Not exact matches
Are we going to have to have a cultural moment, where we're coming to grips with
what it means to interface with
imaginary worlds layered on top of reality?
We happily admire an
imaginary world more readily than we admire
what is called «reality» (especially when we can not do much to change or improve that «real
world»).
I care about the life people like you are attempting to force in to this
world, you care about
what appeases your god - big difference when you really don't care or consider the child only
what your
imaginary friend god wants and yet your god cause abortions all the time... you care about a clump of cells, not the actual life of the child and that's much worse than me supporting the rights of a woman to have control over her body, especially if the clump of cells couldn't survive outside of the host.
... being an
imaginary dialogue between a nominee to a Federal appeals court and members of the Committee on the Judiciary of
what once imagined itself «the
world's greatest deliberative body»...
Here is
what Karl Barth has taught us to consider a great «saga», but one that is not fictional nor
imaginary but grounded in happenings in the
world and in the manner in which those happenings were seen and expressed through a long period from the earliest days of the Jewish people down to and through the specific occurrences in Palestine which are associated with Jesus Christ.
What the mystical is most strikingly «other» to is mindings (usually wedded to materialistic
imaginaries) that are mesmerized by the Cartesian myth that the
world and
world - makers can be sharply distinguished and analyzed separately and systematically.
It seems to follow that, just as a dominant philosophical
imaginary governs the quality of understandings of the
world, so the myths that inform a self - creating social
imaginary must delimit
what that society can as well as should make of itself, while leaving certain possibilities open.
We understand
what all these images point to; if there exists the possibility of a «passage,» this can not be realized except «in spirit,» giving this term all the meanings that it has in archaic societies, i.e., referring to a disincarnated mode of being as well as the
imaginary world and the
world of ideas.
Tom gets his dream job as head coach of some
imaginary college program and moves the bounty of his loins to a humongous mansion on the university's dime, leading to a lot of belly - aching, undeveloped «new kid» bully subplots, and
what would be the final nail in Hilary Duff's career if the
world that made her a star in the first place made any kind of sense.
Question 4 If you could drive ANY car in the
world, real or
imaginary,
what would it be?
Since then, I've been obsessed with the escapism of virtual
worlds and the exploration of
what makes good game design, to the extent that I'd spend hours developing
imaginary games with friends or sketching whole casts of characters when I should have been paying attention in class.
But
what if it takes place in an
imaginary world, and it's just someone playing with toys?
What's better than guiding a super-agile, green skinned goblin assassin around a wholly
imaginary fantasy
world, killing and causing mischief?
«I photograph
what does not exist and I have been integrating painting and photography over the past two to three years, creating
imaginary worlds,» Ventura said during a preview on Wednesday.
What results are seemingly
imaginary worlds, in which meaning is intensified through allegory, hidden motivations...
, ArtPharmacy (Blog), June 12 Elisa della Barba, «
What I loved about Venice Biennale 2013», Swide, June 2 Juliette Soulez, «Le Future Generation Art Prize remis a Venise», Blouin Artinfo, May 31 Charlotte Higgins, «Venice Biennale Diary: dancing strippers and inflatable targets», The Guardian On Culture Blog, May 31 Vincenzo Latronico, «Il Palazzo Enciclopedico», Art Agenda, May 31 Marcus Field, «The Venice Biennale preview: Let the art games commence», The Independent, May 18 Joost Vandebrug, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», L'Uomo Vogue, No. 441, May / June «Lucy Mayes, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», a Ruskin Magazine, Vol.3, pp. 38 - 39 Rebecca Jagoe, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye: Portraits Without a Subject», The Culture Trip, May Lynette Yiadom - Boakye, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye on Walter Richard Sickert's Miss Gwen Ffrangcon - Davies as Isabella of France (1932)», Tate etc., Issue 28, Summer, p. 83 «Turner Prize - nominated Brit has art at Utah museum», Standard Examiner, May 1 Matilda Battersby, «
Imaginary portrait painter Lynette Yiadom - Boakye becomes first black woman shortlisted for Turner Prize 2013», The Independent, April 25 Nick Clark, «David Shrigley's fine line between art and fun nominated for Turner Prize», The Independent, April 25 Charlotte Higgins, «Turner prize 2013: a shortlist strong on wit and charm», guardian.co.uk April 25 Charlotte Higgins, «Turner prize 2013 shortlist takes a mischievous turn», guardian.co.uk, April 25 Adrian Searle, «Turner prize 2013 shortlist: Tino Sehgal dances to the fore», guardian.co.uk, April 25 Allan Kozinn, «Four Artists Named as Finalists for Britain's Turner Prize», The New York Times, April 25 Coline Milliard, «A Crop of Many Firsts: 2013 Turner Prize Shortlist Announced», Artinfo, April 25 Sam Phillips, «Former RA Schools student nominated for Turner Prize», RA Blog, April 25 «Turner Prize Shortlist 2013», artlyst, April 25 «Turner Prize Nominations Announced: David Shrigley, Tino Sehgal, Lynette Yiadom - Boakye and Laure Prouvost Up For Award», Huffpost Arts & Culture, April 25 Hannah Furness, «Turner Prize 2013: a dead dog, headless drummers and the first «live encounter» entry», Telegraph, April 25 Hannah Furness, «Turner Prize 2013: The public will question whether this is art, judge admits», Telegraph, April 25 Julia Halperin, «Turner Prize shortlist announced», The Art Newspaper, April 25 Brian Ferguson, «Turner Prize nomination for David Shrigley», Scotsman.com, April 25 «Former Falmouth University student shortlisted for Turner Prize», The Cornishman, April 29 «Trickfilme und der Geschmack der Sonne», Spiegel Online, April 25 Dominique Poiret, «La Francaise Laure Prouvost en lice pour le Turner Prize», Liberation, April 26 Louise Jury, «Turner Prize: black humour artist David Shrigley is finally taken seriously by judges», London Evening Standard, April 25 «Turner Prize 2013: See nominees» work including dead dog, grave shopping list and even some paintings», Mirror, April 25 Henry Muttisse, «It's the Turner demise», The Sun, April 25 «
Imaginary portrait painter up for Turner Prize», BBC News, April 25 Farah Nayeri, «Tate's Crowd Artist Sehgal Shortlisted for Turner Prize», Bloomberg Businessweek, April 25 «Turner Prize finalists mix humour and whimsy», CBC News, April 25 Richard Moss, «Turner Prize 2013 shortlist revealed for Derry - Londonderry», Culture24, April 25 «David Shrigley makes 2013 Turner Prize shortlist», Design Week, April 25 «The Future Generation Art Prize@Venice 2013», e-flux.com, April 21 Skye Sherwin, «Lynette Yiadom - Boakye», The Guardian Guide, March 2 - 8, p. 36 Amie Tullius, «Seasoned by Whitney Tassie», 15 Bytes, March «ARTINFO UK's Top 3 Exhibitions Opening This Week, ARTINFO.com, February 25 Orlando Reade, «Whose Oyster Is This
World?»
And that's
what Andrew Revkin did, week in, week out: He took the words out of Michael Mann's mouth and served them up to impressionable readers of the New York Times and opportunist politicians around the
world champing at the bit to inaugurate a vast global regulatory body to confiscate trillions of dollars of your hard - earned wealth in the cause of «saving the planet» from an
imaginary crisis concocted by a few dozen thuggish ideologues.
In the
imaginary world of virtue signaling it's a different story, but
what rationalist cares about that?
This is
what AGWScienceFiction has done — it has built an
imaginary Earth on the
imaginary ideal gas for its AGW Greenhouse Effect and because it does not teach the difference between ideal and real gas the general population have a deliberately corrupted concept of the
world around us, they do not know their arguments come from a fictional fisics so they can not see how physically impossible the
world they describe.
As I've said, I don't understand
what you're saying because it doesn't fit
what I am arguing from or against; from real gases of the real
world against the
imaginary world of the AGW Greenhouse Effect created by ideal gas unconstrained by the individual volumes and nature of real molecules under gravity around them.
As a little girl, I was happy and playful, making up
imaginary worlds, games, mock class rooms and
what have we.
In the real estate
world, it doesn't matter if you drive a Rolls Royce and look like a million dollars, if
what comes out of your mouth isn't consistent with your
imaginary trappings of success.