All virtuality is a Barmecide feast and Internet is virtuality par excellence. |
|
It is the medium in which objects and subjects actually come into existence, and is the medium in which their virtuality resides. |
|
Despite the obvious codes of virtuality at play, of simulation and simulacra, the image works. |
|
As background Wodak analyzed the reality of multilingualism and Arlt the virtuality of constructions of transnational living together. |
|
From the 90s of the 20th century one can observe tendencies to take cognizance of the virtuality for the development of infrastructures. |
|
In her book, Clara Völker analyses ideas of virtuality from the ancient world up to the 21st century. |
|
And, templates can be used with inheritance for applications such as parameterized virtuality, which combines the best of two forms of polymorphism. |
|
The gnome lives in dualism of reality and virtuality and perceptive people call him patron of home and yard. |
|
Today we spend more and more time not in reality but in the virtuality created by the media. |
|
Thus, what alarms him is the dehumanization, disembodiment and moral anaesthetization that is now, he believes, accompanying the substitution of virtuality for reality. |
|
As a space of freedom, communication and virtuality, the web allows the exchange of information of all kinds, without restraint or control. |
|
Letting go is an interesting gesture, because in fact it's almost like invoking the virtuality of the self, just putting it spontaneously on the table. |
|
The issue doesn't strike me as being one of virtuality versus materiality. |
|
The ideal education would be to explore how experience is changed by ICT and is made relevant in a new way because virtuality is not the lack of society just as silence is not the lack of language. |
|
For Mr Rykwert, a man on foot in the age of speeding virtuality, good architecture may still show us a face where flâneurs can read the story of their urban setting in familiar metaphors. |
|
If we hold as actual the work that Gilles Deleuze individuated in the series of monographs published between 1953 and 1995, what would be this work's virtuality? |
|
Hence the strategic approach of monitoring violence from fixed points in space and time is giving way to one based on fluidity and spatio-temporal ubiquity or virtuality. |
|
By virtue of his freedom, man can either realize his theomorphic virtuality of being God's vicegerent on earth or deny himself this exalted niche by making the wrong choice. |
|