«Educate Against Hate will provide teachers and parents with the expertise they need to
challenge radical views and keep their children safe.
As they have become more aware of this, Indonesian Muslims are more confident in
challenging radical views imported from the Arabian Peninsula.
Not exact matches
While there are some signs of recognition such as the Fed's reduction in its estimated neutral rate from 4.5 percent to 3.0 percent during the last 2 years, the IMF's explicit use of the term secular stagnation in its World Economic Outlook, ECB president Mario Draghi's call for global coordination and greater use of fiscal policy, and Japan's indicated interest in fiscal - monetary cooperation, policymakers still have not made sufficiently
radical adjustments in their world
view to reflect this new reality of a world where generating adequate nominal GDP growth is likely to be the primary macroeconomic policy
challenge for the next decade.
But he fails even to allude to the
radical challenges to this which emerged in the 20th century from some Pragmatists and from Ludwig Wittgenstein, with their «collapse of the fact - value system», a
view now prominent in contemporary philosophy of science.
Kaufman affirms that the
radicals» emphasis on a suffering God can best be expressed in terms of the dipolar
view of God that comes out of process philosophy.6 Finally, Altizer himself recognizes that it is process theology «that is expected most profoundly to
challenge a death of God theology.»
Earliest Christianity began as a renewal movement within Judaism brought into being through Jesus.22 The examples of Jesus, his
radical and revolutionary action against the Jewish social and religious norms, indeed became a
challenge to women and for women in their ministry.23 His attitude to women is one that is
radical particularly when
viewed in the light of his historical context.
«
Viewed from the perspective of oppressed people's struggle for freedom, the holy become a
radical challenge to the legitimacy of the secular structures of power by creating eschatological images and legends about a realm of experience that is not confined to the values of this world.
Starting as it does from the modern world
view, and
challenging the Biblical mythology and the traditional proclamation of the Church, this new kind of criticism is performing for faith the supreme service of recalling it to a
radical consideration of its own nature.
Radical feminists
view society as fundamentally a patriarchy in which men dominate and oppress women, and seek to abolish the patriarchy in order to liberate everyone from an unjust society by
challenging existing social norms and institutions.
This is the central conceit of tonight's episode, «The Return,» in which almost every protagonist
challenges the convenient narratives being fed to them and comes to accept a new and
radical point of
view.
Radical feminists
view society as fundamentally a patriarchy in which men dominate and oppress women, and seek to abolish the patriarchy in order to liberate everyone from an unjust society by
challenging existing social norms and institutions.
During his study, he became associated with a group of
radical young German artists, including Albert Oehlen, Martin Kippenberger, and Werner Buettner, whose work collectively
challenged the meaning, status and value of the ubiquitously exhibited art object, as well as those who
view and consume them.
Judy Chicago talks to IBTimes UK about the state of
radical art and the
challenges punk feminist band pose to Russian bigotry The founder of Feminist Art, Judy Chicago, who has influenced women artists over five decades, holds a clear
view of the Pussy Riot punk collective.
Together, in their
radical openness to interventions of site, audience, and context, the works on
view challenge perceived notions of what constitutes an exhibition space, a public, an artwork itself.
Radical feminists
view society as fundamentally a patriarchy in which men dominate and oppress women, and seek to abolish the patriarchy in order to liberate everyone from an unjust society by
challenging existing social norms and institutions.