Sentences with phrase «not kinship»

Many were designed for foster carers not kinship carers others were not culturally appropriate.

Not exact matches

The judge overseeing the estate case, Carver County Judge Kevin Eide, has not set a deadline for filing paternity and kinship claims.
But in the end, in an ironic twist, he was forced to pay the tax because the judge concluded the stock transfer was «essentially motivated by the kinship that he had with his father and his children» — a gift, not a business transaction.
The director must not have been an employee of or consultant to the company within the past three years, and in addition may have no kinship ties to employees of the company.
Binx recognizes a kinship here that escapes his understanding of himself as dislocated in time and place in relation to the Wandering Jew, who is not a literary shibboleth but a reality eluding his grasp.
Parents are not reproducing themselves; they are giving birth to another human being — equal to them in dignity and bound to them in ties of kinship, but not created for their satisfaction.
Which was original is not certain, but probably, in view of its kinship with the word for smelling in Hebrew and some cognate languages, ruach at first signified the heavy breathing of man and later the blowing of the wind as the breath of God.
Far from thinking it unfair to visit on an innocent man retribution for a deed he had not done, it seemed then the essence of justice that any or all members of a kinship - group should suffer for wrong done by one of its members.
They may not have much identity of content, but a formal kinship exists that could lead to some levels of theological dialogue not made possible by other forms of Protestant theology.
Process thought developed in the evolutionary philosophies of the late nineteenth century, and has a kinship with the «emergent revolutionary» theorists.38 The process philosophers are interested not only in an evolutionary description of the cosmos, but in what happens to all the traditional metaphysical problems when time is seen as an ingredient of being itself.
In Gall's case, this juxtaposition not only reduces philosophy and theology to mere «bluster,» thereby liberating us to act without thinking seriously; it suggests that none of the consequences that follow from, for example, the codification of same - sex marriage — the redefinition of kinship, the irrevocable technologizing of human «reproduction,» further expansion of the «new eugenics,» deliberate creation of three - parent households, and least of all, the fate of children conceived in this brave new world — even provoke questions of human import worth thinking seriously about.
Two of the specific experiences which Buber mentions in the essay on Boehme — that of kinship with a tree and that of looking into the eyes of a dumb animal — are later used in I and Thou as an example not of unity but of the I - Thou relation.
And fear Allah through Whom you demand your mutual (rights), and (do not cut the relations of) the wombs (kinship).
If this is to be possible, however, an intrinsic kinship must prevail between knower and known, whether what is known is «material» or not.
Not surprisingly, the most conflicted and complicated chapter in the book is the one in which Rapp attempts to read the cultural terrain of what she calls the «alienated kinship» of children with Down syndrome.
The death of the animals is loss enough, but it is not half so serious as the injury to personality that occurs in one who kills his own sense of reverence for life and his sense of kinship with living things below him in the order of creation.
The recognition by the helping person that he has a basic kinship with the alcoholic, that he is not better but only luckier that his symptoms are different, helps him to accept the alcoholic without condescension.
If kinship relations with other human beings have not been important to Marxist theory and practice, then it is unlikely that there is much emphasis on human kinship to other animals and to the natural environment generally.
Following the late Benedict Anderson, we might call a nation an imagined community, given that we do not naturally feel a sense of kinship and camaraderie with those living even half an hour from us, much less on the other side of the country.
I feel a kinship with all existence (all is will - to - live), not abstractly, but existentially.
This would mean not only a close relationship between David and Joab (and the same relationship between David and Amasa) but an even closer kinship between Joab and Amasa.
But I do know that we can not ignore the evidence of our experience that interaction with the Jews has helped us to see with fresh clarity the scriptural teaching that Christians have a spiritual kinship with the Jewish people that is unlike our relation to anyone else.
At any rate, its kinship with his spirit is unmistakable «Love ye, therefore, one another from the heart; and if a man sin against thee, cast forth the poison of hate and speak peaceably to him, and in thy soul hold not guile; and if he confess and repent, forgive him....
The religion of the South, Percy argued, is not Christian; it is Stoic, infused with concepts of honor and tradition, virtue and kinship.
The bonds of kinship flow first from the vows that two persons make to one another, without which biological connections can not be formed.
and fear Allah through Whom you demand your mutual (rights), and (do not cut the relations of) the wombs (kinship).
Such kinship terms do not occur in the abstract as they may in Greek or Hebrew.
He should not press forward impudently and impute to them kinship with himself; on the contrary, he should be blissful every time he bows before them, but he should be frank and confident and always be something more than a charwoman, for if he will not be more, he will never gain entrance.
The doctrine of Christianity is the doctrine of the God - Man, of kinship between God and men, but in such a way, be it noted, that the possibility of offense is, if I may dare to express it thus, the guarantee whereby God makes sure that man can not come too near to Him.
In Minangkabau the shari`a hereditary law is not followed; there, since their laws governing kinship are matriarchal, the privately acquired property of the individual goes after death to his relatives on the mother's side as family property
But what is in mind here is not so much a reference to kinship as a customary Messianic title.
These networks, as we have noted above, do not substitute for, but combine the traditional kinship and neighborhood networks which form spontaneously in poor neighborhoods.
But even if Jesus actually was of Davidic descent, and the purpose of Mark 12:37 was in no way opposed to kinship with David, Jesus» pure Jewish descent is not thereby assured nor a Galilean origin excluded.
Recently, I heard an interview on NPR with Anya von Bremzen, the author of Paladares: Recipes Inspired by the Private Restaurants of Cuba, and I was completely captivated by the tales of resourcefulness, resilience, and innovation, not to mention the kinship the Russian author feels with her Cuban socialist brethren, especially in terms of hunger and deprivation.
Bear Bryant, not just out of kinship, has expressed concern about Alabama's meeting with the Southerners.
These anglers not only perceive a mystical kinship with their quarry but also draw additional rewards from a sense of being one with the elements, with the oceans and streams, with the sunrises and sunsets, with the sights and sounds and silences.
Walker played for Tottenham between 2009 and 2017 as their defender, while Paulinho was their midfielder between 2013 and 2015, during which they must have shared not only the dressing room, but also many a laugh; a kinship that has still not been forgotten obviously.
There were 2.6 million kids in permanent formal kinship care as of 2009, not counting a large number in informal (e.g. not court ordered) kinship care.
Breastfeeding Babies in the Nest: Producing Children, Kinship, and Moral Imagination in the House Chapter 7.
A somewhat similar institution to a jati or an Iraqi tribe (something similar but not quite as kinship based also existed in the Roman Empire and was called a tribe), is a mutual benefit or fraternal society, perhaps most notably in the cosmopolitan bonds of the Freemasons.
By analogy, you might stay home and baby - sit for younger siblings after college, but it's not out of a sense of kinship toward them.
Another problem with kinship selection studies that look only in England and, in particular, the United States, is that kinship ties for homosexuals might not be as strong as they would be elsewhere.
Kinship is a consequence of that, not a cause.
Recent research demonstrates that the bonds of kinship will not keep a chimp from piling up stones and hurling them at zoo visitors if they get too close.
Nowak knew from his own work with the prisoner's dilemma that the development of cooperation did not begin with or require kinship, as Hamilton's advocates believed; in his simulations of the game, it could flourish among any players who interacted with one another.
Seven indels are shared by primates and flying lemurs but not tree shrews, suggesting a close kinship between those first two groups, Janecka and colleagues report tomorrow in Science.
If we can connect with them as sentient beings, it is not because of a shared history, not because of kinship, but because evolution built minds twice over.
Camera theorizes that money makes cooperation possible when people can not rely on reputation or kinship.
However, in 2005, Wilson questioned his own theory, arguing that kinship was not the key to these societies.
In his 2003 book Liquid Love, Bauman wrote that we «liquid moderns» can not commit to relationships and have few kinship ties.
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