Sentences with phrase «in fragmentary»

In his fragmentary autobiography... Nash recalled his sudden youthful awareness in Kensington Gardens of the meaning of place: «there was a peculiar spacing in the disposal of trees, or it was their height in relation to these intervals, which suggested some inner design of very subtle purpose.»
In both Lucas's sculptures and Yamashita's paintings, the body recurs in fragmentary, erotically suggestive and comedic forms.
What persists is an understated elegance and a sensitivity to gesture, color, and composition in fragmentary pictures: a silhouetted figure, a masked face, a veined arm.
The exhibition Písařovic's Study is a way of presenting to the public (at least in a fragmentary form) a valuable collection of works by psychiatric patients, as well as a way of showing to the spectator the interesting and complicated personality of the Czech psychiatrist František Písařovic.
More specifically, in his fragmentary autobiography of 1866 Courbet notes that by 1840 he had left behind his youthful training in order to follow socialists of all sects, and that «once arrived in Paris, he was a Fourierist.»
If you're wondering when the version 1.01 patch happened, it was just a few days after the launch in Japan to fix the color of Ventus» eyes from blue to yellow in Fragmentary Passage's opening.
While Sora and his combos are a bit slower now than what we experienced in Kingdom Hearts II, he's more responsive and easier to control than Aqua was in A Fragmentary Passage, making Kingdom Hearts III a solid middle ground between the two previous titles» combat formats.
An echo of rebellion and religious strife is faintly caught in the fragmentary records that have survived.
Moreover, these films ask us to consider the very nature and purpose of our existence in a fragmentary, superficial and transient universe.
The Cameroon Federation; political integration in a fragmentary society.
Even writing (particularly in its fragmentary beginnings) does not wholly disclose old secrets.
In that confrontation, renewal can be found, and at least in a fragmentary way, the power of reconciliation overcoming alienation, the healing of brokenness, the experience of release from guilt, anxiety and despair.
His most famous works, Histories and Annals, exist in fragmentary form, though many of his earlier writings were lost to time.
It is grace alone, with the forgiveness it holds, which can release us to recognize and in some fragmentary way begin to live in self - giving love for God and neighbour.4
They draw on the religious myths that maintain a sort of power even in their fragmentary form in our mostly post-religious culture.
This composition can be greater or less only insofar as what it includes is greater or less, so that the value for the whole depends upon the unity - in - diversity realized in the fragmentary occasions of the world.
The evidence of Milosz's Christianity is spread throughout his poems and essays in fragmentary clues.

Not exact matches

At best, these other truths can only be regarded as fragmentary versions of it in some way or another.
The others are fragmentary, inclusive of the multiplicity only in some degree (and, in the case of most of the multiplicity, only in a trivial degree).
While it stands accused of introversion and complacency by the Service Club approach, it represents the conviction that service is doomed to be fragmentary and inconsistent unless it is grounded in a firm motivating and sustaining base.
Because it had for ever withdrawn his heart from all that is merely local or individual, all that is fragmentary, henceforth for him it alone in its totality would be his father and mother, his family, his race, his unique, consuming passion.
The conventional literary - critical judgment that the following verses (17 - 19) were not part of the original unit is doubtless correct, but the standard critical conclusions on vs. 16 — fragmentary, a corrupt text, distorted in transmission, et cetera — result from the failure to recognize the difference in form and the functional relationship between Scheltrede and Drohwort, the deliberated and composed invective called forth by the received Word, the divine threat or judgment.
In this essay, I will argue that a major problem with the idea of divine relativity is that it assumes both God's exact knowledge of the whole, which is thus the One as it is a unified act of knowledge, and also precise knowledge of the fragmentary, concrete Many of experience.
Christian experience in depth and fullness can never be fragmentary.
Our knowledge of the early church prior to the Council of Nicaea in 325 is fragmentary, but the fragments reveal many of the concerns African churches have today, from distinguishing between true and false prophets to deciding what should happen to church members who behave badly.
I want to say that the human organism is like the agency in that there is both the unified togetherness of experience enjoyed by the director and fragmentary bits and pieces of structure which may be at odds with, out of tune with, the agency as a whole.
Under such circumstances the structure of religious thought might develop in connection with another or different fragmentary manifestation of theonomy or of the Religion of the Concrete Spirit.
The title suggests the film's fragmentary character, and that in turn suggests one of the film's main themes: the failure of technique to redeem lives from chaos.
Again... he may have the «original» language, but: The oldest surviving Hebrew Bible manuscripts date to about the 2nd century BCE (fragmentary), the oldest record of the complete text survives in a Greek translation called the Septuagint, dating to the 4th century CE (Codex Sinaiticus) and the oldest extant manuscripts of the vocalized Masoretic text upon which modern editions are based date to the 9th century CE.
The record is fragmentary, inconsistent, and uncertain... but there can be no doubt as to what elements in the record have evoked a response from all that is best in human nature.
It is an interpretation, certainly, in that it goes beyond the sheer given of the facts as recorded for us in the partial and fragmentary Gospel narratives.
It is a truth that all of us find repeatedly confirmed in our own existence, and in which, yet, we have only the most fragmentary participation.
The evidence for the presence of Christianity in South East and East Asia is scanty and fragmentary.
Marcus could read and write — though he could not write well, and had no inclinations to authorship, even in that publishing center of the western Mediterranean in the days of Nero — and so, as one of the few in the local congregation of Christians who could both read and write, he was commissioned to put together in his free time — probably late evenings, after the assembly of the Christians had broken up — the fragmentary translations of narratives from the story of Jesus and his teaching which were in circulation in the Roman church.
«This pinnacle of faith in New Testament religion is the final expression of certainty about the power of God to complete our fragmentary life as well as the power of His love to purge it of the false completions in which all history is involved.»
This concerns the Taoist and Confucian concept of Heaven, the Way and Goodness as pointing to the Holy Trinity: «Chinese religion is aware of transcendent power, T'ien (Heaven), at work in those who seek Jen (goodness) by following the Tao (Way)-- fragmentary glimpses, perhaps, of the heavenly Father whose Spirit elicits and sustains our union with Christ, the Incarnate Way» (p47).
All the loose ends of fragmentary texts found their unity in Scripture.
It is believed that the fragmentary insights of both Old and New Testament writers are fulfilled in God's dramatic incursion into human history which we see in the incarnation and atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ, in his life, death, and resurrection.
On the other hand, the New Testament witness to fulfillment is rooted precisely in the eschatological vision and in the belief that the future of the Lord, albeit in a hidden and fragmentary way, is present in our midst in the form of signs, first fruits, foretaste and so on.
Even in this sense transcendence may have all the depth and richness I at least could ask: mystery, ineffability, ecstasy, reunion and reconciliation, worlds upon worlds of various sorts and stages of existence, an ideal order of which our experiences of truth, beauty and goodness are fragmentary glimpses.
He puts the dust back in place with his fragmentary and inconsequential narrative.
A religious insight has profound political significance when it makes the difference between a fragmentary adherence to democracy and its practice in human relations.
Gone, too, (at least virtually and in aspiration), is the infernal circle of egocentrism, meaning the isolation, in some sort ontological, which prohibits our escape from self to share the point of view even of those we love best: as though the Universe were composed of as many fragmentary universes, repelling each other, as the sum total of the centers of consciousness which it embraces.
In a way my question about «totality» and «the refusal of distance» sums up the other questions and suggests that a stance which has a larger component of irony and understatement toward the self might be able to bear the fragmentary character of existence with less restlessness toward totality.
The continued presence of evil, both in man and in the natural order, testifies to the very fragmentary realization of creaturely faith in God.
Our achievements may live on in the memories of others, but this is a very fragmentary and transient immortality.
The continued persistence of evil, both in man and in the natural order, testifies to the very fragmentary realization of creaturely faith in God.
Receiving a solid instruction in Islam by teachers who are secure and at home in American society is surely far better than the fragmentary knowledge available on Internet forums where jihadist wannabes congregate and encourage one another's fantasies.
The following facts support this belief: the participation of the churches in the theological conversations of the ecumenical movement, which perforce have had to find their common starting point and common vocabulary in biblical literature and theology; the growing body of specifically biblical theology, produced by the very vitality of fragmentary and monographic studies.
Furthermore, he fears that a group, motivated from such fragmentary and inadequate perspectives, can easily «simplify and impoverish in order to reduce multiplicity to unity» (BH 55).
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