Sentences with phrase «from abstract ideal»

In that case, the «social» in «social justice» refers to something that emerges not organically and spontaneously from the rule - abiding behavior of free individuals, but rather from an abstract ideal imposed from above.
If your business depends on the engagement, creativity and free thinking of your teams, you must do your part to move the creation of a culture of conversation from abstract ideal to cultural reality.
As an artist she never wavered from abstract ideals: exploring the notion that, even if devoid of representation, deceptively simple constructs allow for infinite aesthetic possibilities.

Not exact matches

Part of the problem the way the question is posed is by assuming that we can abstract an ethical ideal from one part of scripture and use it to judge the actions of God in another part of scripture, as though scripture were given us so we could form such dehistoricized abstract ethical judgments!
Whitehead always accepted experience as more fundamental than ideal objects abstracted from it.3
In a summary of Whitehead's position, mathematics is abstracted from human experience to become ideal objects which initially represent general things that are symbolized in classes by variables.
No actual variant may ever be identical with the theme; the theme may be a wholly ideal entity abstracted from the array of variants.
In a footnote Griffin argues that my argument for this is unsound, because I «downplay the extent to which, over time, even very small deviations from the divine aims would lead to enormous gaps between the actual and what would have been ideal in an abstract sense.»
Most theology still tries to interpret the world in terms of abstract theory, an ideal pattern at a safe distance from history.
The main problem with Hasker's argument is his attempt to downplay the extent to which, over time, even very small deviations from the divine aims would lead to enormous gaps between the actual and what would have been ideal in an abstract sense.
Perfect: from the Latin «perfectus»; entirely without fault or defect (flawless); satisfying all requirements; corresponding to an ideal standard or abstract concept; lacking in no essential detail... Add Metroid Prime to that definition.
In the same year, a policy report from the Brookings Institute, Evaluating Teachers: The Important Role of Value - Added suggested that VAM should not be measured against an abstract ideal, but rather should be compared to other teacher evaluation methods to determine its potential usefulness.
Here's a good example, from a recent exhibition statement by the London abstract painter Cuillin Bantock (who is by no means an unintelligent writer): «Sixty years ago the British painter Patrick Heron pointed out that non-figuration was an ideal impossible of achievement, commenting further that Ben Nicholson's painting of four greyish circles in a greyish square eventually came to resemble the hob of an electric oven.
They represent the bridge from European surrealism, how that modernist ideal of depicting unconscious experience becomes the DNA that makes American post-war abstract expressionism possible.
«Baziotes, Gottlieb and Stamos... [t] hey represent the bridge from European surrealism, how that modernist ideal of depicting unconscious experience becomes the DNA that makes American post-war abstract expressionism possible.»
It was a hold over from that abstract expressionist ideal that a «serious» painter found an image — like Rothko's bands or Newman's zips — and they stuck with it.
Continuing the «Artists as Curators» series this week, let's look at «The escape from the banal of everyday life to the world of the ideal,» an exhibition at NURTUREart curated by Brooke Moyse, a Brooklyn - based abstract painter known for vivid color and casual landscape imagery.
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