Sentences with phrase «well critiqued on»

That directive was well critiqued on Slaw at the time of its release by Ted Tjaden and those who commented on his post.

Not exact matches

One of a number of reasons I stayed out of my business offices and worked at home as much as possible was because when I went to the office, I was «drawn» to listen in on, interfere with or critique every phone call, look at every fax, poke my nose all the way into everything — to the extent that I ruined everybody else's productivity as well as my own.
Successfully responding to these maddening critiques takes time and energy that could be better spent on, well, anything else, and in many cases, not a little self - abnegation.
You can prove this, first, by doing better at whatever was critiqued, but also by updating people on what you've done in response to their feedback.
Dialogue is so critical to the architectural engineering design firm's DNA that once a year, the company hosts a national initiative called Aspire Dialog, where the company's best projects are put on display to be critiqued by outside experts.
See, the movement of dialogue in short order from development economics on the post-modern social marxian critique, bound up in decades of thought from well before the vertical rise in its popularity in the 1960's to today.
i love it when people come on post sites and the best they have is to critique grammar and not thought... please come up with something more intelligent to say than that... you look foolish, too
The fact that First Things published a long article on my book Mercy: The Essence of the Gospel and the Key to Christian Existence is an honor even when the article is a critique, which — as usual in academic disputes — needs critique from my side as well («What Mercy Is,» March).
I think that what he had to say could itself be critiqued, but I believe that his thoughts were so well expressed that they deserve to be read and reflected on without comment.
[My response to the comment generated a lot of «likes» as well, but I'd still love to hear your thoughts on that critique.
He then goes on to praise E. D. Hirsch's Cultural Literacy as a more useful critique of current educational practices because it works in «the framework of a Deweyan understanding of democracy» in which students are to be made better citizens by preparing them to «recognize more allusions, and thereby be able to take part in more conversations, read more, have more sense of what those in power are up to, cast better - informed votes.
I suspect the hand of my good friend Paul Murray, who in January this year had a piece in New Blackfriars titled «Theology «Under the Lash»: Theology as Idolatry Critique in the Work of Nicholas Lash» with the perhaps distracting pun on my name.
Spelled out in a lengthy lead editorial entitled «Evangelicals in the Social Struggle,» as well as in books such as Aspects of Christian Social Ethics, Henry's understanding of Christian social responsibility stressed (a) society's need for the spiritual regeneration of all men and women, (b) an interim social program of humanitarian care, ethical proclamation, and personal, structural application, and (c) a theory of limited government centering on certain «freedom rights,» e. g., the rights to public property, free speech, and so on.18 Though the shape of this social ethic thus closely parallels that of the present editorial position of Moody Monthly, it must be distinguished from its counterpart by the time period involved (it pushed others like Moody Monthly into a more active involvement in the social arena), by the intensity of its commitment to social responsibility, by the sophistication of its insight into political theory and practice, and by its willingness to offer structural critique on the American political system.
He touches on Hayes's critiques of meritocracy — the system becomes hostile to democracy, and the best and brightest don't always govern well — before reflecting on the problems particular to an atheistic meritocracy in the U.S.:
Best critique: Carson Clark with «A Cordial Response to Rachel Held Evans» Post «The Future of Evangelicalism» While I don't agree with every part of Carson's analysis, I really learned a lot from this insightful critique and would love your thoughts on it.
And if you read the story of the good Samaritan with this in mind, you can easy see, that is not only a story about how to act but also a critique on the scapegoating what the Levit and the Priest was probably doing, when they let the poor guy rot to death («ya know, it would make me unclean to help, the guy probably had it coming, I better serve the Lord»).
Much of the current theological critique of liberal society focuses not so much on democracy as a system of political representation as on liberalism as a form of society that operates, or seeks to operate, without a substantive conception of the good.
One way of acknowledging its revisability is to say that it can survive the critique laid for it by Wayne Proudfoot in his 1985 Religious Experience and, more importantly, by the postmodern culture for which Proudfoot speaks.13 If it ignores that kind of postmodern critique, I am suggesting, it will not deliver on the promise it has shown recently in the growth of The American Journal of Theology and Philosophy, in the founding of The Highlands Institute for American Religious Thought, in the resurgence of Columbia and Yale forms of neonaturalism and pragmatism in the work of Robert Corrington and William Shea, 14 and in the American Academy of Religion Group on Empiricism in American Religious Thought — as well as in the growing independent scholarship of those working out of the empirical side of process theology and the Chicago school.
After these remarks on the challenge of a self - critique of the historical method, we now find ourselves confronted with the positive side of the problem, how to join its tools with a better philosophy which would entail fewer drawbacks foreign to the text, which would be less arbitrary, and which would offer greater possibilities for a true listening to the text itself.
And, well, since you probably already hate this comment, do you think that maybe, just maybe, your own identity «as a as a graffiti artist on the walls of religion where he critiques religion... specifically Christianity and the church» got threatened just a little bit with this post?
There is a strong critique going on (that is the word David uses), but it is poignant, it makes a statement about how it could be better and what Jesus might ask of us.
This is a good thing, but in the critique of Ralph Winter that David Hesselgrave gave, he referred to Ralph Winter's reliance on Gregory Boyd's view of «microbial evil» and the necessity of kingdom work overcoming the forces of darkness as represented by disease and poverty in war.
The landscape of the missional debate is filled with questions, assumptions, and opinions - along with hard pressed critiques on wider issues such as leadership styles, congregation sizes, vocational / bi-vocational ministry, building church - based or house church - based as well as core theology.
Cardinal Camillo Ruini, the pope's vicar for Rome, it is said, is one of those who hold this view: what is needed, he is thought to believe, is (in the words of John Allen Jr of the American National Catholic Reporter) «good relations with Islam, but also a more robust capacity to challenge and critique Islamic leaders, especially on issues of «reciprocity» — the idea that if Muslim immigrants benefit from religious freedom in the West, Christians should get the same treatment in Islamic states.»
It justifies itself as a utility - maximizing project, a metaphysically impoverished vision of the common good that provides little basis on which to critique, limit, or challenge its claim to power.
Steady - on Muff any analysis / critique isn't tolerated on here after a win, you can only spout hyperbole about how good we are.
One of the fundamental beliefs of deeper - learning advocates is that these practices — revising work over and over, with frequent critiques; persisting at long - term projects; dealing with the frustrations of hands - on experimentation — develop not just students» content knowledge and intellectual ability, but their noncognitive capacities as well: what Camille Farrington would call academic perseverance and what others might call grit or resilience.
Bettina, well, since you mentioned it... I do think the TLT critiques have focused a lot on minutiae.
Paterson held a formal endorsement news conference alongside Stringer on Monday, though it was noted on this blog and elsehwere that he would make any critiques of Spitzer or say whether Stringer would make a better comptroller.
Senate Democrats ought to be careful to not apply that critique too broadly, given that Cuomo, their party's leader, had to shift his position on taxes as well.
Price added: «One of the most important qualities of a good researcher is the willingness to be wrong, but critique has to be constructive and it has to be informed, which was unfortunately not the case with much of what was posted on social media.»
Many critiqued the original advice: «As long as your adviser does not move on to other advances, I suggest you put up with it, with good humor if you can.»
The power point slides for the presentation on Writing Good Scientific papers and Responding to Critiques are available here.
Editor - in - Chief Jeff Williamson presented a talk on Vision for the Journal Medical Physics and Status of Current Initiatives, Therapy Physics Editor Shiva Das presented a talk on Improving Manuscript Quality via Structured Reviews, Enhanced Scientific Category Taxonomy, and Outreach, and Imaging Physics Editor Mitch Goodsitt presented a talk on Writing Good Scientific papers and Responding to Critiques.
Why We Get Fat and What To Do About It by Gary Taubes — A well researched critique of conventional wisdom on diet and nutrition.
A good project for Weston A. Price members would be to pick one of these books and place a critique of the diet section on Amazon.
As well, there are serious flaws in some of the critiques I've read on the «China Study» in «The China Study.»
Toxins, it would behoove you to read Denise Minger's critique on The China Study, it will arm you well as you go forward, as it's trotted out by the paleo crowd pretty consistently.
Good old Robb made a very precise and correct commentary on her critiques of the Paleolithic diet.
It's so refreshing to read some critique instead of non stop praises, good on you and you have my respect.
I'll be on hand with my best tips and will critique everyone's profiles privately so you can quickly ride into the digital sunset together.
On the other, his failure to move beyond the clichéd genre opposition of the good Indian / bad Indian prevents Taza from offering the same kind of social critiques that he pursued elsewhere.
For those of us who watch and critique these films all year long, there's year - end «best of» lists to publish and people to argue with on Twitter, about why La La... [Read more...]
If the experience of reading Collins's novel is one of being inside a horrifyingly brutal reality television show, the experience the film adaptation offers is one more akin to watching one, and its success depends on our awareness of this relatively new medium as well as our willingness to critique it.
On Tuesday night, Franco responded to all of the recent claims, as well as those who critiqued him for wearing the pin.
Black's critique may have been an admission that all is not well in the fantasy factory, but his words were duly noted and the show went on.
As a fan of the original I find it so hard to critique this current movie, because on one hand you have a movie that's 33 years old which is revered by purists for defining a genre, but on the other hand, the movie is actually pretty good.
Cult filmmaker Tommy Wiseau («The Room») critiques what actor - director James Franco got right — and wrong — in «The Disaster Artist,» based on Wiseau's own legendary experience making the best - worst movie of all time.
Some expect the film's critique to have little bearing on McDormand's front - runner status for best actress or Rockwell's bid for supporting actor.
Both Morris and Madison also levied the ultimate critique by equating Three Billboards» simplistic take on race to that of 2006's best - picture winner, Crash, which has been pilloried relentlessly as the year the Academy got it really wrong — even by Crash's own director.
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