Sentences with phrase «mind modern cases»

The research team hints that the modern humans may have raped female Neanderthals, bringing to mind modern cases of «ethnic cleansing.»

Not exact matches

This is such a truism that one is almost ashamed to pen the words, and yet it remains a fact that, in a great deal of the more conservative biblical scholarship, it does seem to be assumed that the appeal to factual accuracy would he as valid and important a factor in the case of ancient Near Eastern religious texts as it would be in a modern western court of law or in a somewhat literally - minded western congregation.
November 1, 2011 • Has any modern major - party presidential candidate in recent memory ever given a speech that left so many people afterwards asking if he was drunk as was the case after Texas Gov. Rick Perry's now infamous appearance in New Hampshire last Friday?If so, that name doesn't come readily to mind.
The Imitation Game is simple, but it is also cogent in making the case for its subject's place in history, both as one of the great modern minds and as the target of one of society's great failures.
ALAN RUDOLPH Interview by Gavin Smith For some, one of the most beguiling of the moderns; to others, an exasperating case of trouble in mind
In which case, Square's Bravely Default is the loving result of what old world thinking, enhanced with the modern gamers tastes in mind.
In a 1984 Artforum review, Thomas McEvilley, a classicist new to the world of contemporary art, made the case that the Museum of Modern Art in New York served as an exclusionary temple to certain high - minded Modernists — namely, Picasso, Matisse, and Pollock — who, in fact, took many of their innovations from native cultures.
She presents four test cases: the founding of the Studio Museum in Harlem (1968); the Metropolitan Museum of Art's blunder of a show, Harlem on My Mind (1969); the Whitney's Contemporary Black Artists in America; and Richard Hunt's and Romare Bearden's joint solo exhibitions in 1971 at the Museum of Modern Art, which Cahan discusses along with its controversial «Primitivism» in 20th Century Art exhibition of 1984.
A number of well - written articles chronicle at least some of the history of legal writing in the law school curriculum.1 However, those articles were written with a different purpose in mind: the authors sought to employ history to show the pedigree of legal writing and argue for an equal place in the curriculum with doctrinal courses and an equal position for its teachers with other «case - book» faculty.2 Because of this purpose, they understandably focused a large part of their historical narrative on legal writing in the «modern law - school,» an entity that has existed only since the late 1800s.3 The articles paid considerably less attention to the era that preceded it, beyond brief mentions of the Inns of Court in England, apprenticeship in America, and the private law schools and early attempts at law teaching that preceded Langdell's introduction of the case method.4
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