Sentences with phrase «such generalising»

«This is because «the journey occurs in highly particularized settings which are invested with such generalising weight that they come to represent a backdrop of the whole of creation.
Not least because when people make such generalising, sweeping statements, they are talking about the top tier of football.
I don't believe you have the right to make such a generalised statement such as book bloggers are doing it wrong.

Not exact matches

But it's very hard for me to generalise about the concept of Christianity, because it means such wildly divergent things to so many people.
Of course, such experiments also have limitations in how they can be generalised and should have lots of qualifications too.
The book becomes increasingly generalised as it goes on, with later chapters having such titles as «Human Freedom and Creativity» and «Moral Responsibility and Stewardship».
This means that the future can be regarded, on such an hypothesis, as a value implicit and potential in a cosmic equation, a value yet to be educed, a value the eduction of which involves a universalrearrangement of the more generalised value, just as the eduction of a new value in an equation is a value relationship in a total relativity of values.
Physics, in particular, is noted for its ability to use inductive reasoning to posit universal laws such as Einstein's General Relativity, making the claim that experiments and observations on or from earth allow us to generalise a theory into universal law, i.e. a law of physics that we believe must hold everywhere in the universe because this is a law written into the fabric of the universe.
Political interventions by popes are typically generalised, such as speeches against secularism or poverty.
He thus excludes a generalised co-operative model (at least initially) imposed from above by the state, such as in the former Yugoslavia.
However, while condemning the appalling practices that had been uncovered, David Miliband did not launch his own generalised critique of the press — instead much of the legwork was left to people marginalised under the new regime, such as Tom Watson.
At the end of the section, Kauffman generalises the model still further, to address the emergence of any functionally integrated system, such as economic and cultural systems.
Typically, students view learning as remembering facts, terms and definitions, but it's actually the case that problem - based learning builds their skills in doing that because it teaches students to develop thinking skills such as the ability to evaluate, generalise, hypothesise, synthesise and analyse information rather than simply recall it.
Probability is the main topic covered (listing outcomes, formula for total number of outcomes) as well as algebra topics such as expanding brackets, sequences, factorising and generalising formulae.
To generalise to all schools from research of such a subset of schools is fallacious.
It is too diverse, too much a collection of competing voices to be pinned down precisely, in terms of what it could be said to stand for; however, by generalising wildly, it might be possible to say that it represents a point around which certain attitudes towards abstraction have coalesced: one being, that the attempt to build on the discoveries of Modernism is still worth making; and another, that any such attempt can not be reductive, only expansive, ruling nothing out in terms of form, colour and material.
Towards the end of his life, Avery moved further from specific scenes to more generalised form, creating quintessential pastorals such as the present work.
Students with severe to profound general learning disabilities exhibit a wide and diverse range of characteristics, including a dependence on others to satisfy basic needs such as feeding and toileting, difficulties in mobility, problems with generalising skills from one situation to another, significant delays in reaching developmental milestones and significant speech and / or communication difficulties.
I have experience working with many issues such as anxiety, generalised anxiety disorder, depression, eating disorders, trauma, relationship issues, grief and bereavement.
Anxiety disorders are among the most common mental disorders during childhood and adolescence, with a prevalence of 3 — 5 % in school - age children (6 — 12 years) and 10 — 19 % in adolescents (13 — 18 years); 1, 2 and the prevalence of anxiety disorders in this population tends to increase over time.3 Anxiety is the most common psychological symptom reported by children and adolescents; however, presentation varies with age as younger patients often report undifferentiated anxiety symptoms, for example, muscle tension, headache, stomachache or angry outbursts.4 According to the standard diagnostic systems, there are various types of anxiety disorders, for example, generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), social phobias (SOP), social anxiety disorder (SAD), panic disorder (PD), overanxious disorder, separation anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), obsessive - compulsive disorder (OCD).5 Anxiety disorders in children and adolescents often occur with a number of comorbidities, such as autism spectrum disorders, 6 depressive disorders, 7 conduct disorder, 8 substance abuse9 or suicide - related behaviour.10 Youths with anxiety disorders experience serious impairment in social functioning (eg, poor school achievement; relational problems with family members and peers).11, 12 Childhood and adolescent anxiety disorders can persist despite treatment, 1 and they are associated with later adult psychopathology.13, 14
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