Not exact matches
That means that
mediated through the air and through the nervous system, events in the external
world, perhaps someone playing a piano in the room, also become part
of the new
experience.
The point is that, even today when we attempt to develop a conceptual scheme for the understanding
of man, we ordinarily bring to our task an understanding
of concepts and a set
of concepts which arise in our dealings with the external
world as
mediated by sense
experience.
If she follows trends found in every major study
of higher education since the 1950s, Paula's
experience of college will have a secularizing impact on her faith,
mediating the intellectual relativism and cultural eclecticism that is so much a part
of her postmodern
world.
The
world which his speculative vision apprehends is obviously neither the
world of our common sense nor even the
world of modern physics; it is far rather a religiously apprehended
world mediated through the language and categories
of modern science and our common
experience.
In this vague field, more precisely, in these fields
of experience, a highly organized, but as such scarcely reflected, not to mention questioned, thought
mediates for common sense the image
of an «exact
world» which is certainly a symbolic
world.
Seen as a whole, his practice raises fundamental and evergreen questions about the value
of images and art, the nature and possibilities
of painting and film, the intertwined relation
of our subjectivity to cultural identity, and the ways we address what we
experience in life in parallel to the
mediated world of images.
Strong draws this out,
mediating on the spiritual and mystical possibility
of this being the cause
of our unbalanced
world; the works are mirrors through which you can
experience this story
of unhinged paranoia.»
THE END
OF THE ART
WORLD AS WE KNOW IT Is There No
Experience except mediated e
Experience except
mediated experienceexperience?
Katherine Taylor was born in Biloxi, MS, a city shaped by decades
of natural disasters, thus her work in painting often examines visual relationships that
mediate our
experience and response to destruction in the natural
world.