Sentences with phrase «imposing upon the text»

Understanding, therefore, is realized by «exposing ourselves to the text and receiving from it an enlarged self», not «by imposing upon the text our finite capacity for under - standing».

Not exact matches

And more often than not, it imposes upon an ancient Near Eastern text Western assumptions regarding gender roles and the nuclear family, rendering the woman celebrated in Proverbs 31, for example, into little more than a happy homemaker prototype.
We should stop imposing a teaching upon the text that is simply not present.
Maunz's preoccupation with the violence of architecture, the forces of structures imposed upon bodies, is an echo of Borzutsky's text.
A series of text based pieces which are concerned with context and interpretation, Huws» work invokes a deceptive objectivity which gives way to wider questions of our own cultural context, and the resonances which these impose upon works we view.
«I find it is unreasonable to impose a duty upon the [text - sending] defendant in this case under these facts.
The agreement, and the procedures it has caused CGSB to impose upon the drafting committee's working group, violate all three of the foundation principles of the process of «voluntary standardization,» created by the Standards Council of Canada Act (s. 4), and the Council's CAN - P - 1:2012 text, Program Requirements for the Accreditation of Standards Development Organizations and for the Approval of National Standards of Canada, which is treated as having the authority of a regulation created by way of the Act.
To expand upon the meaning of the text is to impose moral values beyond what the people's representatives have enacted into law.
wouldn't tell the public that the problem is not the Law Society's problem, as in effect it does; (15) LSUC's website wouldn't state that lay benchers «represent the public interest,» which is impossible now that we are well beyond the 19th century; (16) CanLII's services would be upgraded in kind and volume to be a true support service, able to have a substantial impact upon the problem, and several other developed support services, all provided at cost, would together, provide a complete solution; (17) LSUC's management would not be part - time management by amateurs - amateurs because benchers don't have the expertise to solve the problem, nor are they trying to get it, nor are they joining with Canada's other law societies to solve this national problem; (18) the Federation of Law Societies of Canada would not describe the problem as being one of mere «gaps in access to legal services» (see its Sept. 2012 text, «Inventory of Access to Legal Services Initiatives of the Law Societies of Canada» (1st paragraph), (19) LSUC would not be encouraging the use alternatives to lawyers, such as law students, self - help, and «unbundled, targeted» legal services, as a «cutting costs by cutting competence» strategy; and, (20) it would not be necessary to impose an Ontario version of the Clementi Report (UK, 2004) that would separate LSUC's regulatory functions from its representative functions, to be exercised by separate authorities.
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