Sentences with phrase «other fragmentary»

In his early Joke paintings, the artist experimented with layering pilfered cartoon illustrations and their pun - riddled, Freudian punchlines on canvas with a silkscreen while also inviting incidents of chance, dripping and other fragmentary evidence of his hand.
Phillipps: A most recent example of that would be some material that was found in the Republic of Georgia -LSB-...] where they recently found a fragmentary skullcap, skull remains, and other fragmentary limb bones.
Even after other fragmentary finds were made at other sites in Java, the total evidence was so fragmentary that a wide range of interpretations was possible.
After four years of searching, he uncovered a skullcap with a simian - like brow ridge and a large brain case, along with other fragmentary fossils, buried near the Solo River on the Indonesian island of Java.
The team proposed that LB1 and the other fragmentary remains they recovered represent a previously unknown human species, Homo floresiensis.

Not exact matches

At best, these other truths can only be regarded as fragmentary versions of it in some way or another.
The others are fragmentary, inclusive of the multiplicity only in some degree (and, in the case of most of the multiplicity, only in a trivial degree).
Neither the self, because it has importance for others, nor any of the others, because they are fragmentary, can provide this measure.
Other than the defendant's statement, the incriminating evidence submitted by the prosecution was fragmentary and circumstantial.
On the other hand, the New Testament witness to fulfillment is rooted precisely in the eschatological vision and in the belief that the future of the Lord, albeit in a hidden and fragmentary way, is present in our midst in the form of signs, first fruits, foretaste and so on.
Gone, too, (at least virtually and in aspiration), is the infernal circle of egocentrism, meaning the isolation, in some sort ontological, which prohibits our escape from self to share the point of view even of those we love best: as though the Universe were composed of as many fragmentary universes, repelling each other, as the sum total of the centers of consciousness which it embraces.
In a way my question about «totality» and «the refusal of distance» sums up the other questions and suggests that a stance which has a larger component of irony and understatement toward the self might be able to bear the fragmentary character of existence with less restlessness toward totality.
Our achievements may live on in the memories of others, but this is a very fragmentary and transient immortality.
But even when we understand why, for example, the New Testament writers went to great pains to confirm Jesus» birth in Old Testament predictions of a Savior, or to relate his biological lineage to King David, or to tie his betrayal and death to other Old Testament prophecies («so that the scriptures might be fulfilled»)-- we still are left with a fragmentary puzzle instead of a clear picture of the «real» Jesus.
Instead, Whitehead states that thought originates from the way a particular fragmentary sense experience impresses us in relation to other experiences.
Indeed it was felt that the more clearly one discerns the value in other faiths, the more certainly will it be seen that Christ is the one overtowering personality in whom all those values, found elsewhere in partial and fragmentary form, come to such complete realization as to make him the Lord and Savior of all mankind.
Researchers reconstructed Timurlengia by combining its fragmentary fossils (shown in red) with bones from other, closely related tyrannosaurid species (in white).
Based on analyses of LB1 and some other, more fragmentary remains, the discovery team concluded that the specimens belonged to a previously unknown human species, Homo floresiensis, that lived as recently as 12,000 years ago [see «The Littlest Human,» by Kate Wong; Scientific American, February 2005].
As with other evidence of smaller pterosaurs, the fossil specimen is fragmentary and poorly preserved: researchers should check collections more carefully for misidentified or ignored pterosaur material, which may enhance our picture of pterosaur diversity and disparity at this time.»
Clothing and other items made of wool have been found throughout much of the ancient world, from 3,400 - year - old Egyptian yarn to fragmentary textiles unearthed in Siberian graves dating from the first century B.C.
Although it aligns more closely with H. sapiens than with the other species in the researchers» comparative analysis, it is only one fragmentary bone.
Named Sahelanthropus tchadensis, the specimen is significant even though it's so fragmentary: The hole in the cranium through which the spinal cord exits appears to be at the bottom, as it is for upright, two - legged hominins, rather than toward the back, as seen in chimpanzees and other knuckle - walkers.
While evidence obtained in our and other laboratories strongly suggests that H. pylori triggers a transcriptional response, epigenetic alterations and DNA damage in infected cells, most of the data supporting these findings rest on fragmentary analyses of clinical samples and cells infected in vitro.
Resnaisian editing brings us into their relationship without preamble, and the images drop us into the spaces between them, seeing each with the other, creating fragmentary sequences of formal and emotional weight.
Carla Hayden close to securing Librarian of Congress appointment; fiction writer Max Porter on the fragmentary nature of grief; the vindication of Ernest Hemingway's second wife; and other news.
A poet, filmmaker, and multidisciplinary artist, Vicuña takes a predictably broad - based approach, combining the visual and the verbal, and juxtaposing her own fragmentary texts with sustained commentary by others.
Feminism proposed two alternative sets of criteria between 1970 and 1990: in the 1970s, the first — in whose development Schapiro participated — challenged the formalist canon for its exclusion of so much political narrative, and even formal content and materiality, and proposed alternatives that looked to craft, costume, folk art, surrealism, the real, lived experience, and the body; the second, developed by deconstructionist feminism during the 1980s, challenged the first for its essentialism and looked back to aspects of modernism other than those promoted by Greenberg, namely the fragmentary, the filmic, the appropriational, and the disruptive aesthetics of Brechtian distantiation.
LOUISE FISHMAN: This painting, it's more fragmentary than a lot of the other paintings.
Other works in the exhibition include wall pieces and a gridded platform on the floor making use of two - way mirrors to create the illusion of fragmentary architectural structures repeating and receding into infinite space.
Range is also the title of the whole exhibition, which includes, among other things, a number of photographs in which fragmentary drawings are collaged on to digital photos of mountains in Europe and the scrubby desert near Marfa, Texas, where Donald Judd set up his somewhat megalomaniacal permanent displays.
Sutphin writes that «Brock cannibalizes old endeavors (his canvases) and sands away layers leaving disjointed fragmentary bits of the paintings former self, revealing a kind of hollowed out other.
Although I could see the attraction in terms of how to deal with architectural space and sweeping gestures that would bring fragmentary objects together as one coherent pictorial unity, I'm curious what other impulse is behind it?
Where Brown's canvases revel in the visceral immediacy of paint, her drawings offer fragmentary motifs that build upon and undo each other.
Seth Cluett «Inward Turning Histories» Year: 2015/2017 Duration: 22»27 In his text The Practice of Everyday Life, DeCerteau writes «Places are fragmentary and inward - turning histories, pasts that others are not allowed to read, accumulated times that can be unfolded but like stories held in reserve, remaining in an enigmatic state, symbolizations encysted in the pain or pleasure of the body.
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