Sentences with phrase «radical implications of»

The radical implications of the blogosphere are not yet realized, like it or not.
The other hit to IPCC's influence in power politics has come from the «radical implications of the blogosphere» in changing the dynamics of expertise.
This newfound power has challenged the politics of expertise, and the «radical implications of the blogosphere» (Ravetz) are just beginning to be understood.
Ravetz's statements about the «radical implications of the blogosphere» are challenging the power politics of expertise.
Those painters who have followed his example in France, under the general banner of art informel or the specifically gestural style of tachisme, and have adopted his formal devices and scale, are unwilling or unable to pursue the more radical implications of his art.
To understand the radical implications of Warhol's Shadows, one must begin with the work's form: the Shadows series was conceived as one painting in multiple parts, the final number of canvases determined by the dimensions of an exhibition space.
Nam June Paik is widely credited as the founder of video art and among the first artists to envision the radical implications of an «electronic super highway» and cybernetics.
«One of the most radical implications of this hypothesis is that even such an intractable condition as anorexia nervosa — which, like obesity, is now universally considered a behavioral and psychological disorder — may be caused fundamentally by a physiological defect of fat metabolism and insulin.
MR: «Barth never fully owned up to the radical implications of his identification of God with revelation.
Unfortunately, the Vatican is opposed to the more radical implications of liberation theology, and it is trying with some success to force the movement back into line.
A cultural starting point might well demand a «hermeneutical suspicion» (i. e., a distrust of one's previous reading of Scripture, given the possibility that such a reading conceals some of the radical implications of the Biblical message for our day), but it may also assist in the renewed hermeneutical task, allowing the Biblical witness to be freshly experienced, freshly understood, and freshly applied.21

Not exact matches

By 1992, the holiday had lost much of its radical implication.
Such a radical rethinking of ad rates would have implications far beyond publishing.
Precisely because it is less abstract and high - flown than the Ninth Circuit's embrace of autonomy, the implications of the Second Circuit's opinion may seem less radical.
This view of the brain has radical implications for treatment.
To the unsuspecting reader, it might seem that Altizer has in fact returned to his first stage, but for those who view Altizer's development as an ever - increasing awareness of the full implications of the dialectical method, Buddhism is now seen as the reversible (i.e., dialectical) ground on which a new radical Christianity can be founded.
There can be no doubt, of course, that Samuel was in accord with the radical political implications of these early prophets» fierce loyalty to Yahweh, that he was allied with them in setting up the monarchy, and that there was mutual influence between Samuel and the emerging prophetic institution.
By implication it encouraged the prophetic radical aspect of religious life, which insisted on criticizing any defective and unjust social order.
To answer Americans and Christians in their fear of Muslims, both moderate and radical: Even though I'm aware of the extremity of Sharia law and its implications, yes, I believe Christianity can and would absolutely survive despite it.
I wonder if what is innocuous to us is a way for us to say it would be too costly to my life to actually ponder the implications or ramifications of radical discipleship.
It is due also in part to the fact that religious institutions in black communities have not been sufficiently cognizant of the radical implications which the changing political, economic and social realities have for their life.
On the present occasion, a journal issue devoted to exhibiting the implications for theology of post-Whiteheadian metaphysics, it is my function to point out that post-Whiteheadian metaphysics, in one of its developments, points towards a radical theology in the sense made popular by the Death of God movement.
The social and political implications of such a view were radical indeed.
But there are several points that deserve special emphasis here: (1) «The radical new view of alcoholism, not as a disease but as a «central activity in heavy drinkers» way of life,» as described by Herbert Fingarette... clearly has transforming implications for conceptualizing and dealing with the ethical issues in alcohol addiction....
The militants down at the Dead Sea, one of whose documents was titled «The War of the Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness,» would have understood its radical implications with regard to the Roman imperial machine.
Hamilton is still thinking and writing about the death of God, still trying to come to terms with its implications, still working to articulate the project of radical theology.
The philosophical implication is a radical form of individualism.
I still, indeed, hold this viewpoint in practice, but with a radical revision of the philosophical implications of science.
Would we rather not accept the responsibility of apostleship at Pentecost and its radical implications?
The basic implications of the changes are a greater freedom of the church from party and state on the one hand and a wider range of political options for Catholics than support of the Christian Democratic party, options that include support of more vigorously reformist or radical parties of the left.
The degree to which modern philosophy represents a radical break with all traditional ideas is only gradually becoming clear, in part because the early modern philosophers were concerned to disguise the full implications of their teachings.
But for a variety of reasons the cloak has been more and more torn away in recent American history, leaving in its stead a radical secular individualism whose implications for social coherence are ominous indeed.
The English bishop, author of the best - selling Honest to God, develops the implications of his radical theology for how Jesus is to be understood by Christians.
Everything we once thought is true is now undergoing radical revision with profound implications to human health, particularly the role of vaccines.
However, despite the valiant efforts of left Rawlsians to press down hard on pre-distribution and force it to yield some radical implications (O'Neill and Williamson, 2012; Doron, 2012), in Miliband's formulation it seems a weak reed, relying on labour market interventions such as education and training to alter distributional outcomes.
The aim is to cut the number of MPs from 650 to 600 by 2015 - a radical proposal that has not yet ignited the interest of the public but which will have major implications for the UK's political landscape — and for voters.
«Although this radical change in the concept of how acid reflux damages the esophagus of GERD patients will not change our approach to its treatment with acid - suppressing medications in the near future, it could have substantial long - term implications,» said senior author Dr. Stuart Spechler, Professor of Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern and Chief of the Department of Gastroenterology at the Dallas VA Medical Center.
This is the implication of a radical new model for the Universe proposed by an American cosmologist.
«Nighttime chemical evolution of aerosol and trace gases in a power plant plume: Implications for secondary organic nitrate and organosulfate aerosol formation, NO3 radical chemistry, and N2O5 heterogeneous hydrolysis.»
Our current research in this area focuses on understanding the paleoenvironmental implications of a radical change in sedimentary iron biogeochemistry in the mid-Atlantic U.S. during the Paleocene - Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), a severe global warming event that occurred 55 million years ago.
The film is impeccably shot and paced, but the radical real - world implications of Wise's agenda are never fully explored.
An ex-con and radical environmentalist, Michael is so terrified by the implications of global warming that he wants Mary to abort their unborn child, rather than bring an innocent soul into a world swiftly headed for its next mass extinction.
Perhaps in acknowledgment of this fait accompli, some of the journalists reporting on the show choose to focus on the implications such canonisation might have on the future of his «transgressive» brand of cinema; as the author of an article for Slate magazine wondered, what does it mean «When a Radical Gets a Retrospective?»
But Johnson's ambitions here can easily be over-sold: Most of the surprising plot twists and character developments that eventually enliven The Last Jedi walk back their radical implications on the story, and revert to the resolutions we've come to expect from a trilogy beholden to recycling its themes of misplaced hope and heroic sacrifice.
But apart from its Los Angeles setting, Short Cuts has no obvious unifying principles, and the narrative links are more casual and incidental, which makes the implications of Altman's method much more radical — a refreshing if somewhat dizzying alternative to the standard simplicities of Hollywood moviemaking.
If we are to avoid «Hell» and have any chance of «Transcending» we, the public, need to understand the implications of the scientific advancements, and Radical Evolution is a pretty good place to start!
Certainly the painter who best embodies the dual implications — both artistically and politically progressive — of the original usage of the term «avant - garde» is Gustave Courbet and his militantly radical Realism.
The priority of the radical revolutionary implication of the term «avant - garde» rather than the purely esthetic one more usually applied in the twentieth century, and the relation of this political meaning to the artistic subsidiary one, is again made emphatically clear in this passage by the Fourierist art critic and theorist Laverdant, in his De la Mission de l'art et du rôle des artistes of 1845:
César Daly, editor of the Revue générale de l'architecture, used a similar military term, éclaireur, or «scout,» in the 1840s, when he said that the journal must «fulfill an active mission of «scouting the path of the future,»» a mission both socially and artistically advanced.3 Baudelaire, after a brief flirtation with radical politics in 1848 — he had actually fought on the barricades and shortly after, in 1851, had written a eulogistic introduction to the collected Chants et chansons of the left - wing worker - poet Pierre Dupont, condemning the «puerile utopia of the art - for - art's sake school,» praising the «popular convictions» and «love of humanity» expressed in the poet's pastoral, political, and socialistic songs4 — later mocked the politico - military implications of the term «avant - garde» in Mon Coeur mis à nu, written in 1862 — 64.5
In other words, there is an even more radical implication that emerges if Europe is dethroned as the point of reference for non-European international courts.
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