Sentences with phrase «indeterminate nature»

«I wanted something which operated on more levels, was capable of more development, had a more «grey'd» quality, like the indeterminate nature of reality» (B. Riley, quoted in «Into Colour: In Conversation with Robert Kudielka», in R. Kudielka (ed.)
Through color alone — applied to suspended rectangles within abstract compositions — Rothko's work evokes strong emotions ranging from exuberance and awe to despair and anxiety, suggested by the hovering and indeterminate nature of his forms.»
The indeterminate nature of leadership in the course of policy making, and the slippage that occurs as policy refinements accrue during implementation, help to explain how policies succeed or fail.243 Particular instruments used to reformulate policy are less important, according to this perspective, than understanding how a particular policy issue got the governor «s or the legislative committee «s attention in the first place.244 A third image, the practitioner perspective, emerges from studies of publicsector administrators; it examines the tendency of administrators to seek flexibility and autonomy in interpreting policies, and ways in which this tendency affects the broader process of change.
Accompanied by composers Ben Salisbury and Geoff Barrow's aptly titled track «The Alien,» the faceless and wordless humanoid is of indeterminate nature; it rejects interpretation.
Jainism holds that because of the indeterminate nature of Reality, different viewpoints are possible and that none can claim final knowledge of the truth — which brings us back to the pervading sense of Mystery.

Not exact matches

Introspectively, my position is verified by the shifting nature of conscious attention, with its structure of a central focal awareness surrounded by an horizon of indeterminate yet always accessible oblique experience, upon which the searchlight of attention may at any moment be turned.
That is, nature is just so much indeterminate «stuff out there» dependent for its determination on the exercise of man's will.
I argue that God exists in all three time - dimensions simultaneously: as a determinate past actuality in virtue of the divine consequent nature, as an indeterminate future reality in virtue of the divine primordial nature, and as a concrescing present reality in virtue of the ongoing integration of the divine primordial and consequent natures.1 Yet, while I agree with Ford that there is no way for finite actual occasions objectively to prehend that integration of the primordial and consequent natures within God even in terms of their own self - constitution here and now, I would also contend that finite actual occasions still feel the feelings of God toward themselves as a result of that integration of the primordial and consequent natures within the divine being.
If we recognize that the human self is not to be equated with its mind, though the logical and analytic faculties of the mind are an instrument of its freedom over nature and history, and if we know that the self is intimately related to its body but can not be equated with its physical functions, we then are confronted with the final mystery of its capacity of transcendence over nature, history and even its own self; and we will rightly identify the mystery of selfhood with the mystery of its indeterminate freedom.
A massive collection of terracotta sculptures showcase his forceful grip, applied manually, and frozen indefinitely as amorphous, flesh - toned objects, indeterminate from first glance as human or something created by nature.
Artists working in «Nature,» a term which should be understood in quotes post-Smithson, are still investigating the casting of indeterminate natural formations and the aesthetics of ruination, yet there is a technical craftiness to «Casting Water» which undermines what one assumes to be its effort to be ugly.
The error occurs in two complementary forms, which we might indicate thus: (A)(My own imagination) → (Real property of Nature), [or](B)(My own ignorance) → (Nature is indeterminate).
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