Sentences with phrase «microscopic views of»

His paintings have been described as «microscopic views of the natural world,» and although the references to nature and science are appropriate, his abstractions do not directly imitate nature so much as suggest its intrinsic structures.
His paintings have been described as «microscopic views of the natural world,» and although the characterization is appropriate, his work does not directly imitate nature so much as suggest its intrinsic structures.
Strongly influenced by the Surrealists and the idea of automatism — the belief that the artist's undirected hand could reach deep into the unconscious — he layered skeins of fine, interlaced lines and overlapping luminous forms that suggested microscopic views of human tissue or plant specimens, land masses seen from an airplane or undiscovered worlds exploding into being.
Microscopic views of individual magnetite crystals found in martian meteorite ALH 84001.
A microscopic view of the entorhinal cortex.
A microscopic view of blood cells forming a clot, which can clog implanted medical devices and harm patients.
And with that, he began prying away the granulosa cells clinging to the eggs, in order to get a better microscopic view of the nascent embryos to see if they were developing properly.
Gut feeling: A microscopic view of an over-the-counter drug is one of this year's Wellcome Images Awards winners.
Microscopic view of a colony of undifferentiated human embryonic stem cells being studied in developmental biologist James Thomson's research lab at the University of Wisconsin - Madison.
Photo: A microscopic view of lymphoma cells in a lymph node.
A. Microscopic view of the respiratory mucosa consisting of ciliated epithelial cells (i.e. presence of cilia at their apical surface).
A microscopic view of one clean place with no context?
Kanae Hasegawa: Your paintings show a telescopic and microscopic view of the society around us.

Not exact matches

Whiteheadians seem able to imagine such ecstatically spanned unities - across - time on the so - called «microscopic» scale of the «specious present,» but give up on the idea as the scope of the temporal disclosure space is widened to the scale of human lifetime and of generations.7 But worse than this from the point of view of Heidegger's temporal problematic, by submitting the ecstatic unities of their «specious presents» to the before / after ordering and metric properties of linear time, at least in terms of their mutually external relations and arrangements, they give back ontologically every advantage they gained from the use of an cc - static - temporal disclosure horizon in the first place, even though it was only the single horizon of presence.
Thus, for instance, deciding ceases to be understandable except as a reduction to these microscopic subdecisions compensated by what I believe to be Hartshorne's general view of the entire process as a collection of particular processes which are part of a general telos manifesting God in process.
The view of actual entities as real existents (whether microscopic, macroscopic, or «hypothetical»), rather than as descriptions of the real, has vitiated the understanding of Whitehead from the outset.
Imagine being able to view microscopic aspects of a classical nova, a massive stellar explosion on the surface of a white dwarf star (about as big as Earth), in a laboratory rather than from afar via a telescope.
In the macroscopic view, such particles are indeed large, but in the microscopic view, each small part of a large dust particle scatters radio waves and produces unique polarization features.
Due to their tiny size, irregular shape and limited viewing angle, commonly used microscopic imaging techniques can not always capture the whole object's shape often leaving out valuable information that can be important in numerous areas of science, engineering and medicine.
Green fluorescent dyes in this microscopic view mark the presence of the glucose transporter, GLUT1, on the surface of lymphoblastoid cells which go on to form the lymphomas caused by Epstein - Barr virus.
We are also able to view live images of tissue in the digestive tract at a microscopic level, enabling earlier and more accurate diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancers.
Microscopic 10x view of a colony of embryonic stems cells (The stem cell colonies are the rounded, dense masses of cells.)
Cynthia and Evelyn's tryst is placed under a microscopic lens and dissected, making for emotionally engaging viewing which tells both sides of the story.
On one two - page spread in Ocean Sunlight, we illustrate the concept of how quickly phytoplankton reproduces by including a series of circles increasing in size, each with a close - up view of these microscopic organisms.
Mixing a blown - up view of the microscopic with the naturalistic botanicals, the result runs López's evocation of infinite distance in reverse.
Painted nail heads and tiny toy homes are typical keys that guide viewers from a bird's eye view of microscopic worlds to intricate webs of connections between people, communities, history and possible futures encased within shiny coatings.
The pieces include interpretations of microscopic forms, expressive manipulations of unusual angles of vision, playful placements of figures whose points of view contrast with that of the artist and more abstract presentations of a visual experience.
Compressing macro views of aerial photography into the same picture plane as images of microscopic organisms and silhouettes of disposable plastics, Hockaday explores the gradation in which nature becomes built environments.
By the accumulation of mass Ono's installations develop into human landscapes resembling internal organs and microscopic views.
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