Sentences with phrase «absolute form»

Lacking his master's certainty in absolute forms without any substance, delighted with all the things he could discover by his senses, Aristotle became the first empiricist, by an large indifferent to anything he couldn't hear, smell or feet The body is the real house of the soul, he insisted, an nothing gets to the soul — not pure knowledge and not any thing else — without the vital mediation of the flesh.
We have seen that radical faith knows the transcendent epiphany of Spirit as an alien and repressive form of God, and Hegel would teach us that it is only in the modern world or in an absolute form of faith that consciousness can know that transcendent Spirit is abstract and lifeless, for only by means of a realization of the death of God in human experience can faith be liberated from the authority and the power of the primordial God.
He argued, however, that in order to assure peace and prevent a return to the state of nature — which he equates with a state of war — it is essential to set up an absolute form of sovereign authority to which we submit ourselves.
There is not a single physical attribute that manifests itself in sports in its absolute form, but instead, they...
There is not a single physical attribute that manifests itself in sports in its absolute form, but instead, they all come together to define a mélange of different combinations of strength, speed, and endurance that ultimately define an athlete's sport - specific work capacity.
While I do not agree in its absolute form, I believe EMH holds true most of the time.
Constantly striving for an absolute form of abstraction deprived of narratives or any kind of reference to anything outside the canvas, Reinhardt could no longer find himself in Abstract Expressionism, charging it for the opulence of emotional indications and a cult of the ego.
Garden Leaves 1955 or Azalea Garden 1956 recalled at the same time Rothko's No. 1 1948 - 9 - shown at Tate - and de Staël's Coin d'atelier fond bleu 1955 - included at the Whitechapel - one of the late works where the French painter had abandoned thickness in favour of fluidity, when he was trying to tread that fine line between «the absolute form and the absolute unformed».
It is this idea of containment that links Keogh's work with the pervasive biological exploration in Crowner's pieces, depicting a natural course resisting enclosure in a clean, absolute form.
Happily, that rule no longer avails in its absolute form in most, if not all, Canadian common law jurisdictions as a result of survival of actions statutes.
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