Vision gives you the rules.
Not exact matches
Better to start articulating a new economic
vision — one that corrects past mistakes and
gives us a clear
rule book for the foreign investments yet to come.
That night I was
given permission to dream big and create a
vision for my life that had no
rules.
Keep bright in us the
vision of days when war shall cease, when hatred and division
give way to love and peace, till dawns the morning glorious when truth and justice reign and Christ shall
rule victorious o'er all the world's domain.
With a
vision typical of Utopian «theologians» whose only real faith is in this - worldly peace and happiness, Noddings proposes that we
give women power, and let women, and the femininity in men,
rule.
Eschatology as the consummation of God's
rule gives us an alternative
vision of that
rule and sends us back to the empowerment of the Spirit of Pentecost (2)(Wardlaw).
For us, it must start with the
vision of a peaceful world, where gradually the production and distribution of armaments
gives way to the production and distribution of goods and services that benefit the human race instead of threatening to destroy it, a
vision of the
rule of law rather than of economic domination, a
vision of democracy where people are able to have a real say in what their own future will be, a
vision of smallness and community involvement, a
vision of cultural pluralism and a diversity of ideas, a
vision of leisure spent meeting human needs.
Political models should be: (1) relevant — they should reflect the empirical system they attempt to symbolize; (2) economical — they should simplify that which is being modeled; (3) rigorous — they should apply the same operating
rules and assumptions of the scheme at every level of the system; (4) combinatorially rich — they should be able to generate webs of relationships or patterns throughout the system; (5) powerful organizers — they should have relevance or correspondence to processes beyond the range of their initial concern; (6) original — they should
give insights beyond the highly probable
visions of everyday language and experience.
Some landscape painters convey reality in compellingly quotidian detail, reflecting or critiquing the complex relationship between humans and nature; others construct neo-byzantine
visions of the future that may thrill or terrify; some work intuitively to
give form to the ephemeral, conveying that which can not be spoken; and many bend or break accepted
rules of
vision, reminding us that perception itself is both a privilege and a discipline.
«The initial discomfort I had telling clients I couldn't do X in their case has
given way to a new
vision of the service I provide: First of all, of course, I am faithful to my practice
rules.