Sentences with phrase «under rubrics»

Recent scholarship under the rubrics of «law and popular culture» or «law and culture» supports this assertion.
It is under the rubrics of this trade security that modernization of the process, via ranching, must be comprehensively discussed; and fashioned out over a target period of time.
Under the rubrics «oral interpretation,» «expression,» and «elocution,» this performance studies has had much to say on how a preacher might improve his or her skill in the oral presentation of Biblical texts in Christian worship.
His program of a thoroughgoing interpretation of the Christian message under the rubrics of history and eschatology looked like another interpretive tour de force, another exercise in killing the Oedipal father (or fathers, in the form of Barth and Bultmann) so that the children are free to pursue their own projects.
Theologians and biblical scholars have customarily approached such passages under the rubrics of «Salvation History,» «Drama of Redemption,» and the like.
Today games are everywhere at Pace, though some of what Pace people call «games» might go under a rubric like «team - based continuous improvement» elsewhere.
In the language of triple - bottom - line business, this work falls under the rubric of social - capital building.
This falls under the rubric of business process automation, something Gartner calls «the automation of complex business processes and functions beyond conventional data manipulation and record - keeping activities, usually through the use of advanced technologies.»
So much can be discussed under the rubric of economics of sex.
One area to watch closely however is the safe harbour provision where, under the rubric of «NAFTA modernization», Silicon Valley libertarians and anti-copyright activists are trying to use the trade negotiations to ensure that large and powerful internet intermediaries are absolved of any responsibility for content appearing on their sites.
Reflecting on Bonhoeffer in the theological journal dialog, Jean Bethke Elshtain addresses the aesthetic under the rubric of shame: «One of the reasons Dietrich Bonhoeffer was so repulsed by Nazism was precisely because of its aberrant shamelessness.
John Jenkins of Notre Dame and John Garvey of Catholic University, for a missed opportunity to speak the whole truth to power about the proposed new HHS mandate that would force all health insurers to cover abortifacient drugs under the rubric of «contraceptives» in «preventive» health coverage for women.
Jews and Christians in our society have all too readily fallen into this secularist trap and been naively willing to constitute their message to the world under the rubric of special interest.
I say «virtual absence» because it can be argued that nature has been present in economic thinking under the rubric of land.
Process theology has failed to deal extensively with the issue of justice, at least under that rubric.
Within them various forms of «natural theology,» whether under that rubric or another, have played a large role.
Neither of us has discussed the topic before under the rubric of greening, but much of what we have said fits under this heading.
Under the rubric of habitus, he speaks of theology as both wisdom and science.
Whereas the various perspectives discussed so far under the rubric of cultural hermeneutics are distinctively Christian, the same can not be said for feminist biblical hermeneutics.
If reader - response criticism represented one reaction to the limitations of traditional narrative criticism and to structuralism, a more pervasive critique emerged under the rubric of poststructuralism, or deconstruction.
In the exciting days of November 1989, during the occupation strike at Charles University in Prague, the students initiated a cycle of lectures under the rubric of «what they did not teach us at school.»
Under the rubric of asymmetrical identity the agent is not considered to be an entity radically distinct from his body, nor is his act considered to be a function radically distinct from the physiological processes that go on in the course of the act.
Though the way in which I approach these matters is significantly different from the way of most recent writers on reasons and causes, it should be clear that what is articulated in rational actions is akin to what is usually dealt with under the rubric of reasons.
But what is disputed among evangelicals, despite Biblical evidence such as that given above, is whether such an approach to social involvement is to be put under the rubric of «compassion» or of «justice.»
Under this rubric, an authentic spiritual experience is not limited to theologians and Bible experts, but is available to all.
They work together under the rubric, the Claremont Colleges.
Under the rubric of parapsychology is grouped the study of such things as telepathy, clairvoyance, communications with the dead and other exotic phenomena and pseudo-phenomena.
This kind of well - meaning but finally destructive inanity is entirely typical of what goes on under the rubric of «interreligious dialogue,» whether sponsored by the multinational religious bureaucracies or a local university.
There would have been no other way I could have discovered these things — certainly not by engaging in the pallid and platitudinous mutual congratulation that usually goes on under the rubric of interreligious dialogue.
It is difficult, above all, to figure out the meaning of innocent suffering, the spectacle of unmerited retribution to which Dostoevsky kept returning under the rubric «the tears of a child.»
We have already spoken of this under the rubric of diversity: the victims and the voiceless demand a hearing.
Arthur's «Federalist» would provide constitutional protection for those who would commit infanticide or euthanasia under the rubric of governmental neutrality.
Let us recall that doctrine is a subset under the rubric of Theology.
The Patheos symposium on the future of evangelicalism introduced another set of essays on August 4th under the rubric of «Transforming Culture.»
Albright's approach flourished under the rubric «biblical archaeology.»
At least among those untutored in the rarefied mountain air of meta «ethical theory, ethics usually denotes that range of human behavior that can be subsumed under the rubric of judgments about inherent good and evil.
God is related to this conflict, but Hartshorne describes this relation under the rubric of tragedy.
If that is possible, then perhaps there's more included under this rubric: maybe it's the whole first half of the book that is «the beginning of the good news.»
Whitehead entitled Part Four of Adventures of Ideas «Civilization,» and it was under this rubric that he described the supreme values of life.
the sense of warfare can already be expressed under the rubric of any» of three of the existing categories.
When Jon Sobrino discusses Jesus» approach to prayer, he does so under the rubric of «Jesus Criticism of Contemporary Prayer» (CC 146).
Some of that rethinking has been done under the rubric of the history of «confessionalization,» a term used to denote the deployment of religion to create or reinforce social and political identities.
Under the rubric Cross of Nails Ministry, participants have sought to pray, teach, and fund - raise on behalf of projects to reduce conflict in Northern Ireland, South Africa, the Middle East, and Europe.
Already in 1781 Thomas Jefferson in his Notes on the State of Virginia made an analysis of the relation between economic and political life that is usually placed under the rubric of agrarianism but is considerably broader in its implication:
A Christian church or chapel might offer hospitality to many groups under the rubric of ecumenism or interreligious relations.
Meanwhile, the Republican Party has in recent decades become the champion of the Church's public priorities — the protection of innocent human life, parental choice in education, the defense of marriage, church - state cooperation, and an array of issues under the rubric of religious freedom.
Undergraduate courses misleadingly lump the two together under the rubric of «rationalism.»
The consolation addressed to Hezekiah certainly relates to the end of the siege but only as a kind of accessory conclusion, the real point being the renewing of the covenant between the Lord and his people under the rubric of «the remnant.»
Healing prayer, in fact, falls properly under the rubric of liberation theology.
As David Burrell (who certainly should be asked to give the Gifford Lectures) has argued, any talk of God «intervening» in nature is misleading and inappropriate if one remembers that divine action comes under the rubric of creating.
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