Sentences with phrase «influence upon something»

It's more than enough to make a reasonable person wonder: What the heck is up these days with hurricanes — and with global warming's supposed influence upon them?
«A writer or director like Peter Fonda, who made Easy Rider, must have had a great influence upon myself when I was young.»
At each point along the routing, we build upon the inherited or acquired past achievements which have their causal influence upon us.
But scholarly discussion of how much Muhammad knew about Christianity and Judaism and of other influences upon him is for Muslims wide of the mark.
As a commercial game designer, I have not had the luxury to explore such artistically - motivated concerns, but my player practices work has had another key influence upon me: it has united the otherwise disparate domains of marketing and game design.
He took a wife, Ta - ki, who exercised great influence upon him.
I simply see the world differently because of his influence upon me.
In this lecture I will view it only in terms of the influence upon it of the model I have been describing.
Elizabeth is not called upon to entertain the people or use personal charisma to exert her influence upon them — she is there to symbolize England and thereby unify it.
Marx, Nietzsche and Kierkegaard are not understandable apart from Hegel's influence upon them.
Were the present moment totally incapable of receiving into itself the deposit of past experiences, this past could exercise no influence upon it.
The old educational theory of «regression to norm» will not take place, God willing, before our Polish friends have exerted an influence upon us that is for the good of the Catholic Church here.
Within the limits of this volume, however, I must confine myself to the tradition which I know from within, with some reference to the Roman and Eastern traditions as they have been influences upon it.
On February 18, 2016, Neue Galerie New York will open «Munch and Expressionism,» an exhibition that examines Edvard Munch's influence on his German and Austrian contemporaries, as well as their influence upon him.
When outlets such as The New York Times finally weighed in, their stories tended to confuse climate politics (the debate over what to do about GW) and climate science (that debate over what we know about the Earth and our influence upon it).
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