Sentences with word «circumscription»

Thus Christians are constantly summoned to break through the sometimes rigid circumscriptions of their roles as parents, citizens or professionals.
Previous circumscriptions based on morphological and embryological characters recognized up to nine families, and subsequent classifications that pioneered the use of chemical and anatomical characters included 12 families (e.g., Dahlgren 1975, 1980; Takhtajan 1980; Cronquist 1981; Thorne 1983, 1992a, 1992b).
«God» can easily be exaggerated into a personification of prohibition and psychic circumscription.
Other disciplines such as ecology, conservation, and physiology will benefit from a more objectively based species circumscription, enabling us to interpret distribution and ecological patterns more precisely, while more accurately monitoring environmental disturbance and climate change.
With artistic possibilities stifled by consumer - led consensus, where to look for a way out of this mannered circumscription?
This duality demonstrates Cross» interest in subtlety and nuance and is entirely appropriate for an artist whose use of language actively resists reductive circumscription.
Although morphological and anatomical characters are generally consistent with these expanded circumscriptions, nonDNA synapomorphies for this newly recognized expanded Caryophyllales have not yet been discovered.
At this particular time of political and social turmoil, a little more coherence, clarity, and if the author may add, circumscription in the EU asylum policy is essential.
The strong support for this clade in recent multigene analyses (e.g., D. Soltis et al. 2000; Cuénoud et al. 2002) has led to a revised — and broader — circumscription of Caryophyllales by APG (1998) and APG II (2003).
According to this understanding of revelation, sin means the obscuring of our true possibilities from ourselves, a circumscription that leaves us unfulfilled and enslaved.
See in this respect also the circumscription of the term «real» that Whitehead is reported to have given in one of his classes: «real because it expresses a fact learned from the actual world and concerning the actual world» (Lackmann, 132).
«Negative liberty» for Berlin is freedom from: freedom from interference in personal matters, which implies the circumscription of state power within a strong legal framework.
The set of people voting for the same seats is called a circumscription or electoral district.
The circumscription of his constitutional right to the dignity of self, freedom of expression and fair hearing denotes that there is a desperate attempt to scare him into submission.
By contemplating visual capture of circumscription, she analyzes how her assemblages can become imagery.
They offer the viewer an opportunity to explore dichotomies between past and present, expanse and its circumscription, stillness and the inexorable momentum of atmospheric change.
Walsh seems to hew rather closely to the origins of the historical movement, yet his almost diffident serial progressions here depart from it with oddly - realized symmetries that suffuse the room with the quirky decorum of a fin - de-siècle Viennese parlor — an interesting scenario to entertain within the circumscription of the Paula Cooper Gallery, one of the primary venues of «classic» minimalism, of epoch - defining shows by Sol Lewitt and Carl Andre.
These circumscriptions remained largely intact for the past 30 years until recently when molecular phylogenetic analyses started reshaping concepts of Caryophyllales.
Because of the potential confusion introduced by applying the name Caryophyllales to a large clade, not all investigators have accepted this circumscription.
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