Sentences with phrase «fragments of the life of»

, on show at The Modern Institute till 2 June 2012, where fragments of the life of an artist, as narrated through pages of notebooks, become a part of the works on display.

Not exact matches

The little fragments eventually join up, creating a new pocket of life.
The work is part of an effort to bring dying reefs back to life by growing tiny coral fragments in labs or nurseries — between four and 25 times as fast as they'd grow in the wild — and planting those fragments on reefs.
Fragments of branching coral — the type that looks like animal horns — were attached with fishing line to skeletal branches of PVC pipe, creating a small forest of life in the middle of an otherwise desolate patch of ocean floor.
Instead, Griffith took survey of his lifefragmented market, baby on the way — and decided to abandon the deep dive and return to the surface.
Though Trump campaign spokesperson Jason Miller released a statement early Tuesday morning praising Melania Trump's address as «beautiful,» and noting that her «team of writers took notes on her life's inspirations, and in some instances included fragments that reflected her own thinking.»
The previous fragment, translated from Siete términos médicos que todo el mundo debería conocer, is a clear example of situations we all have lived at some point in our lives — some expert is using a set of technical terms we simply don't know, and therefore we can't follow.
So that's why essentially the «nooma's» are not this complete theology, they're fragments of... of life
Both of these ways of life are shown to be ultimately unstable in one who is aware of their full implications, and to point beyond themselves to the religious way of life, different aspects of which are represented in Fear and Trembling, Repetition, the Concept of Dread, Philosophical Fragments, and the Final Unscientific Postscript.
All profoundly religions people are gripped by a vision of reality which is not only beyond the state but beyond the difficult lessons of experience, beyond the realistic analysis of social forces and societal needs, beyond the prudential calculations of common sense, and beyond the fragmented bits of data we get from daily life.
One day we find a fragment of unknown quality, origin, and intent that was written in Egypt 20 generations after Jesus» life and this is somehow historic proof of anything?
Thus life is fragmented into a multiplicity of competing selves, alienated from their Creator, from one another, and themselves.
Generally they hold that a fragmented theological curriculum is unacceptable because it is inadequate to a unity that «the faith» or the «life of faith» is supposed to have.
It brings together (a) fragmented reflections from my three years of living and working with the Paraiyar communities in about 20 colonies around the town of Karunguzhi in Chingleput District, Tamilnadu (1985 - 87); (b) systematically documented data from a six - week intensive field trip in two of these 20 colonies, i.e., Malaipallaiyam.
In Living Faithfully in a Fragmented World: Lessons for the Church from MacIntyre's «After Virtue» (1998), Wilson responds to moral philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre, who concludes his celebrated 1991 critique of modernity by calling for «the construction of local forms of community within which civility and the intellectual and moral life can be sustained through the new dark ages which are already upon us....
We have not an individual identity, but fragments of experience; not the narrative of a life that is in some sense a whole, but a decentered flow of experience.
These fragments were most often borrowed from the lives of saints with the same name.
The important thing today is that we should be able to discern from the fragment of our life how the whole was arranged and planned, and what material it consists of.
By providing only fragments from biblical books (in this case part of an oracle from Isaiah, a reassurance from Paul, a parable from Jesus), they leave a suggestive opening, not only to other texts but also to the even more fragmented tissues of our individual lives.
Zarathustra's art and aim is to be the creative poet of the world, to save the temporal world through reconceiving and revaluing life and the world, «to compose into one and bring together what is fragment, riddle, and dreadful chance» (TSZ 161, 216).
But in the merry - go - round of our modern life, so frayed and fragmented, thoughts have no chance to ripen and settle during the day, and are abandoned.
In reaction to the fragmented, depersonalized, hectic style of the secular city, people are seeking community and evincing interest in a chosen discipline for their lives.
To live well instead of badly we need a certain strange confidence that, despite our fragmented and discontinuous experience, somehow it all eventually makes sense.
If you want concessions that the Big Bang happened (which is only postulated theory supported by fragments of data indicating the universe is expanding...) then you need to concede that there is the possibility of life after death due to all of the reported NDEs.
The shape of that fragment is extended to a full orbit when the community, made a community by the words, the work, the living presence of Jesus, bore witness to the size of the event itself.
Either American democracy is living on social capital inherited from an earlier time when Americans shared a common perspective on life's questions, in which case we face a slow descent into the fragmented and violent world Hauerwas sees; or else the enthusiastic, individualistic and yet genuinely loving piety of Emerson, Whitman and Ellison has a better grasp of our human nature, and it really is possible to be both democratic and virtuous.
Unless these understandings can be recovered and shared alongside those of the new cultures among us, we will continue to live in a fragmented and brittle society.
One of the few fragments of genuine information about «The Princes in the Tower» - the sons of King Edward IV of England, widely supposed to have been murdered in the Tower of London in 1483 on the orders of their uncle who became Richard III - concerns the spiritual life of the older of the two boys, the 12 - year - old King Edward V.
Over the course of his writing life, Augustine combined a number of elements from his fragmented culture — Neoplatonic philosophy, Roman civic morality, the heritage of the great Roman poets, Manichaeism — with his dominant but open - ended Christian faith, into a new synthesis.
We move out of the church alone as well, carrying with us our own fragments of warmth and insight as we seek to make connections between the great symbols of the faith and the stuff of everyday life.
We experience our culture as fragmented; we live on bits of meaning and lack the overall vision that holds them together in a whole.
For life in a highly fragmented and specialized society, the pastor as theological integrator can perform a socially unique role in building provisional bridges to enable us to stay in touch with our common humanity fashioned in the image of God.
Man has a fragment of the divine life in him, but he is imprisoned in the evil world of matter, and redemption is a movement away from the body and this world, away from the fear and determinism that bind him.
For most of European history from the emperor Constantine's embrace of Christianity onwards there has been a strong tendency to identify worship of God with loyalty to and reverence for the tradition and authorities that constitute the Holy Roman Empire, or its competing fragments in the Middle Ages, or their successor nation states, or one's home town and its familiar «way of life
It may seem impossible, and it is certainly a very delicate matter, to measure any movement of Life in so slender a fragment of the past.
Yet each of our lives is comprised of only a tiny fragment of the entire patterning which, woven together in ever newer syntheses, issues forth as our universe.
We need your bewilderment at the fragmented on - screen life that leaves many of us feeling scattered and disjointed.
(6) He saw psychopathology as rooted in undeveloped resources in persons: «Hidden in the neurosis is a bit of still undeveloped personality, a precious fragment of the psyche lacking which a man is condemned to resignation, bitterness, and everything else that is hostile to life.
* To relish and build on those fragments of insight and wisdom you have acquired by hard experience — this is the challenge of the interior life in the mid-years.
Another example is the contradiction between a church's goal of enhancing family life and its organizational tendency to fragment families through the many family - separating activities in its program.
As small towns, small firms, inner cities, in spite of and at times, in their own way, because of gentrification, decline, and suburban life styles become increasingly mobile, privatized, and fragmented, the loss of the sense of community is more acute.
In spite of the fragments of knowledge concerning the nature and size of the universe which science is continually gathering, we need constantly to remember that our primary concern is, whether we like it or not, with the earth on which we live.
Whether single or not, each fragment of life is meant to teach you something, I believe.
In a boat, we become whole again, and the flying fragments of our lives that whirl about us daily become concentrated in us.
Soccer, here, is less a diversion from the realities of everyday life than it is a way the fragmented day - to - day existence can come together and take on some semblance of meaning.
But the chief drawback to this fragmented approach is that we can miss the common themes and patterns that persist through the stages of a child's life.
Where our kids go to school is one small fragment of a much larger ecosystem of their life choices and values.
So I spent the first 6 months of his life on fragmented sleep, ended up in some VERY unsafe sleep positions b / c of my fear of bed sharing, like falling asleep on the couch with him in my arms.
Constraints associated with running a hospital contribute to the provision of fragmented maternity care to women who need the support of continuity of care at this important time in their lives [25, 29].
In addition to exposing the limits of state capacities to mediate the lives of their internal and external populations, the conference spotlighted the transnational and highly fragmented nature of migrants» political realities.
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