Sentences with phrase «coherent experience»

In 2013, Capcom Vancouver released the third installment of the Dead Rising franchise, famous for funneling an unprecedented number of zombies into a coherent experience.
Though the story content is not necessarily more interesting in Samurai Warriors 4, it is executed better than Dynasty Warriors 8 making it a more enjoyable and coherent experience.
It's just a shame that each level is essentially a miniature horde mode rather than featuring proper level design, and that the number of levels could have been cut drastically to make for a more coherent experience.
It's transformed into a coherent experience that stands the test of time a bit better than its transitional - 3D - era predecessors, and while it is the latest entry in the series, not dropping off in quality with the next installment is going to be a tall order.
It's a shame too, because if Sumioni presented a more linear and coherent experience, it would have been a much more enjoyable game.
But despite this, Velocity 2X manages to blend all of these elements together to create what turns out to be a rather coherent experience.
For us though the UI was just too busy — it tries to do too much and doesn't deliver a very coherent experience.
If learning to teach is to be a cumulative, coherent experience, a common framework should guide a comprehensive system that addresses a variety of purposes:
Program and work collaboratively to provide a challenging and coherent experience for students.
However, the program is taught by faculty from HGSE, the Harvard Business School, and the Kennedy School of Government, who work collaboratively to provide a challenging and coherent experience for students.
Kirby Star Allies on the other hand takes a bunch of ideas from older games and attempts to make a coherent experience.
However I still feel the open world is unnecessary and if Koei Tecmo focuses on a linear and more coherent experience with the gameplay of Toukiden, they can deliver something special for the fans.
Her curation pulls together a sonically and thematically coherent experience that comes close to being the macro-album these album - length macro-grooves seem to demand.
It is also the final aim of the occasion, that final unifying pattern it has decided upon in order to bring all of its prehensions into a single, coherent experience.
Let's make sure we have a coherent experience when we launch.»
Deans for Impact supports leaders in educator preparation who want to transform their programs to create rigorous, coherent experiences for every teacher - candidate they prepare.
People who were interviewed took different approaches to the exhibition, tending to build consistent, coherent experiences from their overarching attitudes, moods, intentions, strategies, and ways of conceiving and perceiving.

Not exact matches

If so, it remains to be seen which of these similar visions of panentheism is most adequate to the facts of experience and coherent in terms of total system.
Trying to shape those who have had these experiences into a coherent Christian community is harder still, and more than one congregation has thundered and sunk under the strain of sorting out the personal and the corporate.
Weinandy is particularly effective in explaining why it is precisely the impassability of God that makes both possible and coherent the incarnation of the Son of God, the second person of the Holy Trinity, in Jesus, by which incarnation God experiences and overcomes human suffering as a human being.
Fully coherent with my own experience.
While, therefore, Hartshorne's concern with the a priori aspects of our understanding may lead to criticisms that he overlooks the experiential aspect, his resulting insights in practice do not impoverish but confirm and enrich the believer's experience of a saving God by setting that experience within a coherent, consistent, and comprehensive understanding of reality.
Hartshorne is able to unite thought and experience for the believer because he has largely succeeded in developing a concept of God that is internally coherent and externally adequate to religious faith in God as the proper object of worship.
The speaker's drama in preaching is both a search for a language of lived experience and for a way of speaking sermonic texts that are «believable» at a time when coherent, theological frameworks have collapsed.
This is not to say that Christianity was not in fact accepted in part because of its intrinsic convincingness; after all, Christian theology from the beginning was always adequate to many facts of experience, and was always formulated in a somewhat coherent way.
On the contrary, the neoclassical Group I attributes can be combined with the classical Group 2 attributes into a consistent and coherent conception that captures the experience, belief, and practice of the high theistic religions better than either of Hartshorne's total packages.
Whereas Wesley came to his theology chiefly out of his study of the Bible and his personal experience, Whitehead was a mathematical physicist trying to make coherent sense of deep perplexities created by new discoveries in the early part of this century.
The second set — the questions of a systematic theology — may then attempt to determine exactly how the vast and diverse material of past and present Christian experience may be ordered to form a coherent theological whole.
Unfortunately Fr Edward's book Ways of Loving is out of print, but I can assure the reader that all the ends of marriage were very adequately discussed and that his conclusion - «outside of marriage: no deliberate, willed, intended experience of sexual pleasure at all» - was clear and coherent.
2, argues that all self - consciousness is imbued with the coherent unity of my experienced world.
We have seen that Hartshorne has excellent reasons to deny that there is only one form of theism or even that the forms that have been the most prominent are the most coherent; we have also seen why he denies that the existence of God is a hypothesis falsifiable by experience.
This provides the matrix, as a body of first principles, judged as coherent and logical depending on the manner in which each proposition requires the others in systematic interconnection.2 However, as a whole, the theses of the system must be confronted with the facts of experience.
A friend who has been teaching a course on constitutional law for a couple of decades and has achieved a national reputation confided recently that he plans to stop teaching the course; there just isn't any integrity to the subject, and it becomes almost a degrading experience to have to teach, say, equal protection doctrine and pretend that the Court's decisions are the product of any sort of coherent thinking.
Speculative Philosophy is the endeavor to frame a coherent, logical, necessary system of general ideas in terms of which every element of our experience can be interpreted.
And as we experience a coherent, cohesive set of events, I don't see how eternalism could be true.
We have to gather the data of experience to achieve a coherent interpretation which includes as clear an analysis as we can make of our presuppositions about the nature of things.
It is state in which which our brains are acting as if called upon to interpret real sensory input when actually experiencing much less coherent stimuli than reality provides.
As a traditional branch of philosophy, it refers to a comprehensive worldview or vision of reality, coherent, consistent, and adequate to the facts, that seeks to set forth the categories for the interpretation of all experience and the most general characteristics of all events.
«Speculative philosophy,» writes Whitehead, «is the endeavor to frame a coherent, logical, necessary system of general ideas in terms of which every element in our experience can be interpreted,» but they «are not dogmatic assertions of the obvious; they are tentative formulations of the ultimate generalities.»
For Whitehead, «Speculative Philosophy is the endeavor to frame a coherent, logical, necessary system of ideas in terms of which every element of our experience can be interpreted.»
Indeed in his magnum opus, Process and Reality, he sets out to elaborate «a coherent, logical, necessary system of general ideas in which every element of our experience can be interpreted» (PR 5).
«Lacking a coherent picture of what a good human life looks like, we have filled the gap with quantified measures that tell us little or nothing about how far flesh - and - blood human beings are flourishing in all aspects of their experience.
But when Hartshorne says that «reality is the succession of units» (b), meaning thereby the succession of actual entities or «experient occasions,» I must ask whether this statement can be rendered coherent with personal self - conscious experience.
There have been important recent criticisms of the excesses of scientism, but even these grow out of an acceptance of the general scientific method of drawing coherent conclusions from observation and experience.
Religious claims, in this regard, are a series of propositions which are coherent in their own terms and which generate a historical tradition in which believers struggle to reconcile their understanding of truth - claims with the pressures of life and experience.
His concern is not with evolutionist theories or cosmology, but with an initial formulation of his micro-ontology of actual occasions, intended to provide a coherent account of the experience of novelty and creativity as more than endless permutations of the previously - given.
Speculative Philosophy is the endeavour to frame a coherent, logical, necessary system of general ideas in terms of which every element of our experience can be interpreted.
Metaphysics has traditionally been understood as the search for a coherent set of general categories for the interpretation of the whole range of human experience — scientific, religious, aesthetic, moral, etc..
He defines it as»... the endeavour to frame a coherent, logical, necessary system of general ideas in terms of which every element of our experience can be interpreted.»
[It] is the endeavor to frame a coherent, logical system of general ideas in terms of which every element of our experience can be interpreted» (PR 4).
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