Sentences with phrase «challenges radical ideas»

Collective practice challenges radical ideas and they were presented here in their entirety.
A few physicists have challenged this radical idea, but many share their colleague's befuddlement.

Not exact matches

Only if there had been a strong sense of tension between Christianity and the integrative American culture — a tension that was embryonically suggested by neo-orthodoxy but never substantially applied to challenge the idea of a culturally integrative science — might there have been a search for radical alternatives.
The growth of paid - time religious television and its many affiliated religious services, industries, and practices presents a radical challenge to established ideas about the nature of the Christian church.
Thus, while it does not automatically accept any radical or novel idea, religious naturalism can help us to be genuinely open to the continuing challenge of the ideal aspects of transcendence, and thus willing to entertain radically new ideas and approaches.
Many ideas that used to be radical challenges to the accepted order are now part of the accepted order.
«There's still plenty of time for the Tory leadership to develop radical ideas but the grassroots are probably correct to sense that the party's policies aren't yet equal to the scale of Britain's challenges
Elizabeth King challenges the idea of radical smallness, exhibiting her half - scale sculptures and stop - motion video projections.
Ella Plevin is the author of said quote, taken from a text that comes with the room sheet noting the show's Richard Kern short - film namesake, challenges gendered identity, questions ideas of «radical femininity» as constructed by men and mentions that women haven't always had control over their own bodies «(we still don't btw)».
(02/01/2012) New, radical theories in science often take time to be accepted, especially those that directly challenge longstanding ideas, contemporary policy or cultural norms.
New, radical theories in science often take time to be accepted, especially those that directly challenge longstanding ideas, contemporary policy or cultural norms.
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