Sentences with phrase «also circumscribe»

The same forces that direct our aesthetic impulses in life also circumscribe our death, and if Lum's newer work is more grim and difficult, it is of a piece with, and a logical conclusion to, the previously mischievous, sweet way of investigating our imagined relationships to our real conditions of existence.
Besides the one quoted above (Category of Explanation xviii), Whitehead also circumscribes it, in reference to Locke, as «the principle that the reasons for things are always to be found in the composite natures of definite actual entities» (Process 19).

Not exact matches

If they ever floated into view, unless chapter and verse were also quoted in a very circumscribed context, they were dismissed as «liberal», «socialist», «unrealistic», «under the law», «wimpy do - good social gospel» — you get the drift.
Although I expect many conservative Christian thinkers will find Foucault a strange bedfellow, I want to suggest that our endorsement of the radical left on this subject should be an enthusiastic one, although it must also be carefully circumscribed.
But it also said that leaving the EU could give the UK greater flexibility — albeit at the cost of greater complexity - if it chose to vary the tax system, particularly in the area of Value Added Tax (VAT) which is currently heavily circumscribed by EU directives.
Given that he is a public figure — not only a peer of the realm but also the deputy chairman of the Conservatives, the party's biggest single donor and one of the architects of its general election strategy — that right must surely be somewhat circumscribed.
They also seem to be willing to accept some propositions with highly circumscribed causal contingency — for instance, that reducing class size increases achievement (provided that it is a «sizable» change and that the reduction is to fewer than 20 students per class); that Catholic schools are superior to public ones in the inner - city but not in suburban settings.
While Lorna, Deep Contact, and other works (including many not in the exhibition) are structured around open - ended narratives, what they presciently anticipated is perception and experience skipping along the internet's seemingly infinite set of links — seemingly, because what Hershman Leeson's work also shows is how circumscribed choice (even on the web) can be.
The ovoid composition at the center of the large, dark canvas of Exclose is defined by pink (almost fluorescent) rays that also cut diagonally across and directly through its circumscribed enclosure; a diagram that might imply inward compression from the encircling soup of mitochondrial forms, outward expansion from a thin and greenly veined core, or perhaps capture the simultaneous effect of both forces exerted at once.
The Swiss Institute offered The City Wall (2013), a configuration of metal - stud walls, also twisted, that circumscribed the main gallery.
Knowing that only X equals Y saves a great deal of time and money arguing about the possibility that Z might also equal Y; it helps to improve the predictability of litigated outcomes; it depersonalizes disputes, insofar as it's not anyone's fault that X equals Y; and, it promotes settlement by limiting the available options and thus circumscribing litigants» hopes and expectations.
This ruling also provides some interesting insights on the relationship between the Arbitration Act 1996 and the New York Convention, notably how the provisions of the Convention circumscribe the English courts» power to order security.
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