Sentences with phrase «more subjective elements»

Closely related to tachisme is Lyrical Abstraction, a softer type of abstract painting, that eliminated some of the more subjective elements of Art Informel - a style exemplified by Nicolas de Stael (1914 - 1955), Jean Paul Riopelle (1923 - 2002) and the colourist Patrick Heron (1920 - 99).
This process combines the outcomes orientation of student test scores with the more subjective elements of classroom observations.
Finally, we come to the much more subjective element of design and build.

Not exact matches

In the twentieth century, the Austrian school of economics — notably Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek — became famous for stressing the subjective element of economic life, particularly in personal action, and more especially in the personal act of enterprise.
Two biologists and one philosopher argue that the psychical, or mental, or subjective elements in reality are more fundamental than the physical, material, or objective elements.
These are rather very subjective elements when you're looking for a person whom you wish to spend an entire lifetime with... [Read More]
«However, when dealing with the human element of teaching, student interaction, and student motivation, perhaps a more subjective and humane analysis should be considered.»
Logistic and creative elements have already been taken into consideration and recognized (given the fact that all finalists are already EVVY Award - winning books), so determining the three finalists are admittedly a more subjective decision making process.
There is a third, more subjective, element to an intrinsic value calculation that can be either positive or negative: the efficacy with which retained earnings will be deployed in the future.
«Me, My, Mine» implies that subject matter is nothing more than a personal gathering of inspired fragments to be treated as mostly formal elements — that a depicted image is selected spontaneously based on subjective criteria and its relevance to a viewer need not extend beyond the simple fact of its authorship.
A more complex version (the enhanced DRIVE model) was also developed to acknowledge a subjective element and included perceived stress as well as further interactive effects.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z