Sentences with phrase «as a phenomenon»

What specific significance does color have for your paintings, for example as a phenomenon of natural science?
In short, students truly have to understand volume as a phenomenon in order to answer this question.
Death is here as image as well as phenomenon.
Like all youngsters, this child is adapting to its turbulent environment and actually incorporating social change as a phenomenon into its way of life and way of thinking.
The light in the paintings acts as phenomenon, and at the same time the abstract color creates an experience of light and place.
To describe cryptocurrency as a phenomenon would probably underestimate just how successful these digital currencies have been.
As long as this phenomenon remains intact over the medium term, stocks could continue to significantly outperform bonds.
This is largely due to social media no longer being looked at as a phenomenon or passing trend, but as a vital component of the marketing mix.
I have no choice but to view this fact as a phenomena.
We know these things as phenomena, but of the «something or other» which lies behind them we can only speak in negatives.
And check back because we'll keep updating as the phenomenon rolls on.
Moreover, she is interested in ecology and environmental issues, currently researching artificial light as a phenomenon, through the relationship between writer's block and the global energy crisis.
The exhibition invites us to wonder at, contemplate, investigate and, in some cases, to interact with illumination as a phenomenon and as an artistic medium.
But as the phenomenon of arcade gaming became more mainstream, manufacturers explored other markets to sell new cabinets to.
The multiple, a system of synthetic bifurcation, has contributed to the historic decline and eventual rise of scarcity as a phenomenon by changing the mechanicalism of the familiar.
Surprisingly, how — and why — paternal mitochondria are prevented from getting passed on to their offspring after fertilization is still shrouded in mystery; the only thing that's certain is that there must be a compelling reason, seeing as this phenomenon has been conserved throughout evolution.
#DeleteFacebook doesn't work as a phenomenon only among the elite — it would take tens of millions.
The precipitous decline of liberal Protestantism is frequently viewed as a phenomenon of the last few decades, but the stereotype of religious liberalism as desiccated and dying goes back much further in time.
In the wake of Abstract Expressionism and its highly subjective, mystical focus, Judd and other Minimalists sought to create a depersonalized art in which the physical properties of space, scale, and materials were explored as phenomena of interest on their own, rather than as metaphors for human experience.
Anyone interested in blawgs as a phenomenon within the legal profession should read the results of the readership survey conducted by Bruce MacEwen for his blog, Adam Smith, Esq..
Routinely in this kind of narrative, the plight of polar bears, summer sea ice melt, global warming, and anthropogenic CO2 are conflated as the one and same thing, as each other's cause and effect, rather than treated as phenomena that have distinct and complex causes.
«The YBAs will be regarded as a phenomenon of the 1990s, not something to continue into the 21st century.»
Within the exhibition the main traits that characterize his body of work are highlighted: the fascination for painting as a phenomenon, the artist's attraction for the materials he employs — or finds — , and an exhaustive and over-controlled handwork that nearly reaches an artisanal level.
The iPhone as a phenomenon really coalesced a year later in 2008 with the 3GS, when the company added 3G wireless speeds and the app store.
Rather than assuming that people understand their own interests and act according to them, the writers approach the negotiation process as a phenomenon that's only understood as a set of essentially irrational and emotional responses.
«If you go into PubMed [the search engine for the National Library of Medicine, the world's largest biomedical library] there are maybe 20 articles that include «smartphone addiction» as a term, and most of those articles just talk about smartphone addiction as a phenomenon,» notes Choi.
We think of risk as a phenomenon to be watched from afar, like some wonderfully picturesque flaming lava flow from a volcano.
Given the diversity of views about the definition of scalability, perhaps it is best thought of as a phenomena where «you know it when you see it.»
For most of his career, Starr viewed the California experiment benevolently, as a phenomenon balanced between utopia and reason.
Large sections portray contemporary anti-Semitism as a phenomenon of the right, with a full chapter given to a vicious caricature of «the religious right,» when in fact anti-Israel and overtly anti-Jewish passions today are more than equally on the left.
Azusa made it clear, though, that while she recognizes Christianity's beauty as a phenomenon going far beyond cultural aesthetics, she is not yet a convert.
That God's love, manifest in diverse ways throughout the duration of the universe, might come to a full and unsurpassable self - expression in an individual human being who lived and died in the Middle East almost two thousand years ago does not seem incongruous with what we now understand about the nature of an evolving universe, especially if we regard religion as a phenomenon emergent from the universe rather than just something done on the earth by cosmically homeless human subjects.
Thus one may speak of God as a phenomenon by selecting a phenomenon or experience and capitalizing it; thus God is Power, Love, Spirit, Goodness, the Drift - of - history.
In all its shapes and forms, Judaism has always adhered to a concept of redemption which sees it as a process that takes place publicly, on the stage of history and in the medium of the community: in short, which essentially takes place in the visible world, and can not be thought of except as a phenomenon that appears in what is already visible.
Watergate is better seen simply as a phenomenon that permitted citizens to express their already present cynicism and to feel morally justified in doing so.
Commitment as a phenomenon has to do with why one occasion respects a pattern set for it by another occasion.
Kant introduced a sharp dichotomy between appearance and reality, which he distinguished as phenomena and noumena.
Whether or not indoor soccer makes it, the MISL is worth studying as a phenomenon, a laboratory researching those S's for all future sports management.
Every year pro football gets bigger and bigger, but what has happened this year ranks as a phenomenon — or aberration or mania.
But she acknowledges that others regard the problem as a phenomenon rooted in more profound anxieties, especially for migrants from mainland China.
Eurocentric visions dominate current discourses (as I have similarly argued in an introduction to a recent special issue that I collaboratively edited, see Vollmer et al. 2015), and this narrow sight reduces the understanding of migration as phenomenon and the intricate processes which are part of it.
This ambivalence about integration as a phenomenon, and the UK's role inside supranational institutions like the EC / EU lasted until 1961, when the Conservatives applied for membership, only to find themselves excluded until the retirement of France's General de Gaulle in 1968.
Another line of research dovetailed with Steere's work, locking Lyme disease into place as a phenomenon of the Northeast.
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