Sentences with phrase «deeply human ones»

Teaching and learning are not mechanical processes but deeply human ones that call upon not just our minds but our hearts and souls.
As the head of the Globalization Response Program for the Integrated Social Development Centre, Amenga - Etego's soft - spoken integrity, warmth and his unique ability to move between the worlds of the powerful and the poor helped elevate water privatization as an important political and public health issue not only on a global scale, but on a deeply human one as well.

Not exact matches

I this all sounds like psycho - babble but I promise you that if you'll commit just one day of your life to go to prison with the team at Defy Ventures you will feel profoundly moved, you will feel deeply human and you will feel the calling to do more.
Yet, thinkers from Edmund Burke to Russell Kirk have shown the deeply anti-conservative bases of the social contract theory of Lockean (and Hobbesian) origin, one that is premised upon a conception of human beings as naturally «free and independent,» as autonomous individuals who are thought to exist by nature detached from a web of relationships that include family, community, Church, region, and so on.
scot, It's one thing to believe so deeply that you eschew evolution or the biological fact that humans are animals, it's entirely another to willfully misrepresent statements by others to support your position, and to deride and taunt people with other positions.
While on a human level our Apostolate is one of the most active imaginable, I think it has also been destined by God to be deeply contemplative.
If he was not able to change the face of the present in a decisive way, his groping toward the mainsprings of human existence enables one not only to grasp more deeply the religious situation of our time but also to foresee the direction in which a new breakthrough must be sought.
The tragedy of human behavior is that so long as we seek to build ourselves up, to overcome our deficiencies, we in fact only spin webs around ourselves, isolate ourselves more deeply than ever from one another, and reveal our desperate need for the love of God.
It imputes a sinister motive to what, in this case, is a widely and deeply held belief that God's design for human sexuality lies within the lifelong context of one - man, one - woman marriage.
In this relation to one's fellow men dialogical freedom enters history even more deeply, because it is concerned not only with the sovereign God, but also with the decisions of human beings, by which it is determined and which, in certain situations, it has to determine itself.
Lastly, I am hopeful your testimony is good for our world through demonstrating that one can be deeply thoughtful, skeptical, and human and still have the power to elicit profound change.
Calvin understood that doubt was a part of the faith experience, because human nature itself finds ideas about God and His goodness so outside of what we can understand: «For unbelief is so deeply rooted in our hearts, and we are so inclined to it, that not without hard struggle is each one able to persuade himself of what all confess with the mouth: namely, that God is faithful.»
In this perspective, every human being has an irreducible value and dignity — but also, because we have one Environment who fulfils all our knowing and loving and all our desire for love and truth, we are more deeply connected to each other than we sometimes dare to imagine.
I agree with Jermann's statement that the transgender movement is one of many manifestations of our society's deeply flawed understanding of human sexuality.
As Yves Simon and Heinrich Rommen long ago demonstrated, there is room for disagreement within the tradition of natural law about how one envisions the role played by God as the author of human nature, or about the tortuous problem of culpability when there is deeply rooted perversity of basic inclinations.
Another — one that acknowledges that human beings are, as William Hazlitt once put it, poetical animals, that we are deeply affected by beauty and form — would be to cultivate in Christian circles an understanding of true beauty.
We are aware, much more deeply now that never before, that for the survival of our Mother earth mercilessly plundered by us human beings, for the peace of the world torn with division and bigotry, for love and justice to prevail in human community, and for worship of God to bring shalom to ourselves and to the community around us, we must learn to be repentant, each one of us acknowledging we have fallen short of God's glory, But repentance alone is not enough.
Rather, being meek in the beatitudinal sense means having an eschatological consciousness about violence, believing deeply that God has acted / is acting / will act in vindication of his beloved ones — who are, of course, the members of the human race in its entirety (cf. John 3:16).
Fasting forces one of the most basic human needs to be suppressed for something deeply Holy, which similarly causes one to do the same with sexual passion.
Since captive animals live such constrained lives already, there's an argument for letting them have babies so they can have at least one part of their lives that (we humans think) is deeply satisfying for them.
But also, I think one thing we really get a sense of is the extent to which he was deeply concerned with the problems of the human being in coming to know things and that that was very much a problem that was a problem of our bodies as well as our minds.
You will have a scar on your heart, but scars are just one of the things that make us deeply human.
«I really can't stand the criticism that says, «because he's playing this character, he must be one himself» — which is such nonsense... He makes something human out of somebody so deeply flawed.»
Gleeson's character could come across as a real jackass, but he doesn't — he's a deeply flawed and mistake - making human being, but ultimately one with a really good heart, as evidenced by the not - quite - throwaway brief subplot with his dying mother.
It's less an important movie than just a really good one, very deeply emotional, well - acted, and filled with human nuance.
Roberts treats the material with intelligence and respect, allowing his actors the opportunity to craft flawed, deeply human characters who believably do everything they can to selflessly ensure their loved ones have a chance to survive the night.
«For his raw, complex and deeply human portrayal of middle - aged teacher and writer who tries to rekindle his creativity by plunging into an ill - advised affair with a student, the award for Best Actor goes to Alessandro Nivola, in Liz W. Garcia's One Percent More Humid.»
A brilliantly realistic journey back to an era of Chinese history that is as deeply moving as it is sorrowful, this lyrical and emotionally charged novel delves into one of the most mysterious of human relationships: female friendship.
(Though the hierarchy thing is deeply human, so I'll bet oral storytellers around ancient fires used to snipe at one another much the same way.
York / Zach is a deeply flawed and witty human being rather than an implacable cardboard cutout, and is one of the most impressive lead characters that you'll ever command.
Featuring one of Massenet's most enchanting scores, this deeply human take on the classic fairy tale is hilarious and touching in equal measure.
BACON REFLECTS ON POPE PIUS XII A deeply human portrayal of Francis Bacon's most enduring subject, Study for a Head, 1955 (estimate on request, illustrated left), is one of only a handful of works depicting Pope Pius XII: the current, living incumbent at the time of the painting.
The deeply controversial and unconstitutional agreement comes about a month after what might be among the most revealing developments so far in the supposed war on man - emitted carbon dioxide — an essential natural gas exhaled by humans that makes up a fraction of one percent of the greenhouse gases naturally in the atmosphere.
... I belive the answer to be plain old human nature based upon that deeply held feeling described as HOPE, the same feeling that one expresses when justifying purchasing a lottery ticket... you just never know.
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