Sentences with phrase «on circumscribing»

Why is he so bent on circumscribing his own political ambitions in everything spiritual?
Rather, the reliance on a circumscribed mechanism of production often results in a sense of potential endlessness that forces us to examine our preconceptions about the distance between reality and visual illusion.

Not exact matches

R. G. Woolley, in a set of articles published in England during the late 1970s (while he was at Cambridge) argued that such basic attributes of a molecule as its shape must be carefully circumscribed on the basis of current theory.
It symbolizes a unity which is not simply a formal bond that circumscribes the unfolding of individual powers in an always equal manner, but rather a process of unified development which all individuals go through together [«On the Concept and the Tragedy of Culture,» by Georg Simmel, in The Conflict in Modern Culture, translated by Peter Etzkorn (Teachers College Press, 1968), p. 28].
The phrases «your Father» and «your brother» were often on his lips.4 Paul by stressing the acquisition of sonship by acceptance of Christ, and circumscribing this still further by a doctrine of divine election (Rom.
Although I expect many conservative Christian thinkers will find Foucault a strange bedfellow, I want to suggest that our endorsement of the radical left on this subject should be an enthusiastic one, although it must also be carefully circumscribed.
It sprang from a desire not to emphasize the Messianic realm but to circumscribe it; it originated in a more spiritual conception of the world's finale than could be satisfied by a nationalistic victory or by any kind of social order imaginable on earth.
In so doing he circumscribes the nature and role of the imagination, especially its synthesizing power, making it dependent on the understanding» (CJ 95).
15:40 - 41) women are expressly mentioned for the first time in Mark as followers of Jesus; on the other hand, however, their relationship to Jesus is circumscribed with the key word diekonoun («served»; NRSV: «provided for»).
Decisive, on the one hand, is the history of the origin of the myth; it falls into the period which circumscribes the first attempt at fixing the image, on the other.
In particular, the defense hoped to circumscribe a conversation between Silver and Reid during which Silver noted the inclusion of more information on his disclosure form in early 2010, a few months after the sentencing of former Queens Assemblyman Anthony Seminerio on corruption charges.
In the table on the left page, the square that appears repeatedly denotes 4 / pi, or the ratio of the area of a square to the area of the circumscribed circle.
They probably aren't the priorities of Oliver Stone, whose ruthlessly circumscribed World Trade Center isn't about the 2,749 citizens of 87 countries who got killed in the 9/11 assault on the Twin Towers and who are mentioned only in a title when the movie's over.
During all this time, natural ecosystems have developed in co-evolution, but 250 years ago, with the development and industrialization models imposed by the West on the world, anthropogenic action is causing a major ecological and social footprint, hence the urgency to formulate international policies that circumscribe human economic activities within the biophysical limits of Mother Earth.
Rather than attempting to reach consensus, the objective has been to map out a variety of bold visions that push on the boundaries that circumscribe our current thinking and spur fresh debate.
The content focus is on inscribed and circumscribed angles.
JG: I think we really have to be cautious about pushing kids into making choices too early, as well... It's not so much that kids make clear choices early on, but [Linda Gottfredson], who's a well - known theorist in this space, she talked about how kids circumscribe and compromise as they consider careers that might be possible for them.
When you consider that many council children's departments now have a much smaller role to play in overseeing school improvement, they should be able to focus nearly all their attention on this one important, circumscribed area.
The concept of TPACK has been cited thousands of times, and has been influential within a narrowly circumscribed circle of faculty members whose professional careers focus on some aspect of emergent technologies.
Despite the difficulties of crossing cultural and gender lines to tell his story, Schwarts manages to convey the circumscribed, confining royal lifestyle and its effect on his vulnerable heroine.
Red, hairless, well - circumscribed, sometimes raised lesion usually on the leg; if chronic, will drain
Acral Lick: red, hairless, well - circumscribed lesion usually on forearm; cats: symmetrical hair loss, sometimes ulcers, on abdomen, groin, along the back
Its title, from a 1951 Robert Frost skit about the discovery of the New World, partly feels like a wry reflection on the museum's own mandate: an institution that has a duty to map American art, however provisionally, but is ever reluctant, and commendably so, to circumscribe what might constitute that tradition.
While Lorna, Deep Contact, and other works (including many not in the exhibition) are structured around open - ended narratives, what they presciently anticipated is perception and experience skipping along the internet's seemingly infinite set of links — seemingly, because what Hershman Leeson's work also shows is how circumscribed choice (even on the web) can be.
While working under Ceausescu's regime, Bratescu focused on the studio as a space for self - preservation and the protection of identity: see her filmed performance Atelierul (The Studio, 1978), in which she defines the studio with gestures even as it circumscribes her movements.
Within eyeshot of Uklański's Nazis, it takes on a new resonance, circumscribing the horrors of war and setting up a dynamic that resounds throughout the exhibitions: mythos, survival, and never - forget.
The central black cross on a white background circumscribed by red and white circles is likely an abstraction of the Iron Cross medal for bravery, which was bestowed posthumously on Freyburg.
It is in fact the wax, in this case, to circumscribe an unpublished testing ground, within which develop geometric images that mimic perfectly the yield of the print with arrays of wood; such research is concreted in a series of works on paper and wood of various sizes (35 × 50, 150 × 100, 20 × 30 cm).
Robert has invited to you play on a field which he has circumscribed, layering on the arguments that you can't prove your assertions using formulas he chooses.
Culture change and strategy shifting has to circumscribe product designers, formulators, market managers, and so on.
While the court clearly has jurisdiction to deal with issues arising out of a compensatory award, especially where there is provision made for leave to apply, it is difficult to reconcile such a limited and circumscribed power with the imposition on claimant victims of a mandatory requirement to undergo medical examination after a court has:
Some inquiry, albeit one carefully circumscribed to avoid entrenching on client - solicitor privilege, is necessary.
On the other side, the argument is made that the authority of the police must be strictly circumscribed by the law of arrest and search as it has developed to date in the traditional jurisprudence of the Fourth Amendment.
This ruling also provides some interesting insights on the relationship between the Arbitration Act 1996 and the New York Convention, notably how the provisions of the Convention circumscribe the English courts» power to order security.
CCD / CACL concur with Professor Montero's conclusion that an a posteriori control system, vague criteria in the hands of physicians with a wide range of opinion on AS / E [54] and a social ethos or philosophy based on autonomy prevailing over all other considerations mean it is «illusory to think [AS / E] can... be narrowly circumscribed
If they do not, the attack on the fairness of the terms that is open to the OFT will not be circumscribed by reg 6 (2)(b).
Enforcing limits on the power of government, as judicial review does, and perhaps especially enforcing limits set up by federal constitutions, insofar as they circumscribe the powers of centralized governments, helps preserve foot - voting and market - choice opportunities.
Although some provinces recognize specific exemptions for reserve residents or for on - reserve purchases by Aboriginal people, the limits of provincial powers to tax Aboriginal people are circumscribed, constitutionally, by the ascendant federal restrictions set out in the Indian Act.
The difference is that while Rupert Murdoch's empire has been circumscribed by the limits of production and broadcast, Zuckerberg's is already in your home, on your laptop, at your workstation and even in your back pocket.
But the theory of our system is that, on net, having a frustratingly long, circumscribed, and public process will tend to weed out most of the bad ideas and impulses that would otherwise result from unconstrained decision making, even if well - intentioned.
When presenting resumes for government employment, however, you have no such «play,» since the requirements and duties for government jobs are very carefully circumscribed — allowing no deviation on resumes for federal positions.
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