Sentences with phrase «in abeyance as»

Not exact matches

That self - consciousness is held in abeyance by whatever decision, by whatever choice, or whatever trial where it is made to answer a summons — even that which is the appearance of the absolute — does not express the feebleness of the proof of testimony, as in Aristotle, but the finitude of the consciousness to which absolute knowledge is refused.
What little difference exists between these two views revolves around whether religion's diminution (secularization) occurs automatically with pluralization or instead will occur only if the «holding in abeyance» is helped along (as by a changing legal order).
The Self manifests through the organism; but there is always some part of the Self unmanifested; and always, as it seems, some power of organic expression in abeyance or reserve.»
Putting his plans for a medical career in abeyance to work as a baker and bank clerk, Paris - born Michel Bouquet began taking acting lessons during the war years.
Many of the film's depictions of Japanese culture — including a series of plays on the best - known Nihonga paintings, such as Hokusai's «The Great Wave off Kanagawa» — are these punchlines held in pregnant abeyance: we anticipate something off - colour or ill - considered to find that perhaps the only thing happening is a certain blithe, meaningfully meaningless cultural appropriation.
Malloy's teacher evaluation program, currently held in abeyance until after the election (as if he believes that we are stupid), mandates that teachers be evaluated not only on their teaching but on student performance on standardized tests and parent involvement.
The excesses of this method — such as the giant dragon the artist created for the Fifty - Fourth Venice Biennale — are here held in abeyance, allowing a sublimated conversation about contemporary masculinity to energize his experiments in form.
Postwar Modern Art and the Rejection of Modernism The development of a new American art movement was held in abeyance until after World War II, when the United States took the lead in the formation of a vigorous new art known as abstract expressionism with the impetus of such artists as Arshile Gorky, Jackson Pollock, and Willem de Kooning.
A ruling on the motion was held in abeyance, and was never granted insofar as the record before us reveals.
The solution was not to place its function as administrator and its associated fiduciary duties in abeyance.
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