For example, Maimonides,
whose view on the matter Gellman omits, built his theory of chosenness on Abraham's faithfulness.
I read it as a simple book review outlining what certain people
whose views on the matter, again by definition, make them centrists.
As for sea level rise: we see 30 years of steep global temperature rise during a time when, according to Spencer Weart,
whose views on this matter are shared by most if not all climate scientists, «the temperature rise up to 1940 was... mainly caused by some kind of natural cyclical effect, not by the still relatively low CO2 emissions...» (from «The Discovery of Global Warming,» by Spencer Weart — https://history.aip.org/climate/co2.htm)
Not exact matches
Furthermore, I reflect
on these
matters as a Protestant Christian
whose theological
views have been most deeply shaped by the Reformed theological current within the Protestant river, as that was channeled by nineteenth - century theological liberalism and then intersected first by that peculiar eddy in liberalism called «neo-orthodoxy» and then by various other theological eddies still swirling in the last half of the twentieth century.
That is to say, Descartes»
view of the world began with his reflections
on the non-extendedness of mind and proceeded to contrast it with
matter, of which his body consisted,
whose essence was extension.
His student rosters included the names Louise Nevelson, Alfred Jensen, Fritz Bultman, Lee Krasner, Nell Blaine, Wolf Kahn, Richard Stankiewicz, Mercedes
Matter, Red Grooms, Joan Mitchell, Helen Frankenthaler, Allan Kaprow, Giorgio Cavallon, Jan Muller, Jane Freilicher, Larry Rivers and Vincent Pepi,
whose work
on view at the Quogue Gallery was reviewed in July 2016
on HamptonsArtHub.com.
To create a conversation between the past and present, and to explore the relevance and importance of his Black Panthers artwork 50 years later, we interviewed Mr. Douglas, who is now retired but still creating art, traveling, and living in San Francisco, along with two young artists who often look to him for inspiration: Ms. Casteel and Fahamu Pecou,
whose solo exhibition, «Black
Matter Lives,» is
on view at the Lyons Wier Gallery in Chelsea.