A smiley face, the contemporary emblem of banal pleasantry, in Gbur's hands reads as both vacant and malevolent; rather than serving its standard purpose
of evincing happiness, the smiling hieroglyph instead reconnoiters the potential for deception and psychological violence intrinsic to pictographic communication.
However, in a review of extant research, Volling (2012) finds that not all children evince substantial changes in behavior or psychological adjustment over the transition to siblinghood, and
that of those evincing changes, not all changes were negative.
Each of the three women in this film shows a tendency to kill their human lovers, and two
of them evince a sexual attachment to their pets.
The goal
of evince is to replace the multiple document viewers that exist on the GNOME Desktop with a single simple application.
In conducting my monthly survey of commercial gallery shows this month I was struck by the amount of representational work on view, and even more so by the «academic» rigor much
of it evinces.
«Judge Gorsuch has written hundreds of opinions,» Joyce continued, «and virtually
all of them evince a genuine fairness with concern and respect for all parties to the litigation before him.
Not exact matches
Although both appellants and the government argue that the ACA, read in its totality,
evinces clear congressional intent, they dispute what that intent actually is... We conclude that the appellants have the better
of the argument: a federal Exchange is not an «Exchange established by the State,» and section 36B does not authorize the IRS to provide tax credits for insurance purchased on federal Exchanges.
Gripped by the fever
of a true believer, he
evinces a hostility to all regulations — not just the bad ones.
The consensus on these two is
evinced by countless research papers dedicated to monetary policy strategy and implementation in the past quarter - century, compared with a relative handful on the design
of countercyclical fiscal policy.
He has ignored the CEO playbook for a company that faces a crisis
of public trust: He does not grovel, he does not
evince embarrassment at the size
of the lapse.
But he also
evinced such open contempt for the news department (which he labeled â $ œFort Newsâ $) and current affairs â $ «the very lifeblood
of the CBCâ $ ™ s raison dâ $ ™ etre as a public broadcaster â $ «that he alienated the beleaguered CBC staff.
The greater weight
of such redistribution in any modern simulacrum
of debt cancellation is bound to
evince strong opposition from those at the receiving end.
In his superb defense
of freedom
of thought and opinion, Matthew J. Franck does not carry through his unblinking realism in analyzing the arguments for same - sex marriage to his conclusion, where he
evinces a Pollyannaish hope that the «strategy pursued by the advocates
of same - sex marriage will be self - defeating.»
In view
of his approach to solving the problems facing higher education, it's not surprising that, although long a tenured professor at prestigious schools, Taylor
evinces little respect for academic disciplines.
In short, unless the Court is prepared to think about this issue with greater care than was
evinced by the Ninth and Second Circuits» and there is little in its opinions
of late to suggest that it has the moral imagination to do so» the question will be not how far we slide down the slippery slope
of legally sanctioned killing, but how fast.
Anyone who reads The Catholic Ethic and the Spirit
of Capitalism, however, must recognize that, far from being uncritical, Novak
evinces an intense and well - informed sense about where the American experiment has gone wrong and is going wrong» from race relations, to the urban underclass, to crime, and the debasement
of popular culture.
They
evince a vibrant confidence that, as we cross the threshold
of the Third Millennium, we may be entering upon the greatest era
of evangelization in all
of Christian history.
But Love
evinced a tough side also, recording a number
of remarkably angry songs: the garage - punk classic «My Flash on You,» one the fastest versions
of «Hey Joe,» a cover
of «My Little Red Book» that ditches the lost - love vibe
of the original, and finally «7 and 7 Is,» a breath - taking hardcore punk prototype from early» 67, complete with a nuclear explosion finale and lyrics about throwing one's Bible in the fireplace.
The power to
evince new levels
of synthesis will depend upon orthodoxy, as a rising cathedral grows naturally so to speak out
of the foundation laid to take it.»
«There will be found a power in the full, orthodox doctrine
of Christ to
evince for every era a new synthesis
of divine and human knowledge.
When Kekes compares this example with the eventuality that we might one day discover that blood transfusions are harmful, he
evinces the materialist bias
of his analysis.
To many observers, the outlooks and expectations
of mainline congregations
evince a bland uniformity indistinguishable from that
of their surrounding society.
Niebuhr didn't mean to be funny when he said that Lutheranism
evinces a «mystical fear
of action,» but for a Lutheran student
of theology that's gut «wrenching humor» which, upon further thought, is kind
of sad.
Le Goff's championing
of urbanism and the medieval city was a manifestation
of the republican values he inherited while his singling out Christianity as the single most important source
of medieval society
evinced a deep Catholic impulse.
I am haunted by having left a man in desperate shape in order to respond to another who, at the level
of party conversation, had
evinced interest in «doing more,» yet who had created a world
of work which did not allow him to step into another world.
A former student said
of his teaching: «He not only thought out the -LSB-...] doctrines upon which he lectured, but he felt their power, and falling tears often
evinced his emotion while he spoke
of some particular aspect
of the truth.
Rather, it says: «But when a long train
of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object
evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government and to provide new Guards for their future security.»
Today, Catholics and Evangelicals have, in large part, become cobelligerents in the culture wars and
evince a growing confidence that theirs is the opportunity to advance their cause in the face
of a multifaceted crisis
of secular liberalism.
In arguing against the possibility
of attaining to a neutral standpoint on matters
of concern to religious persons, one begins with the axiom that all human activity — and so, by extension, all scholarly activity, all religious activity, and all interaction among serious religious persons — both implies and
evinces a commitment to some particular metaphysic, some view as to the way things are and as to how human activity should proceed in that context.
Again, unlike Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman — and even Melville — Hawthorne
evinces a profoundly heterosexual and monogamous nature, one to which the elemental fact
of womanliness is ever present and open to his powers
of depiction.
In reaction to the fragmented, depersonalized, hectic style
of the secular city, people are seeking community and
evincing interest in a chosen discipline for their lives.
As one
of the five groups involved in the study, the response
of the Committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs
evinces a certain embarrassment.
More important and immediate than the embargo question, I was impressed by the way that U.S. pilgrims to Cuba - including cardinals, bishops, and many priests -
evinced a sense
of urgency about ongoing and very practical work with the Cuban Church.
But we can not predict with confidence whether more recent challenges to world security» state sponsors
of terrorism and nonstate actors seeking to acquire weapons
of mass destruction» will
evince the same degree
of rationality.
It thus seems that, even on our divided Supreme Court, a majority
of judges (on both ends
of the political spectrum)
evince a growing appreciation
of intermediate associations, including religious ones.
The leaders
of other powerful institutions in society must
evince these virtues as well.
Our society is now awash in presentism,
evinced by our celebration
of a form
of marriage that is intrinsically sterile, our diminishing willingness to bear and raise children, and the wanton irresponsibility
of reckless entitlement spending and debt.
But Abraham believed precisely for this life, that he was to grow old in the land, honored by the people, blessed in his generation, remembered forever in Isaac, his dearest thing in life, whom he embraced with a love for which it would be a poor expression to say that he loyally fulfilled the father's duty
of loving the son, as indeed is
evinced in the words
of the summons, «the son whom thou lovest.»
Whether it be Wieman's general appropriation
of James's «knowledge by acquaintance» in Religious Experience and Scientific Method, Meland's «appreciative awareness,» or Loomer's more narrative forms
of gathering evidence, each purports merely to describe, but then
evinces that the description is driven by rather specific personal and / or contextual definitions
of what counts as religious experience.
When in the course
of human events...» Thus Jefferson and his associates,
evincing a «decent respect to the opinions
of mankind,» began their explanation
of what they were up to.
So They Show Their Relations To Me And I Accept Them, They Bring Me Tokens
Of Myself, They
Evince Them Plainly In Their Possession.
Christian ethicists usually have no great difficulty in admiring and even recommending these virtues, also in cases where they do not fully or even partially endorse the theological and philosophical presuppositions
of people who
evince them (such as, for instance, Latin American Pentecostals, Muslim fundamentalists, or neo-Confucian businessmen).
The same breach is
evinced in the characterization
of Prince Myshkin in The Idiot.
Unfortunately, Turner and O'Donovan's essays
evince the continuing ignorance
of liberation theology on the part
of European and North American theologians.
A revealed religion that
evinced no such confidence, that accorded ritual only secondary importance, as Reform Judaism does, and was therefore fully disposed to be tolerant
of other faiths, as Reform Judaism is, would almost certainly have obtained Spinoza's only slightly grudging approval.
Pope Benedict
evinced more awareness
of this particular deficit in orthodox culture than did either his predecessor or successor.
And though we shall need to emphasize how» much «There is a God»
evinces an attitude to the familiar, we shall find in the end that it also
evinces some recognition
of patterns in time easily missed, and that, therefore, differences as to there being any gods is in part a difference as to what is so and therefore as to the facts, though not in the simple ways which first occurred to us.
The power to
evince new levels
of synthesis will depend upon the orthodoxy, as a rising cathedral grows naturally, so to speak, out
of the foundation laid to take it.
Worse, the authors
evince little knowledge even
of what is close to home: the Catholic tradition, and the thought
of Pope Francis.
Part
of the personalization
of our studies is
evinced in the shift over past decades to a primary interest in the major living religions
of the world.