Sentences with phrase «become loci»

in human life in a given social and ecological context, becomes the locus of the parabolic teaching of Jesus.
In the New Testament, the church of Jesus Christ has become the locus of God's promise.
In one, the church becomes a source of fellowship, participation and institution - building; in the other, the church becomes the locus of an alternative worldview and, possibly, increased individuation and pluralism.
Goods produced with U.S. capital and Mexican labor would be competitive in the international market, so Mexico would become the locus of production for many goods for export outside the free - trade zone.
And this, I suggested, becomes the locus for drawing the substance and the agenda for theology.
The science of love quickly became the locus of Fisher's attention, particularly as it is pretty central (albeit in different degrees) to the aforementioned behaviours.
Love quickly became the locus of Fisher's attention, particularly as it is pretty central (albeit in different degrees) to the aforementioned behaviours.
TV becomes the locus of spectacles, «battles royale» whose moral implications the films don't have time to expire (which isn't necessarily a bad thing, as the action and the objects in the film can «preach» better).
That Coogler feels deeply connected to his hometown is evident: The movie goes to great lengths to create the feel of the Oakland and San Francisco metropolitan areas, a move that makes perfect sense given that Grant died in a BART station that became the locus of protests afterward.
As suggested by their titles — The Audition, The Rehearsal and The Interview — in each of the three installations making up The Woods, a particular show business ritual becomes the locus of meaning through which to more broadly reflect upon and decode the machinery of mainstream entertainment.
With several immersive installations, the audience becomes the locus of the investigation, interacting with metal bars in their by measuring their own figure against the spaces that Gormley orchestrates.
His Gallery 291 became a locus for the exchange of critical opinions and theoretical and philosophical views in the arts, while his periodical Camera Work became a forum for the introduction of new aesthetic theories by American and European artists, critics, and writers.
As suggested by their titles — The Audition, The Rehearsal and The Interview — in each of the three installations that constitute the trilogy, a particular show business ritual becomes the locus of meaning through which to more broadly reflect upon and decode the myth - making machinery of mainstream cinema.
«For this project I've envisaged the show as a truly active situation» explains Roach, «A process has been set in motion whereby the gallery can become a locus for the active production and exchange of thoughts and ideas.
The lake has become the locus of water's absence, a negation of itself, a void.
In one of a series of articles on Orchard for the journal Grey Room, Branden W. Joseph wrote, «During that three - year period, the exhibitions, events, openings, screenings, discussions, and performances staged at the venue gradually became the locus and embodiment of a certain strain of critical artistic discourse.
«For the artists included in this exhibition, the female body became a locus of exploration and rediscovery in a radical new visual language that challenged the way of understanding the world», explains Fajardo - Hill.
Given its history, it is no wonder that Helsinki became the locus of a collaboration between a law firm and service - design consultancy.
In many cases, city government has become the locus of innovation, leveraging data, technology, social impact bonds, and other tools.
About... Paterson, New Jersey became the locus of original American industry and manufacturing, beginning with Alexander Hamilton's 1791 consolidation of the Society for the Establishment of Useful Manufactures to harness the energy of the Great Falls of the Passaic River.

Not exact matches

When our focus is only on «quality of relationship» versus «structure,» the family tends to become for us chiefly a locus of self - fulfillment for singular individuals.
The body is the locus of meaning for us, but being or becoming a full, self - expressive person is independent of the limits of the body in some way.
He holds that becoming can not have an instant of time as a locus but must be extended and must end in an atomic occasion.
Such a metaphysics, though not successful in introducing development into being, at least correctly locates becoming as an important locus of ontology, namely as involved in those peculiar movements Aristotle called generation and corruption.
ii) Correspondences that can not or are not allowed to be spoken out — these lie in the spirit breathed into man by God and thus belongs to the transcendent locus; this then is the reason why mystical knowledge and union with God becomes possible.
This is the phenomenology, particularly as practiced by Max Scheler, of which Wojtyla became a student, and which would in time lead him into novel, but orthodox, expositions of sexual ethics (Love and Responsibility), and into even more novel, though no less orthodox, expositions of the human person as the self - possessed locus of action and thought (The Acting Person).
Christology can not be the locus for God's becoming human, although it may reveal to us the depth of his humanity for us.
Although they, of course, become ingredient in some spatiotemporal loci, they are essentially outside the spacetime continuum, being no more bound to one spatiotemporal locus than another.
Perhaps associating the two categories even becomes metaphysically required: If the subjective aim is characterized by a different content vis - à - vis each given actual situation, and if, as Ford recognizes, the subjective aim determines the locus of the actual entity then the multiplicity of divine aims implies a multiplicity of divine occasions.
Though these proposals are brilliant and even useful, they do not constitute the most important locus of ontological truth in the work of these scientists - become - theologians.
Before the initiation of our becoming, this locus was part of the divine activity determining alms for the emerging world.
Each actual occasion emerges at a particular locus in time and space when that locus becomes the center of converging feelings, or prehensions.
The carefully nurtured fiction that the locus of authority in the ABC resides in 6,300 autonomous» congregations has become increasingly difficult to maintain.
If PR IV, 2, the locus of the derivation under attack, is to become intelligible, the reader must be aware of the sort of undertaking in which Whitehead is engaged.
After Simonides» discovery, the loci method became popular across ancient Greece as a trick for memorizing speeches and texts.
The puffy appearance was a known sign that genes were being activated in those regions to give rise to their encoded proteins, so those sites of activity became known as the heat shock loci.
Genetic recombination is the transmission - genetic process by which the combinations of alleles observed at different loci in two parental individuals become shuffled in offspring individuals.
They trained their minds to become capable of these stunts, using a mnemonic training technique called «the method of loci
In recent years pleiotropy, the phenomenon of one genetic locus influencing several traits, has become a widely researched field in human genetics.
Once the gut is inflamed and bad microorganisms take the locus of control, the mucousal membrane gets worn down and the gut becomes permeable.
Once we decide that someone else / something is responsible for how we feel (external locus of control), we have lost the opportunity to influence how we react and become a victim of the stressor.
As our education system becomes more decentralized and complex, the locus of accountability should shift from government to parents.
Addendum: It is becoming so painful to sift through the slush pile flooding my Amazon recommendations that I intend to turn off the «personalized» ads and in the future only search the major publishers» websites or Barnes & Noble or Locus for new books.
Perhaps it's the protective, self - preservationist impulse extending from one racialized creative to another that prompts concerns of limitation with self - identification, but Alsharif's modes of direction deftly precipitate the necessity of her insistence, and then collapse these concerns altogether as it becomes clear that her work speaks far beyond borders and barriers: from the vantage point of one particular socio - political locus, she excavates wider, apparently enduring truths of human relations and leaves us somewhere else altogether, making sense of the nebulous matter in between.
Although destructive in nature, the gestures themselves become new loci of speech.
The Whitney's holdings of film and video now form one of the major collections in the field, and have become an important locus for art historical scholarship.
Professor Doug Berman's weblog, Sentencing Law and Policy has become the informational locus of the debate, with multiple courts citing it in opinions, and serious scholars of sentencing policy checking it almost daily.
Locus of control becomes more internal with age.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z