Sentences with phrase «social act»

That, to me, is the deepest social contract, to understand the idea that individual creativity within a willing community is a profound social act.
Every structure of secular life both present and to come is called into question by hope, because this is the anticipation of what is not in our power, and the historical and social act of hope is realized in this calling into question, though not entirely.
It generates power and fun at the same time, acting as a social
«Along with the lesion results, this indicates that the cMPOA and BSTrh are responsible for the urge, or drive, behind these very different social acts
Voting is at once a highly personal yet broadly social act that carries great significance in American life.
If at any time during his or her life, the person commits a crime or aberrant social act, the individual is called to the center of the village and the people in the community form a circle around him.
The School of Architecture, founded on principles of independent and exploratory thought, maintains that individual creativity within a willing community is a profoundly social act.
We who join in this act gather as a community to affirm our resolve for the sanctity of education as a profound social act.
Because it is a social act, certain constraints are necessary.
(65) This is only one of many ways in which the theme of preaching as a social act can be continued.
They thought of it as a social act, totally unrelated to how blacks and whites think about God.
In order to arrive at a better understanding of interpretation as a social act of reconstruction, several dimensions of critical exposition are peculiarly important.
The second group reduces kingdom to redemptive power and therefore it becomes a spirituality or personal salvation or healing or a charismatic moment or a social act that breaks through with God's will or a cultural good that evokes God's will now done on earth — and like the former view — out goes Israel and the church and we lose the dynamic of the kingdom.
Also preaching as a social act is examined.
All preaching then is a social act.
Here in this social act is the expression of a common allegiance to Christ and the reality of a common sharing in his life and what he has done — his «benefits,» as theologians would say.
Posting something on Instagram is a social act — we should think about what we are posting.
And it's not just a drink that people use to wake themselves up; it's a social act: «Let's get a coffee,» «We'll discuss over coffee.»
Throw in your age, and some of the generational challenges that can occur from trying to engage in a social act during a time that might be different from your heyday, and you can appreciate why some people are wary of dating after 50.
That's what gives the theater meaning: when it becomes a social act
Both saw learning as a social act, where teachers and students dialogued and all created knowledge together, rather than teachers filling the students with content and information as if they were empty vessels.
We know that learning is a social act (thank you, Lev Vygotsky), so turn - and - talks should be a routine in all of our classrooms.
Participants discussed standards, literacies, and definitions of social justice in relationship to writing as an educational, artistic, and social act.
Participants will discuss standards, literacies, and definitions of social justice in relationship to writing as an educational, artistic, and social act.
If you were to walk into an exhibition today and come across a work that required you to participate in a social act in order to «see» it, you might not find it unusual.
The exhibition elaborates upon Pica's ongoing interest in the social act of listening, sites of celebration and technologies of mass communication.
Art, she tells me, «is a social act.
Biagoli later argued that those rules that Hart, in his Concept of Law, called secondary - rules (which act to introduce and modify rules) are in fact constitutive rules since they ascribe the social act of changing a rule to physical or institutional actions (e.g., physically rewriting the law book, or there being a majority vote on the rule change, etc.).
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