Sentences with phrase «as a point of departure in»

This provision for such relative and limited autonomy is indeed a key requirement in any theory which takes the whole as primary, since without it there is no way to understand or even account for the fact that partial aspects can be found which may serve as points of departure in the development of knowledge.
It serves as a point of departure in much the same way the horse and head function in paintings by the contemporary American artist Susan Rothenberg (MATRIX 3).
Thus, the aim of Signals: If You Like I Shall Grow, is not to establish a definitive history of the gallery, but to re-activate its past as a point of departure in the present.
Having trained in the conservation of Japanese decorative arts, Lorenz continues to employ traditional lacquering and gilding techniques as points of departure in her studio practice.
Hughie O'Donoghue often uses historic events and figures from art history as a point of departure in his work.

Not exact matches

With this as their point of departure, the bishops further suggest a process of negotiations to achieve three objectives: «First, it should formalize Israel's existence as a sovereign state in the eyes of the Arab states and the Palestinians; second, it should establish an independent Palestinian homeland with its sovereign status recognized by Israel; third, there must he negotiated limits to the exercise of Palestinian sovereignty so that it is clear that Israel's security is protected» (my emphasis).
This vision serves as «a viable point of departure for oppressed persons, suggesting that in the quest for liberation oppressed persons must claim their freedom.»
Scripture is the primary source and guideline «as the constitutive witness to biblical wellsprings of our faith,» but tradition, experience and reason also function as sources and guidelines, and in practice «theological reflection may find its point of departure» in any of them.
3 This point of departure required, furthermore, that «any proclamation of God which is to be operative upon and within us can only express God in His relation to us,» not God as God is in and of Godself.4
The parallel between the situation envisaged in the saying and that providing its point of departure in the ministry of Jesus is such that we must see the table - fellowship of that ministry as a table - fellowship «of the Kingdom» and as anticipating a table - fellowship «in the Kingdom».
We see at once that the historical in the more concrete sense is a matter of indifference; we may suppose a degree of ignorance with respect to it, and permit this ignorance as if to annihilate one detail after the other, historically annihilating the historical; if only the Moment remains, as point of departure for the Eternal, the Paradox will be there.
Jesus understood the Kingdom of God as being manifest in his ministry; all else in his teaching takes its point of departure from this central, awe - inspiring — or ridicule - inspiring, according to one's perspective — conviction.
Pannenberg's other christological innovation is his reintroduction of the concept of logos, which in Jesus: God and Man he replaced with the idea of revelation as the point of departure for Christology.
19) of the Posterior Analytics, where Aristotle describes how the mind ascends to the first principles on which all science is grounded, he points out that the immediate point of departure of the inductive movement is not mere sense perception, but «experience»: «So from perception there comes memory, as we call it, and from memory (when it occurs often in connection with the same thing), experience; for memories that are many in number form a single experience.
Cf. D. Emmet: «But the doctrine of the objective immortality of actual entities... in the constitution of other actual entities is, as Miss Stebbing points out, a departure from the earlier view of events as particular and transient, and objects alone as able to «be again».
His thoughts on the special role of agape in evolution may serve as a point of departure for developing a conceptual scheme that makes room for the origin of what is radically new in a world of regularity and order.
A sort of nonbiblical text and point of departure for this lecture is to be found in one of the definitions in Webster's Dictionary, which characterizes power as an ability either to produce or to undergo an effect.
In fact, he takes as his point of departure their lack of knowledge, symbolized in the altar «to the unknown god.&raquIn fact, he takes as his point of departure their lack of knowledge, symbolized in the altar «to the unknown god.&raquin the altar «to the unknown god.»
Human loving in its personal aspect might be seen as the first of a series of concentric circles, whose point of departure (so to say) is the self in its personal identity.
11 Cone acknowledged that, in fact, his position is «in company with all the classic theologies of the Christian tradition,» though, of course, with a different point of departure: the plight of the oppressed.12 Biblically, he focused on the redemptive suffering of Jesus (coupled with his resurrection as a defeat of suffering) and expressed the eschatological point that God has in fact defeated the powers of evil even though we still encounter them and are called to fight against them, «becoming God's suffering servants in the world.»
in which, consciously and explicitly, the reality of life on the one hand, Scripture and Tradition on the other are being recognized as equally important points of departure.
Thus, while you use Francis's identity as a Jesuit as a way to explain his pontificate, you simultaneously use his pontificate, in this case, Amoris Laetitia, as a point of a departure to critique the Jesuit charism.
But when we understand theology as having its point of departure in the real and is centered on life, then we need a method that corresponds to such an - approach.
The point at hand is that the Spirit's presence as Counselor (Paraclete) solves the problem to faith of the vacancy left by the departure of the Jesus who had led in discipleship, and shifts the life of faith into another mode than «following.»
The temporal point of departure is nothing; for as soon as I discover that I have known the Truth from eternity without being aware of it, the same instant this moment of occasion is hidden in the Eternal, and so incorporated with it that I can not even find it so to speak, even if I sought it; because in my eternal consciousness there is neither here nor there, but only an ubique et nusquam.
In order to conceive of divine causation we should not take as our point of departure the crude images of transfer of power that we find in the objects of secondary (sense) perceptioIn order to conceive of divine causation we should not take as our point of departure the crude images of transfer of power that we find in the objects of secondary (sense) perceptioin the objects of secondary (sense) perception.
One may wonder whether this takes into account the religious attitude in its essence — for the present I put aside the Christian event, which poses still other problems — for the religious attitude appears fundamentally as the expression of a dependence, whatever the point of departure for this dependence may be.
... which claims to recover in its purity the first layer of facts and ideas which served as a point of departure for the first generation of Christians.
It would be natural to see in this the slow but sure «leavening» of the world by the spirit of Christ, or the like, as did the older liberalism, if we did not recognize, again, that the point of departure is the activity of God as king.
Just as our birth in a particular nation and setting is a constant factor throughout our lives, baptism is the point of departure, the definition of our selves, to which we must constantly return in order to understand who we are and who we are called to be in Christ.
Instead they focused upon the subjective perceptions and internal anxieties of the human person as their point of departure, which for Jaki was all very well as a second step in theological dialogue but not the first.
again, the only way that you presume those questions are merely material & physical in nature is if you * already assume * naturalism as your philosophical point of departure.
History It is possible that a Portuguese recipe was minimally adapted in Sri Lanka or used as a point of departure.
And, as Arseblog pointed out, note the subtle differences in the last lines of the announcements of the departures of Carlos Vela and Robin van Persie.
I use both natural and abstract elements as my departure point to create a collection of items that combines my interests in bold, graphic woodcut / relief art, the craft of sewing, and, in particular, nature, giving a nod to mid-Twentieth Century design too.
[8] «The abstract category «labour,» «labour as such,» labour sans phrase, the point of departure of modern economics, thus becomes a practical fact only there [in the USA as the most modern form of bourgeois society].»
As Shami Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, has pointed out, Grieve's departure «is a very worrying signal of how the government values human rights in particular» and recalled that the ex-attorney general's maiden speech was in support of the Human Rights Act.
Perhaps the most appropriate point of departure in examining how the Dhammapada parallelsclassic yogic principles as outlined in Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, is in comparing each text's first lines.
Signaling the determination of indigenous musicians to assert their enduring role in rock, the doc takes Fred Lincoln «Link» Wray, Jr.'s seminal guitar instrumental «Rumble» as its departure point.
Written long before the sequels were published, Garland's script seizes on key ideas from the novel, but spins them in exciting new directions, using his source as a kind of leaping - off point (even the opening meteor detail is a bit of a departure, albeit one with rich other - worldly implications) from which he offers five tough women a chance to make first contact with this alien presence, and perhaps save the human race in the process.
The foreword, written by editor in chief Daniel Dawkins, briefly brings up this question as a point of departure for the book A Hideo Kojima Book: The Ultimate Guide to Metal Gear Solid.
At the point of departure, we find Max haunted by his tragic past and hunted by desperate scavengers as he drifts around the vast wasteland in a rusty, rattling, off - road muscle car.
The movie takes as its departure point the 2010 killing of Sea World trainer Dawn Brancheau by the orca Tilikum (who had killed before, apparently), and then examines the rise of Sea World and the inhumane conditions under which these orcas live, which can lead to the kind of psychopathic behavior seen in Tilikum.
The picture's point of departure is Copenhagen in the Roaring Twenties, which is where we find Einar and his wife Gerda (Alicia Vikander) both plying their trade as aspiring artists.
At the point of departure, we find the self - abusing schoolmarm singularly focused on her impending wedding to the filthy - rich heir (Nat Faxon) she sees only as her meal ticket to a pampered life in the lap of luxury.
As a point of departure for my first editorial for Research in Learning Technology, this seemed appropriate; a reflection on how — along with my fellow editors, our contributing authors and pool of reviewers — we have worked together to surface these six stories of research in this field.
Stephen L. Gessner uses the Education Week classifieds as a point of departure for an analysis of what is wrong in American schooling («What the Want Ads Can Tell Us About the Educational Wars,» July 8, 1998).
If you're a classroom teacher and are interested in trying out this idea, here are a few questions that might serve as a good point of departure for teaching discipline:
For example, as students study the Korean and Vietnam Wars in history class, a teacher will have them review the causes of the previous wars they have studied that year to find points of intersection and departure.
Abstract: Having as departure point her learning as a participant of the Second Forum on Education for Global Citizenship, held by UNESCO in Paris, shortly after the January 2015 attacks, the author shows that the best antidote to violence and fear - that paralyzes and generates more violence — is to educate people to see themselves as part of a single humanity.
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