Sentences with phrase «idealistic notion»

«Bitcoin Gold does have some grassroots support and I think there are people who do have this idealistic notion that mining should be more decentralized... a common cause that could rally people together in an organic sort of movement,» Lombrozo said.
Now, in a new era of austerity, the idealistic notion of School Prints has found its time again.
In the end, like I said, my idealistic notion of a successful sugar baby or whatever you may call it, is a lot different from that.
Just as his belief in beautiful, orderly scientific theories mirrored a child's view of the world, so his belief in God as the ultimate manifestation of that order expressed an idealistic notion that God is so much greater than humankind that He can not be found in any one faith.
Along with other commissions by Margarita Cabrera and Pedro Reyes and extant works by Mario García Torres, Máximo González and Livia Corona, these projects collectively present the means for thinking about communities outside idealistic notions of cohesion and unified experience.
Ultimately, Lee Bul presents the human impulse to promote visionary and idealistic notions within the structures that surround us daily — our adornments, buildings, and institutions — as an attempt to fulfill the illusive promise of a truly egalitarian and harmonious existence.
It's grounded on what actually works in relationships that are happy and stable, not idealistic notions or anecdotal evidence of what marriage ought to be.

Not exact matches

It was idealistic and overflowing with neat tools and great notions.
It was sort of like Google in paperback form, 35 years before Google came along: it was idealistic, and overflowing with neat tools and great notions.
As idealistic as the notion is, when the chemistry is there, there is no reason not to seize the moment and strike while the iron is hot.
Its is all well and good to construct hoops for leaners to jump through based upon more idealistic / romantic notions of what is to be produced after 13 years (including transition), where education is seen as satisfying an industrial orientated outcome based upon neo-liberalist ideals.
arguments that legalisation of such practices will inevitably result in the exploitation by the rich (recipients) of the poor (donors) to their profound disadvantage, qualms about the ethically suspect source of the organs to be transplanted, namely, as here, from executed prisoners; and quaint and idealistic, but arguably antiquated notions that donations are always made altruistically.
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