A humanistic topophilia is analogous to Aristotle's elemental metaphysics of a topos oikeos. |
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No words can be more forthright or more remindful of the basic aims of humanistic inquiry than these. |
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Editors should be scientific in their methodology and humanistic in its application. |
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There certainly appears to be a tension between a mechanistic philosophy and a humanistic outlook. |
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Fortunately, I was blessed to become a part of the great humanistic conversation at Princeton University. |
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So they accommodated humanistic premises to explain both unregeneracy and carnality. |
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However, young Danes tend to choose humanistic or social science studies over the natural sciences. |
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Huxley has received widespread recognition for her humanistic achievements. |
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By contrast, the fire-walking ceremony draws heavily on cosmological notions even though the humanistic dimension is not absent. |
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He immersed himself in the reading of the humanistic philosopher and linguist. |
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It is also supported by humanistic arguments and encourages us to be more outward-looking in what is a globalizing world. |
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Our only alternative to the danger of robotism is humanistic communitarianism. |
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The abiding Spirit prevents a humanistic, rationalistic understanding of truth. |
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The feminine side of me wants humanistic evaluations of interesting female people in the news, written by well-bred, well educated women. |
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Few would impeach any society's humanistic obligation to care for those who actually bear the weight of battle. |
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According to Fischoff, this approach draws from humanistic psychology, with its emphasis on self-actualization and personal growth. |
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This book is an argument for his significance to a wider humanistic endeavor. |
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Faculty and staff recognize him for his humanistic approach in solving problems and conflicts. |
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In the 15th century, a new generation of artists grew up who found that their patrons were humanistic. |
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During the 15th century, developing humanistic attitudes among patrons increasingly esteemed the creative contribution of the individual artist. |
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They devised an educational program that made the study of English literature and the British humanistic classics the core of the curriculum. |
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For the Renaissance, he was a wellspring of learning and a model for humanistic writing. |
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This Latin and Italian manuscript combines a number of classical and humanistic works. |
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Cultural repression facilitated by decorum lies at the root of the humanistic classicism informing the Renaissance sketchbooks. |
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A classical, humanistic education was still accepted as the defining culture of the elite. |
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Mired in the humanistic belief that someone must be pushing the planchette, our unease grows as we cannot pin down the culprit. |
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The basic philosophy of this organization must be, in consequence, deeply humanistic. |
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The result was not cheap and corny, but complex and genuinely humanistic, invoking some of the central ambiguities of contemporary life. |
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Those who allow Satan in their temple, declaring humanistic wisdom, are exalting themselves above God and opposing God. |
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He's quite big on the continent where they are more into humanistic philosophers. |
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Doubts and refutations were presented from the perspective of humanistic atheism and agnosticism. |
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Most had received a humanistic education with its emphasis on analysis and reasoned argument. |
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They expect no justice, no fair deal and no humanistic approach by the Indian leadership. |
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She wants an ongoing reintegration of humanistic folk and religious values with democratic ideals. |
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It has given ordinary men and women a more humanistic and tolerant outlook on life by making them empathize with all of humanity. |
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Art education, based on Renaissance ideals of humanistic emancipation and professional excellence, had become an instrument of cultural conservatism. |
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I was then deeply impressed by the humanistic vision of that extraordinary man who had made peace the ultimate goal of his struggle. |
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The freedom of man is perhaps the humanistic psychology's basic argument. |
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In the last year, the colours have become more intense and his approach even more humanistic. |
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This humanistic exhibition which will take place for 2 weeks in April also enables the deconstruction of prejudices linked to the Rroms. |
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They had Ph.D. degrees from some German school, all based on some atheistic, humanistic philosophy. |
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If Sonntag is right, the average acceptance of these beliefs should be the same between groups of students from scientific versus humanistic studies. |
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Conservation is a cultural, artistic, technical and craft activity based on humanistic and scientific studies and systematic research. |
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Like all of his shows, this one is challenging and timely, but it only glancingly addresses how the computer is eroding the hard-won humanistic qualities of modernism. |
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Pathos often turns into banal, vaguely humanistic heavy breathing elsewhere. |
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He prioritized spiritual values and humanistic principles above market forces and hedonistic impulses. |
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No one has the right of life or death over another person and any demands to the contrary run counter to the spirit of our humanistic culture. |
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Through this support, Imerys contributes to the existence of an outstanding ambassador of humanistic culture. |
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However this economic crisis has its roots in the crisis of society values warp in the material, cultural, moral and humanistic field. |
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This desire to travel the world is it always from a humanistic perspective, to meet people and to leave them with your art? |
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In this, the social standards of business are merely catching up to the humanistic standards of other aspects of western society. |
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It seems it evolved from very economic and quantitative considerations to more humanistic and qualitative considerations. |
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Evans believes the building's form fulfills the need for a humanistic, and occasionally humorous, approach to normally unstimulating work environments. |
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It is a broad theme that cuts across academic boundaries and builds linkages between disciplines to form a humanistic understanding of the many dimensions involved. |
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Currently, medical education emphasizes the biological aspects of care to the exclusion of social, cultural and humanistic aspects. |
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This is an essential ingredient in a recipe to whet the public appetite for greater exposure to learned humanistic commentary. |
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He collected humanistic manuscripts and Roman and Italian art. |
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Written in admirably clear Latin, it is a typical humanistic work in its classical quotations and references and historical and philological discussions. |
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Instead, he supports a humanistic, multidisciplinary model of management education. |
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We shall later on discuss in some detail the philosophic distinction between the scientific and humanistic fields, and their relation. |
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Gaudier thought that the smooth, humanistic naturalism of the Greeks was at an end. |
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A poignant, humanistic story that the minister and I and others got to share. |
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Twenty years ago, Kreinces argued for the application of Ginott's humanistic interpersonal psychology to be applied to pedodontics. |
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The significant fact of history is that it was in Hitler's Germany that the rigmarole of national flags and anthems was imposed on de Coubertin's sane, humanistic, anti-jingoist scheme of things. |
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There currently exist many branches of psychotherapy, though they all spring from five main schools: psychoanalysis, systemic therapy, humanistic therapy, behaviorism and cognitivism. |
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After training as a painter of icons within the sphere of influence of Byzantine art, he received from his parents, or subsequently acquired, a broad humanistic grounding that made him a cultivated and highly learned man. |
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Using various techniques, he combined realistic experiences and humanistic concepts in idealizing compositions the figures and scenes of which are harmoniously integrated into a spacious landscape. |
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From the start of his career through to the present day, Vincent Calabrese has pursued a resolutely humanistic path in which moral rectitude and truth are the keynotes of his approach as a watchmaker seeking knowledge. |
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Tourism and culture are important because they are eminently humanistic and peaceful in their search for European individuality within a European commonness. |
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Online supplies bibliographic records for dissertations in musicology, music theory, ethnomusicology, as well as in related musical, scientific, and humanistic disciplines. |
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I think of the ninja mutant turtles where they not only took on humanistic characteristics, but some of the characters were part animal and part human. |
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Another, less physiological, way of classifying the various states of consciousness would be from a more humanistic, sociological or even philosophical point of view, taking ethical factors into consideration. |
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Hence the importance of reasserting, in a pedagogical context that tends to put it in the background, the humanistic and spiritual dimension of knowledge and of the various school subjects. |
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Russia shares the democratic and humanistic values revered around the world, and bears them firmly in mind as it takes concrete political decisions. |
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Ultimately, the Islamists seek to attack us as much for what we do, as for what we are: societies open, democratic, humanistic and in which all the citizens are equal in front of the law. |
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The EU thus has to seize the chance to modernise its own future socio-economic model which should ensure diversity, long-term sustainability and the guarantee of the humanistic values on which the EU was built. |
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This is my response to what Members said about the balance between the military approach and this more humanistic or morally driven way of defining our role and our philosophy in this world. |
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Democratic principles were inscribed in the Constitution adopted in 1992, which states that the ultimate objective of the people of Mongolia is to build a humanistic and democratic civil society in our country. |
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The diversum association is a humanistic project that seeks to incorporate languages and cultures, the bedrock of mankind's cultural environment, into sustainable development policies. |
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One can decipher from her numerous writings that she received a humanistic formation supported by a keen intelligence, a strong and tenacious character, and a willingness to live and enjoy herself. |
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Dawkins is an outspoken atheist and a supporter of various atheist, secular, and humanistic organisations. |
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The sketches provide early evidence of Holbein's wit and humanistic leaning. |
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Vico's version of rhetoric is product of his humanistic and pedagogic concerns. |
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Are they idealistic freedom fighters with humanistic principles? |
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Thus, Goldberg offers her readers a new paradigm, intrinsically humanistic, implicitly pacifistic. |
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His voice has always been one of moderation encompassing a humanistic vision transcending the boundaries of nationality or other petty divisions. |
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Therefore, concern for the individual in his or her broadest sense is central to a humanistic manager. |
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Naturally, Majaj's firm answer to all the irreconciliations of her culturally diverse and divided life is a humanistic approach to them to a greater extent. |
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Post services were founded all over Europe, which allowed a humanistic interconnected network of intellectuals across Europe, despite religious divisions. |
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At the same time, humanistic concepts such as imagination and critical thinking, which cannot be tested by such methods, are disappearing from college curricula. |
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Its proponents took an intellectual and humanistic approach to religion. |
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At first glance it would seem difficult to fathom the rise of Nazism in a country that was long the source of formidable humanistic scholarship and scientific achievements. |
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