Sentences with phrase «particular phenomenon»

For process theology the quest for the overview within which to understand particular phenomena, including Christian faith, can not be given up.
Of course, Trump is a very particular phenomenon with which the US media have to deal.
Each of the seven chapters follows a somewhat similar basic structure: In each chapter, the author discusses one particular phenomenon from several angles, using the most relevant national constitutional legal regimes or, if pertinent, the EU legal order as case studies, and she then concludes with some general comparative reflections.
This defect shows up in the very methods of Marxist social analysis, not just in its assessment of particular phenomena.
The article equivocates on whether we can assign global warming to this particular phenomenon, but there is little doubt that our social systems, beliefs, mental models, and infrastructure is contributing to overall global warming.
One particular phenomenon that has swarmed the digital currency space on Telegram are cryptocurrency - themed sticker sets.
Since I am not a scientist, I am not always sure what I am looking at, nor do I have the theoretical background to discern all the implications of a particular phenomenon, but as a preacher — that is, someone who lives on stories — I find the stories rolling in from the frontiers of the new science as rich in meaning as any stories I know.
But they were trapped in the morass of polytheism; one of the reasons for this was that the traditional associations of various deities with particular phenomena — the sun, the moon, the stars, storms, vegetation, the sea, and so on — meant that the obvious multiplicity of nature kept getting in the way of their struggles to apprehend the unity of the divine.
If we can gauge how people feel about a particular phenomenon based on tweets, we can similarly use tweets to measure their sentiments toward political candidates.
Just as detectives employ the convergence of evidence technique to deduce who most likely committed a crime, scientists employ the method to determine the likeliest explanation for a particular phenomenon.
The antennas essentially pick up everything coming from space, and it is then up to a superfast processor cluster to sift through the data and focus on a particular phenomenon or part of the sky.
«Those neurotransmitters themselves regulate memory formation and that's the basis of the particular phenomenon
Often, non-avian models are unsuitable to study a particular phenomenon, such as the study of verbal learning, for example.
Theoretical physics seeks to explain and predict all manner of physical phenomena — particular phenomena that can't be explained with traditional experiments.
A: I blame this particular phenomenon on street style photographers.
A measure is a source of information or data that can be expressed quantitatively to characterize a particular phenomenon.
As VetStreet noted, there's a particular phenomenon that a lot of cat owners have probably noticed.
In all of the works, the articulation of each form — whether a paint - streaked surface or carefully cut out paper — describes a particular phenomena of time and motion, while giving concreteness and permanence to fleeting traces of human action.
In his essay, A Lawless Proposition, Paul Chan discusses the perpetual question of why (and how) art comes into being, and touches on a particular phenomenon that some artists engage in their work, at times against their will — when the process of making creates the work of art itself: «By following the contours of this internal reasoning, a work takes on an uncanny quality that comes from it being an outgrowth of the experience of something becoming aware of becoming itself.»
The irony is, that his objects (miniature landscapes studded with monochrome billboards) and installations (painted plywood boxes accompanied by sound effect recordings and flashing lights) recontextualize the particular phenomena of painting, and literalize how abstract painting functions as an object in the world.
The term identifies a pictorial strategy of the 16th century Mannerist period; «discordia concors ~ describes a particular phenomenon of this period which places disparate images within the unifying frame of a work.
Recall, please, that there is often an argument about whether a particular phenomenon or even is «weather» or «climate».
They approach it in isolation, wondering what characteristics of this particular phenomenon invoke this particular reaction in these particular people.
This is a good question, but unfortunately the answer seems to depend very much on the particular phenomenon being looked at.
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