Sentences with phrase «practise by»

It is worth noting that Gleick's forgeries are considered normal practise by the climate science establishment... and that hypocrisy for personal gain (Gore) is accepted and rewarded.
Were this to be common practise by parents for their children, the dentist industry would be in terrible trouble.
Against Sassuolo, the theoretical benefits of the false nine were put perfectly into practise by Roma and Perotti.
It was a stunning disquisition on the new cash - flow politics practised by our governing party.
One approach which has been the boilerplate for a number of emerging market countries, including that of Brazil, is that practised by the Bank of England.
According to the Odinist Fellowship website Odinism is an ancient «indigenous form of heathen religion» practises by the Angles, Saxons and Jutes.
Here's the Mormon logic behind baptisms for the dead: (1) Bible says you have to be baptised to get into heaven, (2) lots of people died without any chance to get baptised, (3) the Bible mentions baptism for the dead, which was practiced by early christians but isn't practised by anybody now (other than Mormons), and (4) God lvoes everybody but he is also truthful, so baptism for the dead reconciles the statement that everybody must be baptised with the unfair situation of not everyone being able to do so.
They belong to us for some of the same reasons they were practised by ancient Pythagoreans and modern Buddhists: natural, human religious wisdom acknowledges that the body must be tamed before the soul.
Today the 77 - year - old continues to be a prominent voice in speaking out against the idolatry of the state (a sin which he believes is particularly practised by both the American Church, and President Trump.)
The state - ordered assassination of terrorists, as currently practised by Israel, simply aggravates still further the hostility, hatred and sense of injustice, which were the original causes for the rise of terrorism.
Intertwined with economic globalisation is the globalisation practised by world religions.
Yoga is the science of spirituality, and is practised by many as such.
Certainly the love of God and neighbour may be recognized and practised by those who do not profess a biblical faith more adequately than by some who stand inside.
But the tax evasion practised by fortunate social sectors is not an exclusive phenomenon of Third World countries.
He found evidence for this in the Christian veneration of icons and believed he was restoring religious faith to its pristine purity, as first practised by the Israelite patriarchs.
If one is totally honest, the Tridentine liturgy as practised by the ordinary clergy in a daily «low» Mass was by and large a hurried and not very reverential exercise.
Non-certified organic agriculture in developing countries is practised by millions of indigenous people, peasants and small family farms involved in subsistence and local market - oriented production.
Even in the expansive attacking systems practised by the current Liverpool side, he still manages to rack up impressive defensive stats, particularly when it comes to reading the game and intercepting passes.
2.3 In many places, if initiation is not being practised by the Breast Crawl or a similar process, how is it practised?
Liberalism isn't practised by everyone in the country, sadly.
The Independent's recent exposé of lobbying's dark arts, as practised by Bell Pottinger, only adds to the momentum towards a statutory register of lobbyists.
Domestic slavery practised by the educated African coastal elites (as well as interior traditional rulers) in Sierra Leone was abolished in 1928.
Here is the great vulnerability of the sunshine politics as practised by the Tory leader.
But his economic plight is more acute: in part the legacy of Thatcherism as practised by Gordon Brown.
She directed that the other must be a highly recognised leader in the religion being practised by Kanu.
You could think of it as putting the art of food presentation, long practised by restauranteurs, on a more neuroscientific basis, much as molecular gastronomy riffs off the chemical basis of cooking.
Two of the healthcare reform bills before US legislators harbour clauses that would force insurers to pay for the prayer - based healing practised by the Church of Christ, Scientist
The other method, practised by Riess and his colleagues, measures how distant galaxies appear to recede from us as the universe expands, using stars and supernovae of known brightness to gauge the distance to those galaxies.
The computer analysis also shows that Dunga played a key role in the kind of possession football practised by Brazil, characterised by passing between groups of two or three players.
But while Christmas rituals can be exciting for children, they certainly don't have any of the high drama of those practised by other faiths.
Records kept by the Romans describe the macabre rituals practised by the Germanic peoples on the bodies of their vanquished enemies, but this is the first time that traces of an ancient holy site have been unearthed.
Water fasts are highly praised for cleansing, and are regularly practised by keen detox advocates.
Our goal was to choose a form of exercise that could be regularly practised by the general population and to be used as a control.
Meditation can be practised by anyone and adherence to religious practices of any kind is not required, Anyone can enjoy the benefits whatever their religious or spiritual beliefs.
However, there are programs, which require a muscle being taken to the FURTHER point of not even being able to twitch, as most successfully practised by the foremost exponent of this regime; Tom Platz
The final step to success is this technique which is practised by the great body building legend Frank Zane.
However, by listening intently to student voice, one can empower themselves to refined practises by constantly reflecting on their impact to improve.
Early neutering is now also practised by many vets.
And THIS is being practised by «responsible breeders» — well at least Kennel Control Registered breeders — and a proliferation of «pure bred dogs with serious genetic faults.
This loss is compounded by the falling out of favour of a kind of criticism which systematically ignored what paintings were about, the modernist sort, practised by Clement Greenberg, Michael Fried and early on Rosalind Krauss.
Although this «pinboard aesthetic» is also practised by Nigel Henderson, William Turnbull and John McHale, it is Paolozzi who, one night in April 1952, projects his ads, magazine clippings, postcards and diagrams at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, in a demonstration that underwrites the distinctive method of the IG, an anti-hierarchical juxtaposition of archival images disparate, connected, or both at once.
They abandoned the polished classical style that was fashionable at the time and practised by artists such as Aleksandr Laktianov and presented a subject matter that they felt better reflected the grim austerity of post war Russia.
In Britain, Post-Impressionism was practised by the Camden Town Group, founded in 1911 by Walter Richard Sickert, who became known for his nudes and interiors.
The main component styles included: the animated all - over Action - Painting (developed by Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner); Gestural Painting (developed by Willem de Kooning); Colour Field Painting (practised by Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, Clyfford Still), and «Hard - Edge Painting» (invented by Frank Stella), most of which were executed on a monumental scale.
Drawing, collage, printmaking and painting will introduce students to contemporary painting as practised by the RISD Painting Department.
In autumn 1956 in ARK, the magazine of the RCA, the art critic Robert Melville published an essay that considered «action painting» - as practised by Green and his contemporaries at the RCA, Richard Smith and Robyn Denny - a trend observable in New York, Paris and London.
It was also around this time that the Russian - American experimental sculptor Louise Nevelson (1899 - 1988) began producing her famous assemblages known as «sculptured walls», and only a few years since Jean Dubuffet (1901 - 85) had begun his own form of junk art which had an important impact on junk sculpture practised by Arman and others.
In her view, the grid as practised by painters such as Piet Mondrian, Kazimir Malevich and Agnes Martin is a priori mute, resisting both personal and political narrative.
However, given the meltdown in the international contemporary art market, as well as the rise in popularity of traditional painting - as practised by many Eastern European schools - this conceptual / abstract approach may prove to be a long term weakness.
Although nominally a type of «realism», photorealism was not a successor to earlier types of American realism practised by the likes of Winslow Homer (1836 - 1910) and Edward Hopper (1882 - 1967).
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