Sentences with phrase «with predetermination»

Opening: «Splotch» at Sperone Westwater and Lesley Heller Workspace A two venue group show organized by Sperone Westwater will explore elements of chance and failure and include work by artists whose pieces play with predetermination and self - imposed rules.
A two venue group show organized by Sperone Westwater will explore elements of chance and failure and include work by artists whose pieces play with predetermination and self - imposed rules.

Not exact matches

You may not hear Calvinists talk much about determinism, but you will about predetermination, and as Dean points out, it is often in connection with foreknowledge.
She's a blogger who fell in love with a Catholic guy and adopted his religion while still denouncing half all based on the flimsy idea that she had a predetermination that «morality» is «external» to man based on essentially nothing other than she believes it.
Our own Walter Chaw brilliantly observes in recent omnibus reviews pairing Love Me If You Dare with Valentin and Dodgeball with Napoleon Dynamite that leitmotifs are emerging at the box office free of predetermination, and I myself got a faint chill when I became cognizant of having consecutively watched the upcoming DVDs of John Frankenheimer's 1962 The Manchurian Candidate, Bob Clark's 1972 Dead of Night (a.k.a. Deathdream), and William Lustig's 1997 Uncle Sam.
This approach, which combined a lot of Minimalist predetermination with a little post-Minimalist randomness, was probably inspired by Frank Stella's famous defense that «what you see is what you see.»
Citing a seven year old citation of what was then a seven year old citation of something to irrelevant to the paper in question, then making insupportable assertions about inevitability (which, ironic, as complex dynamical systems pretty much argue against the precept of predetermination), and ending with an implied causal relationship from the symptoms of Forcings to the Forcings themselves, served with a dollop of ad hom..
Apparent bias or predetermination on the part of a planning authority does not render the grant of planning permission unlawful unless the authority made its decision with a closed mind.
In Condron v. National Assembly for Wales and Another [2006] EWCA LGR 87 (where under consideration was the effect of an observation to an objector of the chairman of a Welsh Assembly Planning Committee that he was «going to go with the Inspector's report») Lord Justice Richards had conducted a lengthy analysis of all the relevant facts and circumstances and felt «entitled, indeed required, to reach a decision on this issue...» The court was there putting itself in the shoes of the classic «fair - minded and informed observer and making its own assessment of the real possibility of predetermination».
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