Not exact matches
Habermas takes a critical view of all these movements because he regards their own theoretical
vision as being
too narrow.
It makes me very sad that Christians and churches that welcome the perspectives and the gifts offered by other faiths, and by people of no acknowledged faith... and those who recognize, acknowledge and journey through their doubts, questions, etc. are
too often pushed (and allow themselves, ourselves) to be pushed to the extreme fringes and accept our voicelessness within a context where faiths and faith groups are often identified by the
narrowest, most exclusive
vision.
He ends the article by attacking what he calls the «Reassurance Labour tendency», not just for minimising the chances of electoral success, but because «its
vision is
too narrow, its mechanisms
too one - dimensional, and its effectiveness
too limited.»
A
narrow view of «academia» is tunnel
vision,
too.
Pan's paper, it seemed, was
too narrow, only focusing on using channelrhodopsin to restore
vision, while Boyden's paper took the broad view of thinking of channelrhodopsin as a tool for neuroscience in general.
The 1990s were a tough decade for painting, as video, installation, and, in particular, photography, relegated it to the margins of the art world's often
too narrow field of
vision.
«There was «The Death of Environmentalism» with its bold declarations: Environmentalism had defined itself as a special interest, its message was
too negative, and it presented
narrow technical solutions instead of an inspiring
vision tied to values voters hold dear.
In this Article I will argue that, even if legal educators wish to embrace a more progressive
vision of the profession, and even if we agree that legal education should take the lead in bringing it about, the Carnegie Report's perspective is far
too narrow.
Visions of death by loveseat were all
too clear as they struggled to push and pull it up the steep,
narrow staircase.