Sentences with phrase «concrete human reality»

The Apostle's insistence on the offering of our bodies emphasizes the concrete human reality of a worship which is anything but disincarnate.

Not exact matches

Abzug's push for Women's Equality Day was, in fact, far more symbolic than many of the more concrete policies she made a reality in her six years in Congress, not to mention in the two decades prior to her election, which she spent as a lawyer fighting for human rights and civil rights.
Our praying, whether in word or thought, whether in church or at home, whether at ordinary services in church or at the Lord's Supper, should be grounded in two matters of supreme importance: the reality of God as Love and the concrete place where we happen to be as human beings.
In portraying Rodrigues's struggle to reconcile this idealized vision with the concrete reality of the Japanese people, Endō and Scorsese wish us to see the universal experience of human weakness.
Human beings can not understand abstract, invisible realities without first learning visible, concrete references.
In fact, if we agree with him that human experiences of as brief a duration as one - tenth of a second may be distinguished in consciousness, and if we disregard the problem of whether a sleeping person also experiences at about the same rate of ten occasions per second, then simple arithmetic enables us to conclude that the concrete reality of a human being that lives seventy years is well over two billion individual «selves»!
In respect to human experience, Berkeley challenges us to explain «the complete concreteness of our intuitive experience,» a phrase that is consonant with his insistence that concrete reality consists in just those ideas we do in fact have.
His view that creativity «is the passage from an actuality to a greater and, in a sense, more richly concrete actuality» expresses a wholly positive intuition of reality and the stuff of human affairs.
Of course St. Paul, like all the other New Testament writers, has to deal always with the concrete realities of human sentiment and behavior.
Almost on a par with this is the correlative conclusion that this Something must be a concrete reality experience - able by humans in some manner.
Our praying, whether in word or thought, whether in church or at home, should be grounded in two matters of supreme importance: the reality of God as Love, and the concrete place where we happen to be as human beings.
These lists and specific references in other essays identify six similarities: (a) God is understood as love involving God's presence in human experience and God's response to that experience, (b) human existence depends upon God's grace and that grace makes humans free, (c) humans respond to God resulting in the fulfillment of God's intentions in the concrete experiences of individuals, (d) knowledge involves more than subjective sensory experience, (e) experience broadly understood is crucial for theology, and (f) reality is characterized by diversity and relationality.
Such philosophy will be cut off from concrete reality as observed and invite idealism - unless we perversely treat science as so different from normal human observation as virtually not to come into this category.
Frequently lost in the policy discussions about human embryonic stem cells research are concrete realities that will determine how quickly such research will result in treatments and cures.
Laure Prouvost's work ranges freely between different systems of representation, alternating fiction, nonsense, and an imaginary, dreamlike world with the concrete reality of everyday life and human perceptions.
Pierre Huyghe, After ALife Ahead, Skulptur Projekte 2017, Ice rink concrete floor; Sand, clay, phreatic water; Bacteria, algae, bee, chimera peacock; Aquarium, black switchable glass, conus textile; Incubator, human cancer cells; Genetic algorithm; Augmented reality; Automated ceiling structure; Rain; Ammoniac; Logic game.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z