Sentences with phrase «echo of human»

The series of oil paintings, a nearly decade - long project whose tremendous canvases capture both the cathedral - like scale of the abandoned factories and the echo of the human industry they once hosted, is the subject of a solo show that opens Friday, February 29, at the Crisp Museum in Cape Girardeau.
What remains at the end is an elegant if remote echo of human presence.
With dimensions that echo those of the human body, these sculptures speak directly to the viewer's corporeality.
Roger White replaces de Kooning's or Gorky's echoes of human flesh with the clothing to cover it.
Anyone familiar with his work can see the direct echoes of his Human Nature (dub version) collaboration with Glenn O'Brien from 2001 as they collide with his latter day de Kooning women paintings.
[Dorothy Cross's] works draw much of their darkly humorous power from their ambiguous echoes of human sexual organs.

Not exact matches

Without echoes and remembrance of our human experiences, where is eternal life?
In speaking of the process of constant self - creation, of our continuing need to «reconceive ourselves» — a gift of the Bard to humans — he is echoing phrases that sprout from the lips of those who insist on a «multiplicity of subjective positions,» «potential identities,» and the like.
The overt artifice of Maine's verbal construction» its reverse wind - up, verbal anachronisms, internal echoes and symmetries» suggests order and intention, but the story itself speaks of missteps, loss, and regret: the inescapable product of human will and the heritage, Maine implies, of our exiled state.
Stephen Toulmin echoes these sentiments in an elegant statement on the cosmos understood on the model of our «home»: «We can do our best to build up a conception of the «overall scheme of things» which draws as heavily as it can on the results of scientific study, informed by a genuine piety in all its attitudes toward creatures of other kinds: a piety that goes beyond the consideration of their usefulness to Humanity as instructions for the fulfillment of human ends.
It is not something that merely celebrates and seals a deep human emotion — although it does echo to the very core of our emotional and psychological needs.
We are reminded of the great warning words of Hosea that have echoed throughout human civilization: «they have set up kings, but without my consent, and appointed princes, but without my knowledge» (Hos.
«We are glad to be getting back on the field for this week's games,» said NFL Referees Association president Scott Green, in a sentiment that is echoed in the hearts and minds of every breathing human.
RESOLVED, That we affirm distinctions in masculine and feminine roles as ordained by God as part of the created order, and that those distinctions should find an echo in every human heart (Gen 2:18, 21 - 24; 1 Cor 11:7 - 9; Eph.
Many thousands of years ago, ALL people were pagans, do human civilization naturally has pagan echoes mixed in with more recent celebrations.
In our generation there is danger and hope — danger that these noncognitive accouterments will lose their aesthetic harmony and hypnotic power when integrated with the basic prehensions of science, and be reverted into impotent and empty symbols, jarring, ugly, and without force in final satisfactions: hope that the power of Jesus as lure will reassert itself in an aesthetic context devoid of supernaturalism, a context such that (the language now picks up echoes of van Buren) the vision of Jesus, the free man, free from authority, free from fear, «free to give himself to others, whoever they were «1 — such that this vision in its earthly, human purity will lure our aims to a harmonious concrescence, integrating scientific insight and moral vision and producing a modern, intensely fulfilling human satisfaction.
In speaking about his views of eternity on Wednesday, answering a question from a caller based in Atlanta, Romney was echoing Mormon beliefs about the eternal nature of human existence.
Also compare the penetrating echo of the teachings of Jesus in the New Testament with something as mysterious and utterly confounding and void of human - to - human concern as the Dao De Jing.
I see the restlessness within us human beings, the sense of discontent with what we are and who we are, to be no less than the grip of God's grace upon us, echoing St. Augustine's cry in his Confessions: «Thou, o God, hast made us for thyself alone, and our hearts are restless until they find their rest in thee.»
So the last two chapters of Part I affirm that «Christ's Church, trusting in the design of the Creator, acknowledges that human progress can serve man's true happiness, yet she can not help echoing the Apostle's warning: «Be not conformed to this world» (Rom 12:2)» (37).
If we lose it, then the human forgiveness becomes either an echo of the divine, and while this would be true so far as it goes it would do less than justice to the dynamic of the teaching of Jesus, or it tends to become a means whereby we earn God's forgiveness, as is happening in Matt.
So when Jesus says that we must be born of Water and Spirit, and if you believe and are baptized you will be saved, I agree with you that in a strict sense God does the saving and we need only immerse (baptize) ourselves in the grace he offers us, I believe that the statement Jesus made about marriage to be applicable, «Therefore what God has joined together, no human being must separate» and echo Peter's rhetorical question, «Can anyone keep these people from being baptized with water?
Accordingly, he upholds the «social - organic» view of sensation to the effect that the body can never do other than «echo» or «represent» its surroundings and directly «present» its own states to the immediately sympathetic human awareness.25
We can see here an emphasis on the dignity and value of the human person that was at the heart of Pope John Paul's philosophical studies and is echoed both in the teachings of the Second Vatican Council — to which he made noted contributions as a bishop — and in subsequent teachings of the Magisterium.
Again, in Romans 8:9 - 22, Paul seems to echo the Stoic views of the aging of the world, as well as the Jewish apocalyptic conception of its subjugation by evil powers responsible for human sin and the disruption of nature.
«We recognise that just as all truth rests in the Word of God, through whom all things were made and through Whom all thing will come to their completion, so too the construction of a true human ecology can only be achieved in relationship to the Word -LSB-...] we can see and sense the echoing of that eternally spoken Word in so much of the created world around us -LSB-... which Word is] expressed in all those actions and events which make up the history of salvation -LSB-...] we recognise most centrally that this eternal Word of God, in whom all things makes sense, finds flesh in the person of Jesus of Nazareth who then becomes its fullest expression and true presence in the world -LSB-...] the centre of true human ecology is the person of Christ.»
Portal echoes a lot of that, bemoaning specialization in fitness and the abandonment of the environment humans evolved to work in and move through.
Whether you're a hipster or an accountant, straight or gay, chances are you will at some point want a spouse, and your desire for one will echo that of every other human being to be in that situation.
And the problem is not confined to land but echoes across the seas as well, where human - produced noise interferes with the lives of various ocean dwellers, including whales.
Your new take on evolutionary theory seems to echo an older view of human nature: more about competition, less about compassion.
When it comes to echoing human speech, parrots are the superstars of the animal world — but a killer whale named Wikie may not be far behind.
Jesse Ausubel, head of the Program for the Human Environment at Rockefeller University, recently echoed Lovelock's sentiment.
«Exploring the potential of human echolocation: Visually impaired people use the pitch, loudness and timbre of echoes to locate nearby objects.»
Your article about the workings of the human mind being more akin to quantum, rather than logical, computation echoes the...
While conservatives in Congress took turns echoing George W. Bush's opposition to destroying human embryos for research, Lensch's colleague Paul Lerou stepped into a small room behind a heavy black curtain to check up on a line of nonpresidential embryonic stem cells.
What's key to the trick, say human echolocators, is sensing the strong early reflections off the walls, rather than the noisy, confusing mishmash of late - arriving, weaker echoes.
This finding echoes the results of many other human epigenetic studies that show that the effects of certain experiences during childhood and adolescence are especially enduring in individuals and sometimes even across generations (right).
When bats echolocate, they emit rapid - fire, high - frequency clicks (usually out of range of human hearing), then swivel their ears like radar dishes to catch the echoes, a system sensitive enough to detect objects as thin as a human hair and tiny, night - flying insects.
«Having the genome sequence is like having part of the instruction manual,» says study author Richard Wilson of Washington University in Saint Louis (W.U.), echoing the famous 2000 comment of then Human Genome Project leader Francis Collins, who called knowledge of our genome a «glimpse of our instruction book.»
When Lilly died in 2001, he left behind recordings that contain a few eerie instances of dolphins echoing human elocution, but nobody has been able to replicate his claims that the animals knowingly uttered human words.
«The Lancet report underscores the terrible consequences for human health if we don't start reducing the dangerous carbon pollution fueling climate change — and dramatic benefits for people the world over from taking action now,» echoed Kim Knowlton, senior scientist and deputy director of the Science Center at the Natural Resources Defense Council, in a release.
The claim echoes those made many times in the emotional debate over federal funding of new human embryonic work.
For example, investigators found that for the mouse immune system, metabolic processes and stress response, the activity of some genes varied between mice and humans, which echoes earlier research.
The findings echo research that reported oxytocin levels were raised in teams of human volunteers when they were pitted against each other in games.
This sentiment was echoed at a recent meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science's (AAAS) Science and Human Rights Coalition (16 - 17 July), where an undercurrent of discontent stemmed from a perceived lack of government leadership in the area, says Jessica Wyndham, associate director of the AAAS Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights and Law Program.
While many of Harris» arguments have dramatic implications, his urging scientists to overcome ailments to human health echo the core mission of Gladstone.
Black Butterflies is the sad human poetry of the lost souls who slip beneath the waves to echo in our collective consciousness.
Beautiful Thing is a confident statement about musical and human authenticity, with production by UNKLE's Tim Goldsworthy which builds dub - like echo - chambers, inside which a kitchen sink's worth of sounds claustrophobically rattle.
Nick and Lien's romance may be generic cliché, but it demonstrates human connection in a world of dehumanization, echoing «The Last of the Mohicans» defiant romance against a world at war.
The characters in Man Of The West never feel real and organically human, but instead as echoes of Mann films pasOf The West never feel real and organically human, but instead as echoes of Mann films pasof Mann films past.
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