Sentences with phrase «often obscure ones»

People identify doing math with writing symbols, often obscure ones.

Not exact matches

Unfortunately, efforts to push forward a careful alliance of theology with evolutionary biology are often obscured by the more sensational spats going on between IDT defenders and creationists on the one side, and evolutionary materialists on the other.
Third, and most basic, religion is so consistently irrelevant to politics because the problem of the translation of ideas from one modality to another is often obscured.
The value of his diaries after 1992 is that they give an insight into one strand of parliamentary euroscepticism, but their downside is that, all too often, we get bogged down with the personality and policy clashes of what now appear to be obscure Conservative parliamentarians, and other major political issues, such as the economy, merely become noises off.
This one has a slow, shuffling story involving people whose miseries are often obscure and whose personalities don't inspire affinity — and then the film is burdened further with ponderous piety.
The frame is often divided by stairs and banisters, fireplaces and vases, with one figure obscured and seemingly entrapped, yet the other is far from free despite their conviction that they are.
I've often wondered how a film starring substantial, popular actors like John Cusack (One Crazy Summer, Stand by Me) and Tim Robbins (Bull Durham, Top Gun) could remain so obscure to the majority of video renters that the majority of video stores don't even carry it.
Parker's one misstep is his tendency to crank up Webber's score to the max, which too often obscures Ché's expository lyrics, which, in turn, are already somewhat obscured by Banderas's accent.
Prothero's point, aided by cogent summaries of the world's major diaspora religions, is that while there is some overlap about goodness and an ideal world, there are specific reasons why religions emerged the way they did for very different purposes (his sports analogy is a good one — most sports have a score - keeping system, but runs are very different than goals or crossing a finish line), obscuring the real and often hostile fissures between them.
They dissemble, evade, prevaricate, confound, confuse, distract, obscure, subtly misrepresent and willfully misunderstand with what often appears to be a positively gleeful relish and are generally perfectly capable of contriving to give one an utterly unambiguous impression of their future course of action while in fact intending to do exactly the opposite, but they never lie.
Your first draft of your first book is probably not going to be the one that's ready for readers, let alone the highly - selective, often obscure publishing process.
In chasing that scale the bigger picture can sometimes get a little obscured, but importantly Final Fantasy 15 retains that love of smaller stories, the ones that often prove to be so much more memorable.
The sturdy froth of color and texture that comprises his images creates a «glancing, immaterial quality,» an impression not of the world as it is, but as it is remembered.1 While the artist finds that «the subject matter of (his) pictures is often established in one sitting,» he may take up to three years to complete a painting, even one as profoundly simple as After Corot (1979 - 1982).2 Hodgkin's process of recollection is related to that of the master mnemonist, Marcel Proust, whose all - over attention did not discriminate between the most significant details of memory and the most obscure.
Superimposed on top of one another, these individual words, numbers and phrases start to merge, creating fields of partially obscured and often illegible texts.
Variables and complexities inherent in photography such as image, truth, reality, subject, and context are often accentuated, sublimated or obscured by photographs with a distinct or special relationship to one another.
Initially, these works gave structural form to many of the images in Asawa's drawings, which themselves were exercises in the fluctuating relationships between figure and ground: one shape often overlaps, without entirely obscuring the others, through a simple economy of means.
It requires an analytical approach and one should bear in mind the rather harsh old adage that the lawyer who acts for himself has — all too often — a fool for a client; in short, anger may obscure essential facts.
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