Sentences with phrase «says something about human»

That soldiers of all the armies kept fighting in the horrible trenches, often with a vigor that post-moderns find incomprehensible and more than a little distressing, says something about the human animal that needs discussion.
For prisoners offered to be taken away from the violent guards, criminals, murderers, rapists and put into a solitary confinement to be nearly always viewed as punishment says something about humans.
Despite the lack of discipline, Apatow is trying to stretch himself, to say something about human nature: his insight here is less about comedy than about adult life as a succession of equivocations and betrayals.
It's wonderfully made and says something about us humans that's incredibly insightful and...
This desire to make photographs that tell a story and say something about the human condition is central to Broffman's approach to photography.
In a circa 1989 interview with Jim Johnson, an art historian at the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colescott said he made the transition and dedicated himself to working with the figure and his imagination, «trying to say something about the human condition.»

Not exact matches

When you believe that people are human beings first and worker bees second, you say something about their worth.
Indeed, these mega-rich buyers don't necessarily view these pieces as evocative works of art that stir emotions and say something essential about the human condition.
«There's something very human about the tablet that isn't human about the laptop,» Bansal says.
«There is something about building relationships and working with people on Capitol Hill that requires human nuance, and many companies won't just leave this to a machine,» she says.
I believe this wise and nuanced document says something true about human nature; I'm afraid Mr. Smalling might label it «common bigotry.»
That much is a fact about human behaviour â $ «we choose to like or dislike something â $ «and this in turn develops our tastes and restrictions (same could be said for food).
I tried to say something about how critical religion is in human relations earlier but it got marked as abuse... I will try one more time in a condensed form.
It remembered and taught what Jesus had said about God and man, about the kingdom of God, about human moral responsibility, and the like, because it was primarily concerned with something else.
It was recognized fairly quickly that Gödel's Theorem might have something to say about whether the human mind is just a computer» Gödel himself was firmly convinced that it is not.
So we're at the place where we can say a couple - four things from the existential side of the problem of evil: [1] from the perspective that pain exists, and we perceive it, we as human beings (you could say «people») have an urge to do something about it when we see it.
In these quite different ways, something is being said about a refreshment or enablement which is provided for human existence; and something is also being said, even in a fashion which sometimes seems curiously negative (as in Indian religious thought and observance), about a relationship with a more ultimate and all - inclusive reality that establishes a kind of companionship between our own little life and the greater circumambient divine being.
In Chinese the character for «trouble» is two women in the same house, which says something about the Chinese view of human relations.
If we have something to say about the timeless enemies of the human condition — injustice, ignorance, bigotry, exploitation, hunger, war — we will fail if we try to sound like every other voice in the public realm instead of using our language and tradition.
The Corporeal Nature of Freedom and its Sphere Before speaking of the existence of freedom and in freedom something will have to be said about the specifically human creatureliness of freedom which will clarify the dialectical character of our relation to our own and other people's freedom.
To Ken Margo: I am totally agree with you about this evil thing going around the earth... this evil minded people is there everywhere regardless of faith... that was not what i was trying to say... my point was to be able to recognize the One True God who is Unseen and who has no partners as He is not in need of any partners but we the creation is in need of Him... thats all... I wish I could do something to stop all these taking place around the earth... I think we human fear the fed laws more than we fear the laws of our Creator, for example not to associate any partner with Him, taking the life of others, drug dealing, human trafficking, believing in hereafter and so on... I remember a story that I was talking with one of my friends... I was telling him look we all obey the law of the land so much like for example when we drive and no one moves even an inch when there is a school bus stop to pick / drop kids as it is a fed laws but when it comes to the laws of our Creator, we don't care... like having physical relationship outside of marriage and many more... then he said something nice... he said that its because we see the consequence of breaking the law of the land but we do not see the punishment of hereafter even though it is mentioned very details in Quran, it even gives pictures of hereafter....
It means leaving the privacy ot your solitary labors, moving beyond those expected work relationships in which the product is always the go - between, and saying or doing something about the human affairs — the public realm — of that organization or community of which you are a part.
He says abortions should be «safe, legal and rare» (something he borrowed from B. Clinton) but says nothing about the basic tenet of proper human conduct i.e. Thou Shalt Not Kill.
What is important here for my purposes is the great agreement between the two that Christian tradition has something to say about the shaping of human desire and thus about public life.
I shall then say something again about human existence in the light of Christology; and I shall conclude with the question of human destiny.
First I had better say something about what makes our human way of experiencing and thinking different from that of other animals.
It is taken from something he says about the relationship between human suffering and human depravity in his essay «On Human Nature.&rhuman suffering and human depravity in his essay «On Human Nature.&rhuman depravity in his essay «On Human Nature.&rHuman Nature.»
When this belief was coupled with the notion of a last judgement which would not occur until God «had accomplished the number of his elect», in words from still another prayer, it said something about the corporate nature of human life, the equally corporate nature of whatever destiny men have, and the need for patient waiting until our fellowmen have found their capacity for fulfillment along with us.
In effect, he says that if God does permit the annihilation of human personality, in its self - conscious awareness as recipient of God's love, there is something oddly selfish about God Himself.
Look, when we think about ending an early human life, this is something that is really bad for the embryo or early fetus that dies, it's losing out tremendously — I agree with that as I already said.
If we bless the Creator God and then curse someone created in the image of God, we not only, say something unfavorable about another human being.
«Every time we learn something new about how breathing, cardiac function and sleep are controlled in babies — even in baby rats — we have the chance to think about how these findings may be used to reduce the risk of SIDS in human infants,» Dr. Leiter says.
And we say something about ourselves too - that a platform which facilitated human voices became too poisonous to use.
The ability to gaze inward may be an integral part of the human condition, but so is our inability to be alone, he says: «Because we're so attuned to be alert to danger, there is something about the human mind that finds it hard to turn in on itself.»
Agouti viable yellow mice might have something to say about the human obesity epidemic.
Dr. Butler - Jones: Certainly, two things about that I guess, firstly as it's been said, we do see from time to time and this is something that people would not know that in fact human viruses can be spread to pig.
«Everybody, regardless of whether or not they go on to college or go on to become engineers, needs to know something about how the human - made world that they live in comes to be,» she says.
Similarly, if a science - fiction writer has something he wants to say about the interactions between some intelligent extraterrestrials and our present human race, he often finds it necessary to pretend that some means of faster - than - light travel can be found (tachyon transmissions, black - hole transit, «warp drive», or whatever), and Einstein be hanged.
«Parasite manipulators have something to teach us about how brains work,» says Adamo, as they are able to exert fine - grained control over their hosts» brains in ways that human neurobiologists can only dream of.
By analyzing the vivid colors in paintings by such artists as J.M.W. Turner, Claude Lorrain, Alexander Cozens, and Edgar Degas, some scientists hope to say something significant about volcano - related cooling — and possibly human - induced pollution — over the past few centuries.
Steve: Tell you a quick story, I was listening to Rush Limbaugh once, which I do as an exercise every once in a while, and he was talking about how, you know, environmentalism is a sham because this is actually what he said: «How can we believe, how can humans believe that we could possibly damage something that God made?»
We have known about this human and animal pathogen, TB, since ancient times, and it has always been considered something that is transmitted either through oral or aerosol exposure,» said lead study author Kathleen Alexander, DVM, PhD, professor, Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia.
Excited by this review by Mark Sisson of the forthcoming film In Search Of The Perfect Human Diet Mark also has some interesting stuff to say about the benefits of taking a personal retreat - something I enjoy doing from time to time, and need -LSB-...]
I'm not saying I think I look awful, but, there's just something about a little makeup that makes me feel human.
Calling all fans of said genre, looking for something like... Game title Hatoful Boyfriend (Japanese title はーとふる彼氏) is a game about a human hunter - gatherer girl (named by you,...
Like «Life Is Beautiful» before it, Imagining Argentina juxtaposes horrific images of torture and humiliation against gooey optimism and thinks it's saying something profound about human resilience in the process.
The movie is saying something worth hearing about the place the future holds, the concept and promise of it, in human existence.
The movie wants to say something about the communications industry and its apparent movement toward a sort of universal hub — a one - stop means by which we can communicate with everyone, even going as far as to literally control another human being's every action — but, as presented here, it comes across as shallow techno - phobia.
While there is something to be said about the film's truly madcap and increasingly absurd multilingual clusterfucks - and they are perhaps the most potent and precise of any Palme d'Or nominee in years - those that know Ade's previous films (The Forest for the Trees, Everyone Else) should also expect a work that is achingly human and nuanced, working marvelously as both an intimate and awkward study of a father - daughter relationship and as an immersive look into the corporate landscapes of post-wall Europe.
It's possible that it has something interesting to say about human nature.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z