Sentences with phrase «comes under the rubric»

As David Burrell (who certainly should be asked to give the Gifford Lectures) has argued, any talk of God «intervening» in nature is misleading and inappropriate if one remembers that divine action comes under the rubric of creating.
The efforts it made among Muslims, after an early feint toward the Hindus of India, came under the rubric of a «Palestine mission.»
It was a chance to get up close to some of the later more delicate and intricate works loosely coming under the rubric of the «Kite» paintings.
Nurses, for example, can have skills in one jurisdiction that other nurses in other jurisdictions may lack, but, in most instances, those additional skills come under the rubric of lateral or vertical promotions that usually carry a different title than just «RN.»

Not exact matches

Evangelicals, though not the originators of these measures, have been suspected as being sympathetic, and as a result have come under relentless attack in the mainstream media under the «religious right» rubric.
In the 1950s, through the efforts of family members, Castle's work came to the attention of the local art community, and it began to be exhibited in Idaho and the Pacific Northwest, often under the rubric of outsider or self - taught art.
With EARTHTWERKS & Other Celestial Familiars, the collective of visual artists acts as curators, representing visual art trends across the United States and coming together under the conceptual rubric of the notion of heliograph.
Social scientists will be discussing it for years to come under the general rubric of «The Madness of Crowds and Popular Delusions.»
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