Sentences with phrase «locus classicus»

2) Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, especially the Privileges and Immunities Clause («No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States»), is the true locus classicus of our modern conception of rights.
Our heroes are student throwbacks, like the characters in that Frat Pack locus classicus Old School, partying dysfunctionally hard and aware that they are getting the weeniest bit old for this sort of thing.
The fans are just a bit disappointed when the band plays anything from the last couple of decades, and the LOCUS CLASSICUS of the longing is the BORM TO RUN album.
(Augustine's De Trinitate, Book V is the locus classicus for this argument; Anselm's Monologion ch.
It is a little surprising that Francis did not mention Newman, since Newman's Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine has long been the locus classicus for an orthodox discussion of the development of doctrine.
A variation on the «locus classicus» approach is the desire to judge Scripture by «what Jesus said and did» («A Conversation with Virginia Mollenkott,» p. 75).
Not only so, but in the locus classicus, i Cor.
As have so many theologians before him, Cullmann found in Paul's letters to the Corinthians and the Romans the locus classicus for the Christian connection of death with sin and evil.
As of today, his case is the locus classicus on the tenure of members,» he said.
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