They take the reductionist position that the fundamental building blocks of any organization are individuals, not the groups within it. |
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Contrary to what your consult implies in his response, I am not a vitalist, a reductionist, or a physicalist. |
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This reductionist or mechanistic view of patients is no longer satisfactory. |
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The advent of specific drugs joined with a more research-based, reductionist brand of medical diagnosis. |
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He warns against reductionist analyses and emphasises that films should be judged by narrative criteria, as entertainment, and as stories. |
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As far as your opinion that a reductionist approach killed the visual arts, I would have to disagree. |
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It sounds kind of reductionist to sum people up by their musical tastes and how they differ from yours. |
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Recent researchers have been less reductionist and more sympathetic than Adorno, but they too have skirted round the audience. |
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The reductionist approach is thus coupled with the ecology of whole organisms. |
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The extent to which we are free, for example, may have to be revised if we accept reductionist explanations of behaviour. |
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The second abandons hope for reductionist exploitation of behaviorist ideas on behalf of materialism. |
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He claims that Western science is often condemned as positivist, anti-holistic, strongly reductionist, and materialist. |
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Picasso was a reductionist, interested in arriving at the essential truth of the matter. |
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The author makes claims for the central importance of the railway in every aspect of life without seeming a crude reductionist. |
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He is a reductionist who holds that whatever real property one finds in the whole must be found proportionally in the parts. |
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In other words, aboriginal knowledge is holistic, whereas western science tends to be reductionist. |
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We must resist reductionist approaches that focus on one aspect, access for example, rather than on justice itself. |
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In this light, it is also fundamental to consider the qualities of the void in the reductionist, uncompromising practice of Emilio Prini. |
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Outside of the traditional reductionist framework, the neo-reductionism of supervenience theory has so far been relatively unapplied. |
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Historically the main spur to Marxists seeking such an alternative to the reductionist and the scientistic conception of dialectical materialism came from Max Weber. |
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The other part is the paradigm of reductionist approaches to understanding nature. |
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He concludes that the only good physicalist is a full-blooded reductionist. |
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Having sat at the table alongside the immortals, hearing their words while watching their games of footsie, Vidal is a sort of reflexive reductionist. |
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When I talk about reductionist explanations, I don't mean uniformly working our way down to the level of sub-atomic wavicles, and dismissing everything else as unreal. |
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Having sat at the table alongside the immortals, hearing their words while watching their games of footsie, he is a sort of reflexive reductionist. |
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The examples bear witness to the beginnings of a reductionist period for the Spanish artist, during which earlier complex works gave way to minimalism. |
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Where the author lets readers down is in her too often reductionist effort to have the frontier wars be the explanation of the 1692 witchcraft outbreak. |
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I do think the way the site evaluates films is a little reductionist. |
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Gattaca plays off the microcosm, the inner genetic make-up of the individual as the most reductionist way of perceiving human life and the vast macrocosm. |
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It has been argued that the traditional view of the Earth as a nurturing mother was replaced, after the Renaissance, by the scientific, atomistic and reductionist paradigms. |
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Democrats tend to believe that the facts will set them free, and that spinning them is reductionist. |
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And Gitlin's blanket assumption that being gay means who you 'sleep with' is reductionist bigotry. |
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This superb insight into the heart of science includes a look at the world of the subatomic physicist, that most rational and reductionist of breeds. |
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It is generally accepted that evolutionism corresponds to a reductionist and materialist view of the World and Life. |
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The old idea of a watchdog does not need to be entirely reappraised, but it is too reductionist in regard to the aims of democracy. |
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The contention here is that not all matters have necessarily benefited, or, indeed, can benefit from the revered analytic, reductionist, expository, dialogical methodology. |
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Thinking about development solely in terms of increasing a country's gross domestic product is very reductionist. |
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Who has weaved this fascinatingly reductionist account of al-Mabhouh's life in such a short span of time? |
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Development thinking is infused with an uncritical quality that is linear, reductionist, and blinkered. |
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According to a reductionist definition, a democratic society is a society that has its citizens participate in major collective decisions by granting the right to vote. |
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Purist, unembellished, the essence of reductionist elegance. These are the distinguishing characteristics of the world's slimmest calendar watch: the new Les BĂ©monts Ultra Slim. |
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This is a reductionist, unsystematic and unsustainable approach. |
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This present period represents the zenith of technological objectification of the world and knowledge, marked by a hyper-rationalist, scientific, linear, and reductionist de-struction of nature. |
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In order for the struggle against terrorism to be seen as legitimate, it was important to eschew reductionist thinking that categorized a particular religion, culture or civilization as a hotbed of extremist ideologies. |
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Biological systems, specifically organisms are an example of a multi-variable system which classical reductionist techniques of analysis can often misdescribe. |
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According to the reductionist program the dynamics of constituents on the microlevel should determine processes on the macrolevel, i.e., here the low-energy processes. |
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Fukuyama rejects reductionist attempts to explain political and social institutions as mere epiphenomena of underlying economic or technological structures. |
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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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But I realised everything we were doing was deeply reductionist, basically saying: 'Scientists should shut down their labs and go and work in Tesco.' It was a kind of counter-enlightenment. |
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Likewise, a reductionist who identifies conscious states with states of the brain is not eliminating consciousness, but rather telling you something about its nature. |
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Your approach to economic aspects has also been partial and reductionist. |
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The World Social Forum is opposed to all totalitarian and reductionist views of history and to the use of violence as a means of social control by the State. |
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Western science tends to be the opposite in that we're very reductionist. |
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The reductionist approach of the randomised controlled trial may fail to allow for the holistic effect that is central to the philosophy of most complementary therapies. |
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The digital mind of genetic engineering, steeped in reductionist logic, sees no problem in claiming discovery and ownership of what it refers to as 'genetic resources. |
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Most of the ongoing work is narrow in scope and reductionist in nature. |
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What we are considering here is not the implementation of a single, reductionist foreign policy, but it certainly is a common foreign policy, which is derived from the diversity of sensitivities within Europe. |
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Such movements see modernism as reductionist, and therefore subject to an inability to see systemic and emergent effects. |
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But, given the argument for its primitive nature just adduced, this would only be possible if the reductionist eschewed the univocality of predications of existence. |
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Reductionist science is considered bad science with politically oppressive implications. |
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Reductionist science grew from the clockwork logic of Descartes. |
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