Because of these problems, there is a danger that the dialectic approach will seem unscientific and its strengths will be overlooked. |
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But the dialectic method of argument is undoubtedly a good one if used properly, as it is dynamic, progressive and evolutionary. |
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Its Hesiodic style was appropriate for the cosmogony he describes in the second part, but is unsuited to the arid dialectic of the first. |
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Jeff, who is a kidder, and William, who is superconscientious, engage in bizarrely dialectic duologues. |
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Whereas Hegel uses the dialectic to trace the development of the Geist, Marx would apply it to the development of Capital. |
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It also employs iconographic patterns of costume, architecture and landscapes to create a rendition of its political dialectic. |
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Think of the individual as embodying a dialectic of sameness and difference. |
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Yet even if this might be called a form of dialectic, it has been turned inside out. |
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While each of the lesser groups has developed dialectic differences, the whole Fang language is basically one. |
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But secondly, the movie is very dialectic and remains very subversive, inasmuch as it has sympathy for rebellious characters. |
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Trotsky used the metaphor of elementary and higher mathematics to explain the relationship between formal logic and dialectic logic. |
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It can be read as a long-running dialectic between individualism and communalism. |
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With the second and third steps, one can see a similarity to Plato's idea of dialectic understood as collection and division. |
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That is to say, we want to carve out a place for conversation, dialogue, dialectic, and debate. |
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The dialectic narrative took the form of a collage, crafted with an uncommon conceptual and cinematographic rigour. |
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But in Berio, it is an element that generally functions within a complex dialectic. |
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In other words, according to Lehman's newspeak dialectic, an honest history has to be prepared to be dishonest about what actually happened. |
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This constellation of images, and the devil in its dialectic, is nicely captured in this passage. |
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The dialectic of display and secrecy essential to Mouride visuality is what gives Serigne Faye's imagorium such tangible impact. |
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The motivation for this negative dialectic is not simply conceptual, however, nor are its intellectual resources. |
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Here was Bruni displaying his rhetorical skills as a Ciceronian orator, conducting a formal exercise in rhetoric and dialectic. |
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For Brother Jack, individuals are expendable, if the historical dialectic so dictates. |
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The second is that human beings have existed in a historical dialectic with the natural world for thousands of years. |
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Before the appendices he includes a jokey bit of philosophical dialectic. |
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McMaster understands alterity as a dialectic of self and otherness. |
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Hare, in fact, constantly creates a form of internal dialectic. |
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Their dialectic is a reminder that flamenco is foremost an improvisational music, and in the hands of Morente and her collaborators remains a living, breathing tradition. |
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The glottal stop earns its own chapter, being such a dialectic phenomenon. |
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Marx took the Hegelian dialectic and placed it on a materialist base. |
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The first of these preliminary considerations is related to some discussions within the art of dialectic whereas the second is theological in nature. |
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The classical methodology of rational dialectic is our only road to truth! |
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This is the spurious, evolving dialectic of electoral democracy. |
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Quite the contrary, assimilation and ethnic identification are two distinct poles of a dialectic process of reidentification that involves creative cultural crisscrossing. |
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Rhetoric and dialectic rely on the same theory of deduction and induction. |
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With him, the poetic dialectic moves away from romanticism and sentimentalism. |
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Sympathy is a strong image of the dialectic whereby each side completes the other. |
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This argument reminded us of the old dialectic which we used to hear too much of precisely during the cold war. |
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As is known, there is a dialectic relation between the concepts of freedom and security. |
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Of one which can be explained by the so-called dialectic of historical development. |
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It is the constant dialectic between these two extremes that gives rise to the dynamics of the system. |
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The unit contains student-centered activities that emphasize the guided process of a dialectic triad: information, inspiration, and invention. |
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They involve a dialectic in which individuals use insights from current events to help make sense of the past. |
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Visioning is a creative and dialectic process revealing opinions, conflicts and relationships between actors. |
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In addition, the new approach of dialectic behavioural therapy is being introduced to these patients. |
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My remark provoked a loud laugh from the guide, a clap on the shoulder and a dig in the ribs, which I regarded as so many tributes to my skill in theological dialectic. |
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He is afflicted with macromania, and as he, moreover, is imbued with the tendency of all advocates to believe that everything can be effected by dialectic dexterity. |
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The ethnic affinity of the Kerala migrants is assessed as against the operation of the dialectic processes of nativisation and localisation in a migrational setting. |
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He had five-year plans and seven-year plans by the bushel-full, and he never lost faith in the dialectic. |
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They are the yin and the yang of the whole film and they dance the dialectic to perfection. |
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The heart of the dialectic lies in Hegel's theory of alienation. |
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The Hegelian dialectic attempts to grasp the totality of the system and argues that change occurs as a result of contradictions internal to that system. |
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In The Street, a dialectic always buzzes between the need for order, negotiability, and legibility and the material facts that seem always to escape or exceed them. |
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The early Jacobean masque's mediation of royal power via a dialectic of revelation and mystery was superseded by a Caroline emphasis on marital love and pastoral retreat. |
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The judges of the members of a democratic legislature are to address the dialectic of contemporary politics, to express the points upon which we disagree and not the points upon which we agree. |
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He is not a Marxist because, instead of economics, class struggle and the dialectic, his understanding of history emphasizes ideas, survival and cooperation. |
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Identity consequently expresses the mysterious alchemy whereby a people receives, transforms and assimilates influences from elsewhere in a dialectic of give and take. |
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For non-Jews the study of Talmud is difficult not only on account of its languages and its unpointed text but also on account of its dialectic which differs greatly from ours. |
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Thus, a kind of mystical humanism is celebrated in Periphyseon Book Four, a humanism explicated through the dialectic of self-knowledge and ignorance. |
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He then addressed the issue of the dialectic of the universal and the particular through the dialectic of identity and otherness, emphasizing the need to find a common essence beyond our differences. |
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This dialectic and the sometimes-conflicting tensions between clinical, ethnical and organisational issues bear witness to the paradigm shift from psychiatry to mental health. |
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The dialectic of contradictories refers to the beautiful and the ugly in art, to truth and falsehood in philosophy, to the useful and useless in economics, to good and evil in ethics. |
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His reading of the Megilla power dialectic meant tragedy for all. |
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Secondly, Lenin's distinction between the phenomenist and the dialectic philosopher is crucial. |
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As with the dialectic, Marx began with a Hegelian notion of alienation but developed a more materialist conception. |
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They also looked to the Marxist dialectic and the work of such theorists as Walter Benjamin and Herbert Marcuse. |
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Adorno's Aesthetic Theory devotes its attention to the dialectic evolving from this aporetic foundation of poetry. |
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This matter is, in the Indian dialectic of beauty, nonnegotiable. |
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But, in divorcing from mass culture in order to aestheticise it, are collectives of art-makers still faced with an inescapable dialectic? |
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I recommend reading about the dialectic that belongs to society. |
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So we can see that in these last centuries Portugal has always been living in a dialectic, which nowadays has naturally become more radical and appears with all the marks of the contemporary European spirit. |
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It's something I want and they want: it's like a dance of the dialectic. |
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In reality it consists in a particularly complex and especially subtle dialectic, a perfect example of which would be the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. |
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But, whatever the apostolate a community lives and practices, it is always kept in the dialectic of a dynamic fidelityto its origins and to a life inserted in the present. |
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Mu'tazila was a Greek influenced school of speculative theology called kalam, which refers to dialectic. |
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These unpublished materials also bring out the dialectic in Congar's thought between neo-Scholastic categories and a more historical and dynamic biblical approach. |
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In 1887, Denton Jacques Snider argued that the play should be read as a dialectic, either between understanding and imagination or between prose and poetry. |
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This situation created the inner dialectic of American history. |
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Like dialectic historicists and others who seek to relativize once settled opinions, skeptics, we are told, often hide the foundations of their own critical thinking. |
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