There are no ambiguities, no gray areas, only either categorical expressions of its goodness or direct allusions to its sinfulness, and the actions that must follow from either.
Thus, the above expressions are often followed by one or more of the following several weeks later:
Perusing the index of Origins, the weekly publication of representative documents and speeches compiled by Catholic News Service, our imaginary historian will note, for example, the following initiatives undertaken at the national, diocesan and parish levels in 1994 - 95: providing alternatives to abortion; staffing adoption agencies; conducting adult education courses; addressing African American Catholics» pastoral needs; funding programs to prevent alcohol abuse; implementing a new policy on altar servers and guidelines for the Anointing of the Sick; lobbying for arms control; eliminating asbestos in public housing; supporting the activities of the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities (227 strong); challenging atheism in American society; establishing base communities (also known as small faith communities); providing aid to war victims in Bosnia; conducting Catholic research in bioethics; publicizing the new Catechism of the Catholic Church; battling child abuse; strengthening the relationship between church and labor unions; and deepening the structures and expressions of collegiality in the local and diocesan church.
The general community shock that followed these events found expression in a strong suspicion that the media, particularly the television and video industry, contributed significantly to these and other expressions of social violence through the heavily violent nature of much of their news and entertainment programming.
On this basis there naturally follows a co-operation of religions in «life and work,» to extend this expression which Soderblom used of the Christian ecumenical communion to the ecumenical union of all religions.
The use of such expressions as «a private matter» and «between God and me» suggests that his Catholicism, however sincere, has been considerably attenuated by Canada's civil religion, which, following Jean - Jacques Rousseau's, will brook no dissent, particularly from those whose faith entails obedience to something beyond the socially - sanctioned quest for autonomy.
Simplifying possessions was an outward expression of my commitment to follow Jesus with simple obedience.
Since all this is true, it follows that the second meaning which the expression «history of a symbol» can have is equally true.
In what follows we will examine how Whitehead's theory of symbolic reference alters our understanding of the arts, and we will supplement his account with ideas derived from Merleau - Ponty's theory of expression.
Obama's elevation of bodily suffering above all other considerations, as he articulates it in his remarks to the press following his new executive order on stem cell research, is clearly an expression of this Cartesian legacy, of a modern science pregnant with moral attachments.
For them this Pastoral Constitution was the expression of a starry - eyed humanism, a product of optimism following the horrors of the world war.
The following recipe is a great expression of this theme using nature's ingredients.
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