His celebrated saying that existence precedes essence, once it is translated
into classical terms, means only that non-being precedes the essences formally constructed by human thought.
Not exact matches
The
classical economist David Ricardo translated momentum
into investment
terms with the oft quoted phrase, «Cut your losses; let your profits run on.»
Thus Cyril C. Richardson has criticized the
classical formulations of the Trinity as imposing an arbitrary «threeness» upon our theological thinking, and proposes instead a basic twofold distinction between God as Absolute and God as Related.1 This is for Richardson a basic paradox, an apparent self - contradiction, for if we try to bring these aspects
into relationship, we compromise God's absoluteness.2 Charles Hartshorne accepts this same twofold distinction, but he removes the contradictory element by understanding it in
terms of the abstract and concrete dimensions of God's nature and experience.3
Pieters deconstructs and reconstructs existing fashion classics to make it
into something new but still
classical, introducing the
term neo-classic hybrids.
The
classical economist David Ricardo translated momentum
into investment
terms with the oft quoted phrase, «Cut your losses; let your profits run on.»
By Betty Ann Brown French artist Jean Dubuffet coined the
term art brut (usually translated
into English as «Outsider Art») to refer to work «created by people outside the professional art world... from their own depths and not from the stereotypes of
Classical or fashionable art.»
Chaos doesn't enter
into the forcing
term — it's
classical radiative physics.
These and other observations can be integrated
into a model with feedbacks and having two unstable end ‐ points that is consistent both with
classical studies of past climate states, and also with recent analysis of ice dynamics in the Arctic basin by Zhakarov, whose oscillatory model identifies feedback mechanisms in atmosphere and ocean, both positive and negative, that interact in such a manner as to prevent long ‐
term trends in either ice ‐ loss or ice ‐ gain on the Arctic Ocean to proceed to an ultimate state.