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paradigmatic and modernist
Dharmapala is an excellent example of an Asian Buddhist modernist, and perhaps the paradigmatic example of Protestant Buddhism.

paradigmatic and exhortation
Another paradigmatic exhortation was articulated by philosopher and composer Theodor Adorno, who, in the 1940s, challenged conventional surface coherence and appearance of harmony typical of the rationality of Enlightenment thinking.

paradigmatic and was
Thereafter, he began a massive program of monumental construction, paradigmatic for which was the state temple called the Bayon.
The paradigmatic case was, of course, the Jewish diaspora ; some dictionary definitions of diaspora, until recently, did not simply illustrate but defined the word with reference to that case.
" was paradigmatic of the movement's approach towards the obsolete.
" was paradigmatic of the movement's approach towards the obsolete.
Additionally, " humour " was thought to include a combination of ridiculousness and wit in an individual ; the paradigmatic case being Shakespeare's Sir John Falstaff.
Twentieth-century French philosopher Michel Foucault argued that the Panopticon was paradigmatic of several 19th-century " disciplinary " institutions.
Indeed, in order to understand the historical context that led to the development of these paradigmatic picaresque novels in Spain during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, it is essential to take into consideration the circumstances surrounding the lives of conversos, whose ancestors had been Jewish, and whose New Christian faith was subjected to close scrutiny and mistrust.
Although von Neumann's projection postulate is often presented as a normative description of quantum measurement, it was conceived by taking into account experimental evidence available during the 1930s ( in particular the Compton-Simon experiment has been paradigmatic ), and many important present-day measurement procedures do not satisfy it ( so-called measurements of the second kind ).
One critic, for instance, said recent scholarship by Edward Said, Homi Bhabha, Gauri Viswanathan, and Jacques Derrida has " reformulated the paradigmatic assumptions of colonial cultural studies ," and the book was as " important addition to such scholarship.
In a March 2008 interview with The Guardian, Shane Smith ( co-founder ) was questioned about the magazine's political allegiances: " We're not trying to say anything politically in a paradigmatic left / right way ... We don't do that because we don't believe in either side.
His singular method of putting discarded automobile-body parts together led to his inclusion in the paradigmatic exhibition “ The Art of Assemblage ”, at the Museum of Modern Art in 1961, where his work was shown alongside modern masters such as Marcel Duchamp and Pablo Picasso.
In music, paradigmatic analysis was a method of musical analysis developed by Nicolas Ruwet during the 1960s but later named by others.
He was, in the paradigmatic sense, a philosopher of science.
The paradigmatic principle was established in semiotics by Saussure, whose concept of value ( viz “ valeur ”), and of signs as terms in a system, “ showed up paradigmatic organization as the most abstract dimension of meaning ”. System is used in two related ways in systemic functional theory.
Upper Dublin School District was the first school district in Pennsylvania to receive a K-12 paradigmatic accreditation from the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.
Something of a paradigmatic statement that questioned the aesthetic goals of postmodern dance, Trio A was a short dance that consisted of one long phrase.

paradigmatic and by
Author James Basker states that the song has been employed by African Americans as the " paradigmatic Negro spiritual " because it expresses the joy felt at being delivered from slavery and worldly miseries.
* Theoretical lexicography is the scholarly discipline of analyzing and describing the semantic, syntagmatic and paradigmatic relationships within the lexicon ( vocabulary ) of a language, developing theories of dictionary components and structures linking the data in dictionaries, the needs for information by users in specific types of situation, and how users may best access the data incorporated in printed and electronic dictionaries.
The vast scope of rhetoric is difficult to define ; however, political discourse remains, in many ways, the paradigmatic example for studying and theorizing specific techniques and conceptions of persuasion, considered by many a synonym for " rhetoric.
According to this notion, epicycles are regarded by some as the paradigmatic example of Bad Science.
One paradigmatic problem arising in the global context is that of institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund who are founded and supported by wealthy nations and provide aid, in the form of grants and loans, to developing nations.
The first and second article of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, adopted unanimously by the Virginia Convention of Delegates on June 12, 1776 and written by George Mason, speaks of happiness in the context of recognizably Lockean rights and is paradigmatic of the way in which " the fundamental natural rights of mankind " were expressed at the time.
The letter, and Daly's apparent decision not to publicly respond, greatly affected the reception of Daly's work among other feminist theorists, and has been described as a " paradigmatic example of challenges to white feminist theory by feminists of color in the 1980s.
Bates's statue of Pandora, owned by Tate Britain but seldom displayed publicly His next major statue, the 1890 Pandora, is more truly a figure in the round, and in this work Bates experimented with polychromy and mixed materials, making it self-consciously into a paradigmatic example of his artistic priorities.
A ' paradigmatic design ' in this sense, refers to a design solution that is considered by a community as being successful and influential.
Hence, paradigmatic analysis is a method for exploring a syntagm by identifying its constituent paradigm, studying the individual paradigmatic elements, and then reconstructing the process by which the syntagm takes on meaning.
For all of its extracurricular idiosyncrasies, Thornlea is by all accounts a reasonably paradigmatic Canadian high school with departments in a fairly standard set of subject areas.
Like the paradigmatic example, the assumption is that people will choose the least distant option, ( in this case, the distance is ideological ) and that the most votes can be had by being directly in the center.
The circle and the square that are combined so dramatically in the atrium were considered to be the paradigmatic geometric units by the ancient Roman architect Vitruvius.

paradigmatic and philosopher
The bull ant famously appears in the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer's major work, The World as Will and Representation, as a paradigmatic example of strife and constant destruction endemic to the " will to live ".

paradigmatic and which
Derrida would argue there about the problem he found in the constant appeal to " normality " in the analytical tradition from which Austin and Searle were only paradigmatic examples.
Kraepelin's great contribution in classifying schizophrenia and manic-depression remains relatively unknown to the general public, and his work, which had neither the literary quality nor paradigmatic power of Freud's, is little read outside scholarly circles.
In order to understand the metaphysics of the Mage setting, it is important to remember that many of the terms used to describe magic and Magi e. g., Avatar, Quintessence, the Umbra, and Paradox, Resonance, as well as the game mechanics a player uses to describe the areas of magic in which his character is proficient — the Spheres, look, mean, and are understood very differently depending on the paradigm of the Mage in question, even though they are often, in the texts of the game, described from particular paradigmatic points-of-view.
The underlying themes of the film have been the subject of extensive critical discussion ; critics and scholars have interpreted it as a paradigmatic exploitation film in which female protagonists are subjected to brutal, sadistic violence.
He would also argument about the problem he found in the constant appeal to " normality " in the analytical tradition of which Austin and Searle were only paradigmatic examples.
This is especially true during adolescence .” Little Women became “ the paradigmatic text for young women of the era and one in which family literary culture is prominently featured .” Adult elements of women ’ s fiction were in Little Women, such as “ a change of heart necessary ” for the female protagonist to evolve in the story.
The paradigmatic example is Hector Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique, which relates a drug-induced series of morbid fantasies concerning the unrequited love of a sensitive poet involving murder, execution, and the torments of Hell.
This case is paradigmatic in that it organizes social judgments about which other activities count as sexual, and also connects to dominant views about what sex is normal, natural and good.
In particular, commensurability involves the extent to which paradigmatic concerns " can be retrofitted to each other in ways that make the simultaneous practice of both possible ".
In their article titled “ The State of Cultivation ”, Michael Morgan and James Shanahan argue “ that cultivation has taken on certain paradigmatic qualities ” and that they “ consider the future prospects for cultivation research in the context of the changing media environment ” What this means is that Morgan and Shanahan join in the conversation that this Cultivation Theory has started to take on a new form, which is starting to shift the way scholars view media affects on the general public.
Behavioral neuroscience also has paradigmatic and methodological similarities to neuropsychology, which relies heavily on the study of the behavior of humans with nervous system dysfunction ( i. e., a non-experimentally based biological manipulation ).
For example, a paradigmatic case is the sequent calculus, which can be used to express the consequence relations of both intuitionistic logic and relevance logic.
This is an important fact to realize for two reasons: ( A ) it allows Saussure to argue that signs cannot exist in isolation, but are dependent on a system from within which they must be deduced in analysis, rather than the system itself being built up from isolated signs ; and ( B ) he could discover grammatical facts through syntagmatic and paradigmatic analyses.
) and excluding principles that refer to intrinsic abstract laws of nature in which their concepts can be formulated completely without a precise formal molecular or atomic paradigmatic view ( e. g. Quantum Chromodynamics, Quantum Electrodynamics, String Theory, parts of Cosmology ( see Cosmochemistry ), certain areas of Nuclear Physics ( see Nuclear Chemistry ), etc .).
The paradigmatic society which stands behind every historical society is hierarchical, but social classes have a marginal permeability ; there are no slaves, no discrimination between men and women.
a-mutation seems to have preceded the raising of unstressed final */ o :/ to */ u :/ in the dialects ancestral to Old English and Old Norse, hence in Old English the phenomenon is subject to many exceptions and apparent inconsistencies which are usually attributed to a mixture of paradigmatic levelling and phonetic context.
A systemic grammar differs from other functional grammars ( and from all formal grammars ) in that it is paradigmatic: a system is paradigmatic set of alternative features, of which one must be chosen if the entry condition is satisfied.
* divide material into paradigmatic classes and identify the codes to which the signifiers belong ( Roland Barthes ).

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