Sentences with phrase «kinds of tensions between»

This may give rise to new kinds of tensions between the desire for openness and for data security.
We can feel this kind of tension between science and religion.
Even the earlier gospel writers like Mark live in a kind of tension between what Jesus was in the days of his flesh and what he was for the church.
«That kind of tension between something that's stiff and something that moves around.

Not exact matches

For months, South Korean President Moon Jae - in has sought North Korea's participation in the hopes it will ease tensions between the still officially warring nations and prevent the kind of violent incidents which have plagued previous major events hosted by the South.
You say, we have all these teachings and society has moved away from these teachings in all kinds of ways; and this creates this incredible tension between New Testament sexual ethics and the way we all live now.
There is some kind of dyadic tension between us - even when I am not wearing them, I am aware of their presence.
To risk a generalization even more reckless than those I have already made: from the time of the pre-Socratics, all the great speculative and moral systems of the pagan world were, in varying degrees, confined to this totality, to either its innermost mechanisms or outermost boundaries; rarely did any of them catch even a glimpse of what might lie beyond such a world; and none could conceive of reality except as a kind of strife between order and disorder, within which a sacrificial economy held all forces in tension.
The sometimes intense individualism of the earlier books is complemented here by the presence of other people, so that a kind of tension is created between personal vision and collective insight.
The American university aims at a kind of rational autonomy and sees an education in reason as identical to an education in morality; however, it no longer draws upon the reflections of those Enlightenment thinkers on the great tension between moral authority and rational self - sufficiency.
I love Godin's perspective on fundamentalism and curiosity, and I'd like to think that I'm the kind of person who «embraces the tension between [her] religion and something new, wrestles with it and through it, and then decides whether to embrace the new idea or reject it.»
Tension between teammates creates all kinds of discomfort.
We've got a 6 year old and 9 year old and between the stay at home moms and the working moms there is that under kind of tension.
The heart of the drama lies in the tensions and occasional affections between the Tory and Labour whips, with stand - out performances by Philip Glenister as Walter, a burly Labour bruiser with a kind heart, and Charles Edwards as the honest posho, Jack — «can't anyone in the North sit properly?»
To some extent that kind of tension has always been present between local and national government; now, the tensions will multiply.
There's a collective energy amongst the group that affords Spotlight much of its profundity and their natural portrayals effortlessly absorb, a notable lack of melodramatic tension between key players resulting in a kind of harmonious interaction between spectator and creator that's rarely been seen this or any other year.
Tensions, meanwhile, are brewing between the Germans and the natives, and Meinhard seems like the kind of man who will play a crucial role in any battle that comes.
However, in scenes between Heck and Antonina there isn't the tension you'd expect from this kind of scenario; the common «scary Nazi is attracted to heroic Jewish sympathiser».
It's hard to watch — and Nolan takes pains to confuse our allegiances in ways that suggest a very British class tension (Borden and ace engineer Cutter (Michael Caine) share a Cockney brogue while Angier, a Yank, is cut from different cloth), a certain nationalism, and, in the figure of Nikolai Tesla (David Bowie) at play mad - scientist - like in a mythical Colorado Springs, a clearly delineated duel between magic and the notion that technology before its time is a kind of witchcraft.
And there's also the father - son tension between Andrew and his dad, nicely played by both Reynolds and Nelson as something a bit harsher than we usually see in these kinds of movies.
Murphy reminds us of the potential tension between teaching the truth and trying to make the right kinds of citizens.
(There is, of course, a tension between the idea of the federal government intervening to encourage states and cities to adopt school vouchers programs and the idea that we need more local control of education, but Trump is not really the kind of policy detail guy who is bothered by this kind of thing.)
I work with tension between colors and among shapes, engaging with all kinds of painting relations, so my approach to painting has always been full of contradictions.
Curated by Jason Andrew, this exhibition is the first of its kind to bring together important paintings from the 1970s offering a reflection on Tworkov's tension between spontaneity and restraint, the automatic and the planned.
Separately and in relationship to one another, these three elements probe the tensions between the known and the unknown, meaning and the inscrutable while creating a different kind of space of the imagination and the interior mind.
Up close, the dense materiality of each piece intrigues with a kind of sumptuous dissolution; there is tension between order and chaos, rigid geometries and decay.
Because Kline sketched and painted this photograph so many times, he acquired such a familiarity with it that he could apparently sketch it blindfolded in less than thirty seconds.39 This skill necessarily involved what Kline had described in 1956 as the process that had led to his breakthrough to abstraction: «breaking down the structure into essential elements».40 In the photograph, the posture of Nijinsky in absolute terms and relative to the frame has a striking structure of a kind that persists in Kline's abstract work, in which there is a tension between the composition internal to the painting and the limits of the canvas.
a woman looks at the toe of her boot inventing the present and presuming a kind of accuracy or at least theatricality, tensions between elements almost implausible, a fugue, a kind of authorial sampling, funnels
The different kinds of tension that exist between objects and forms.
Besides the tension created between these representational settings, backgrounds, and objects by their abrupt interface with the abstract bodies — the collaged corpuses of the nudes — they also convey a playful and bizarre visual japery, a kind of Dadaesque tomfoolery.
There is tension between the set being so perfectly prepared and lit and the models lacking any kind of make up.
It is this kind of tension, between deciding to take a path or to dwell in ambiguity, that unites all of Richard's paintings.
While many contemporary artists exploit the tension between logos and form (consider Tauba Auerbach's Alphabet motifs) or try to press the gray area between design and abstraction into some kind of socially active site (Liam Gillick's platforms), Orchardson descends into the contingent materiality of even the most saccharine and nostalgic of citations.
Shawn is very kind about their motivations, which are to publicly expose the natural tensions between the earth observation mission of NASA and the astronautics one, especially insofar as budget is concerned.
I know that this kind of stress can also cause tension between spouses, which makes the situation even harder.
The tension between the sophisticated and edgy Thibaut faux alligator wallpaper on the cabinet back, the more feminine leopard wallpaper - wrapped books with their calligraphy labels, and the Anewall portrait of a lady, elegantly framed and dipped in Farrow & Ball paint sets up my favourite kind of juxtaposition.
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