Sentences with phrase «whose views matter»

Surely with such widespread concern expressed by so many countries whose views matter to Canada, there would at long last be action.

Not exact matches

When we contemplate the natural world from the point of view of its creation, it appears to be the deployment of a divine plan in which matter is endowed with a natural dyna mism whose successive deployment and integrations produce an immense variety of systems and processes that make possible the appearance of the human being.
Yet all fiction writers (and playwrights and filmmakers, for that matter) must make similar imaginative leaps, and will be judged — as Styron has been judged — by how convincingly they portray the characters whose points of view they've done their best to assume.
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.
All the more so since, pace Bultmann, whose view of the matter is all too academic, our age is not one of enlightenment.
For example, Maimonides, whose view on the matter Gellman omits, built his theory of chosenness on Abraham's faithfulness.
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.
In particular, ministers are keen to hear from those whose views have not perhaps been a matter of public record or as well - known, and / or who might not have had a chance to discuss matters with ministers previously.
The shift from the narrow angle views of the Impressionists and Cézanne, whose nearest points tended to be quite some distance away, to the wide - angled views of Bonnard, Matisse, Dufy and Soutine, whose nearest objects were often very close indeed, was a major change in subject matter which is usually overlooked since the names «landscape», «still life», «portrait», etc., remained the same.
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.
I read it as a simple book review outlining what certain people whose views on the matter, again by definition, make them centrists.
Speaking of defamation, Robert Tracinski returns to the fray with a column whose headline captures well Dr Mann's view of these matters, «Free Speech for Mann, But Not for Thee»:
However, the algorithms determining «whose voice really matters» are very different in the climate science — if viewed as a conventional scientific discipline — and in the IPCC.
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)
-- that regulation does not preclude the application of a provision of national procedural law of a Member State which, with a view to avoiding situations of denial of justice, enables proceedings to be brought against, and in the absence of, a person whose domicile is unknown, if the court seised of the matter is satisfied, before giving a ruling in those proceedings, that all investigations required by the principles of diligence and good faith have been undertaken with a view to tracing the defendant.
Most of these cases will have to be brought back to court and in my view the courts will react with such fury, as a matter of principle, that those prisoners whose conversations have been bugged will have to be let out.
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