Her faith, however, is not a simple brand of spiritual reductionism whereupon community and congregational problems can be explained by God. |
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That does not require that in embracing naturalism one also embrace determinism, physicalism, and reductionism. |
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Here the mind is not limited by any reductionism such as religion, caste, nationality etc. |
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The main enemies are psychologism, reductionism, idealism, and the distortion of the phenomena by philosophical systems. |
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No less interesting has been the enthusiastic reception of several recent political plays that steered clear of rigid political reductionism. |
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This tradition, with its suspect promise of simplicity, has a tattered reputation because of its reductionism. |
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Even those that oppose simple reductionism do not come close to Myers's ultimate hopes. |
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Synthesis and holism is much more scientifically subtle than analysis and reductionism. |
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Ayer by now thought phenomenalism was unsuccessful in this attempt, and again reductionism would not work for the future cases. |
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But there is always something more to Cocteau's films than the simple reductionism of ordinary interpretation. |
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This reductionism is an ideological fantasy, rather than a theoretical position resting on solid argument. |
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Such reductionism is done purposefully to justify military aggression, he added. |
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This kind of reductionism is not very useful, and it is also politically paralysing. |
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In some ways, this reductionism has been the way of science for hundreds of years and it has to change. |
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Deferment to the original testifier can then be offered as a problem for reductionism. |
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It would be social scientists using an analytic strategy that avoids reification and is cognizant of the pitfalls of reductionism and dualism. |
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Similarly, microevolutionary explanations may not provide a sufficient account of macroevolution, even if such reductionism were justifiable in principle. |
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Thus because of multiple realizability, reductionism violates a tenet of scientific methodology: seek to capture all capturable generalizations. |
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Unlike so many popularizers of sociobiology, Bellah consistently avoids scientistic reductionism. |
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The spatial and temporal flow of water in the hydrological cycle is too complex to be captured in the mechanistic reductionism of the market. |
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At the source of ethical questioning associated with scientific reasoning lies the evacuation of meaning brought about by reductionism. |
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The world community, yes, but without over simplifying matters, without falling into the trap of a dangerous reductionism. |
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Within a context of human reductionism and spiritual captivity, there are signs of the search for meaning, fulfilment and spirituality. |
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This loss of meaning brought about by reductionism is today more clearly perceived for two reasons. |
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Even for the casually religious, such seeming reductionism can rankle. |
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What an extraordinarily explicit statement of scientific reductionism! |
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Opposing either form of reductionism would be the thesis that both species of causation exist but that neither is analysable in terms of the other. |
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You could say this is an attack on reductionism, or on fundamentalism. |
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Can we appropriate them in their simplicity, without falling into trivialization and reductionism, and in their complexity, without falling into casuistry? |
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According to his view, Hume is not arguing for a bundle theory, which is a form of reductionism, but rather for an eliminative view of the self. |
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George Engel made a landmark contribution to medicine when he argued against biological reductionism. |
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The cinematic supporting programme compiled by trigon-film includes works ranging from traditional narrative cinema and desert ballads to genre film and the reductionism of the Modernists. |
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The cultural interests of the information society thus occasionally run the risk of a chiefly perceptible economic reductionism and of becoming the central crisis center of the European unification process. |
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It is just as true of today's science, which faces regular warnings of the risks of scientific reductionism, of hyper-specialization which may be necessary at one level of research. |
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One aspect of the contemporary technological mindset is the tendency to consider the problems and emotions of the interior life from a purely psychological point of view, even to the point of neurological reductionism. |
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For the Dream and Reality exhibition trigon-film has compiled a cinematic supporting programme featuring works ranging from traditional narrative cinema and desert ballads to genre spiel and modernist reductionism. |
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However, I wouldn't want us to start off on the principle of reductionism and to think that the position we're presenting here is only representative of evangelical Protestants. |
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In this way, one can avoid a hermeneutical reductionism that impoverishes canonical science and practice, removing them from their true ecclesial dimension. |
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But Thompson claims-and Fryer refutes him-that Marxism is a form of economic reductionism that negates the subjective factor, or what he calls the human agency. |
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Can consciousness be studied using a reductionist approach, or is consciousness an emergent property arising from brain complexity and thus not amenable to the divide-and-conquer approaches of reductionism? |
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The correspondence principle must reflect emergent classicality if it is to be a viable principle, which means that the implicit assumption of reductionism in Ford's discussions of quantum chaology should be abandoned. |
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Conceptually, reductionism is the greatest triumph of modern science, enabling multifaceted problems to be reduced to their constituent molecules. |
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In this book he elegantly cuts through the baroque structure of recent philosophical debate, and displays the flaws common to the various sophisticated alternatives to reductionism. |
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The debate turned to the possibilities of and limits to scientific reductionism and the role of democracy in the face of the revolutionary potential of modern biology. |
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Ms Atwood loves lingo, the shrunken language of advertising, brand names, slogans, corporate-speak, webtalk above all the heartless language of scientific reductionism. |
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The limits, or even flaws, of reductionism therefore invite us to adopt a realist epistemology: scientific activity attains reality and provides us with definite knowledge. |
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This second thesis might seem to fail if reductionism in ethics is true. |
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I find much of his statement to be generalizing without attentiveness to the differences made in specific texts and yielding a reductionism in which one size fits all. |
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Given its reductionism, CTA has appeared to be a promising strategy to naturalists for showing how desirable features of human agency are compatible with this framework. |
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Reductionism and the criterial theory lean heavily on the notion of analytic or conceptual truth. |
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