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essence and earliest
He and his contemporary, Lev Kuleshov, two of the earliest film theorists, argued that montage was the essence of the cinema.
His concept of Minkowski space is the earliest treatment of space and time as two aspects of a unified whole, the essence of special relativity.
In essence the earliest sallets were a variant of the bascinet, intended to be worn without an aventail or visor.
The earliest published reports ( Lozano 1873-74 summary of Jesuit accounts in the 17th century ) about the Aché refer to them as " Guajagui ", a term based on the Guaraní root " Guaja " (= enemy tribe, or brother-in-law ) and " gui " a common Aché suffix ( meaning " essence of " or " having the property of ").

essence and vision
In particular the flag has become a banner for pro-Europeanism outside the Union, for example in Georgia, where the flag is on most government buildings since the coming to power of Mikhail Saakashvili, who used it during his inauguration, stating: " European flag is Georgia ’ s flag as well, as far as it embodies our civilisation, our culture, the essence of our history and perspective, and our vision for the future of Georgia.
The Lotus Sutra and especially such tantras as the Kunjed Gyalpo Tantra give expression to a vision of the Buddha as the omnipresent, all-knowing, liberative essence and deathless Reality of all things.
And the actors and the plot are the development of that dream vision, the essence of which is the ecstatic dismembering of the god and of the Bacchantes ' rituals, of the inseparable ecstasy and suffering of human existence …
" The essence of the process is that it moves from the general to the specific, from the vision to the mission to the goals to the corporate objectives of the organization, then down to the individual action plans for each part of the marketing program.
In essence Spencer's philosophical vision was formed by a combination of deism and positivism.
The essence of the disagreement is that in the East one cannot be a genuine true theologian or teach knowledge of God, without having experienced God, as is defined as the vision of God ( theoria ).
For Ballanche, this creative power of speech had the same essence as poetry, and he developed a poetics of the symbol that played a role in the thinking of those who gave birth to a new vision of the poet and of poetry that soon came to be known as romanticism.
In essence, it was his vision of what the Valiant Universe would have been if he had stayed with the company.
Or rather, is not the nearest approach to the knowledge of their several natures made by him who so orders his intellectual vision as to have the most exact conception of the essence of each thing he considers?
His theological works emphasize the empirical basis of theology called theoria or vision of God, ( as opposed to intellectual-contemplative ) as the essence of Orthodox Theology.
He published an open letter to Adolf Hitler in 1933 in which he accused Hitler of " behaving and acting as an evil superman ... possessed with some weird vision " which is " uncomprehendable by the human mind and belief and quite certain, and in all forms and essence, directed against the Orthodox soul.
Aristo made virtue one thing in its essence, and called it health ; but in what it is somehow related to, he made the virtues differentiated and plural, just as if one wanted to call our vision in grasping light-colored things light-sight, but dark-sight in grasping dark-colored ones.

essence and was
Early Chinese anchoritism was theoretically aimed at a mystic pantheist union with the divine, personal salvation being achieved when the mystical recluse united with divine essence.
Critically, the film was also better received than the first two instalments, with some critics remarking that it was the first Harry Potter film to truly capture the essence of the novels.
Under Arianism, Christ was instead not consubstantial with God the Father since both the Father and the Son under Arius were made of " like " essence or being ( see homoiousia ) but not of the same essence or being ( see homoousia ).
According to the teaching of Arius, the preexistent Logos and thus the incarnate Jesus Christ was a created being ; that only the Son was directly created and begotten by God the Father, before ages, but was of a distinct, though similar, essence or substance from the Creator ; his opponents argued that this would make Jesus less than God, and that this was heretical.
Jesus was God in essence, being and or nature ( ousia ), which the Latin fathers translated as substantia.
The temple to Ares in the agora of Athens that Pausanias saw in the second century AD had only been moved and rededicated there during the time of Augustus ; in essence it was a Roman temple to the Augustan Mars Ultor.
His primary interest was in applying the methodology of science to realms of inner experience and the spiritual worlds ( Steiner's appreciation that the essence of science is its method of inquiry is unusual among esotericists ), and Steiner called anthroposophy Geisteswissenschaft ( lit.
His " Software Tools " series spread the essence of ' C / Unix thinking ' with makeovers for BASIC, FORTRAN, and Pascal-and most notably his ' Ratfor ' ( rational FORTRAN ) was put in the public domain.
German strategist Carl von Clausewitz stated that " the employment of battles ... to achieve the object of war " was the essence of strategy.
The essence of Zakonopravilo was based on Corpus Iuris Civilis.
The political revolt brought little social change, however, and 19th century Chilean society preserved the essence of the stratified colonial social structure, which was greatly influenced by family politics and the Roman Catholic Church.
The view that there was no rigid structure is reinforced by S. T. Joshi, who stated " Lovecraft's imaginary cosmogony was never a static system but rather a sort of aesthetic construct that remained ever adaptable to its creator's developing personality and altering interests ... here was never a rigid system that might be posthumously appropriated ... he essence of the mythos lies not in a pantheon of imaginary deities nor in a cobwebby collection of forgotten tomes, but rather in a certain convincing cosmic attitude.
It was Maurice Fréchet who, in 1906, had distilled the essence of the Bolzano – Weierstrass property and coined the term compactness to refer to this general phenomenon.
The essence of the design was the ability to transfer charge along the surface of a semiconductor from one storage capacitor to the next.
In classical thought, a definition was taken to be a statement of the essence of a thing.
In essence, the data warehousing concept was intended to provide an architectural model for the flow of data from operational systems to decision support environments.
In essence, the accusation was that the accused committed treason against the " benevolent and righteous " common cause.

essence and Christian
Non-Trinitarianism includes all Christian belief systems that reject, wholly or partly, the doctrine of the Trinity, namely, the teaching that God is three distinct yet coeternal and coequal hypostases who are indivisibly united in one essence.
" Hope is an essential and fundamental element of Christian life, so essential indeed, that, like faith and love, it can itself designate the essence of Christianity ".
In essence, Golding ’ s contribution to English literature was his translation of the Metamorphosis because not only does he create an accessible work for many to understand, but he also translates in such a way as to infuse the work with Christian theology.
According to Christian theology, the transcendent God, who cannot be approached or seen in essence or being, becomes immanent primarily in the God-man Jesus the Christ, who is the incarnate Second Person of the Trinity.
Nontrinitarianism ( or antitrinitarianism ) refers to monotheistic belief systems, primarily within Christianity, which reject the Christian doctrine of the Trinity, namely, the teaching that God is three distinct hypostases or persons and yet co-eternal, co-equal, and indivisibly united in one essence or ousia.
Acta Sanctorum ( Acts of the Saints ) is an encyclopedic text in 68 folio volumes of documents examining the lives of Christian saints, in essence a critical hagiography, which is organised according to each saint's feast day.
The essence of Judson's preaching was a combination of conviction of the truth with the rationality of the Christian faith, a firm belief in the authority of the Bible, and a determination to make Christianity relevant to the Burmese mind without violating the integrity of Christian truth, or as he put it, " to preach the gospel, not anti-Buddhism.
On the other hand, some Christian communists believe that it is necessary to employ the word communism in order to capture the essence of their position on economics.
) Nirguna Brahman is the first spirit, with slight similarities to the Judaic / Christian God before the creation of the universe, although Brahman is taught to be both the essence of being in the world as well as its material body.
It emphasized also the phenomena of Christian experience and deemed miracle and mystery to be of the essence in a spirit-filled church.
So in essence, evidential apologetics attempts to build from a common starting point in neutral facts, while presuppositional apologetics attempts to claim all facts for the Christian worldview as the only framework in which they are intelligible.
* Godhead in Christianity, the substantial essence or nature of the Christian God
" " Because sickness belongs to the essence of Christianity, the typical Christian condition, ' belief ,' has to be a form of sickness.
Early Christian views tended to see Jesus as a unique agent of God ; by the Council of Nicaea in 325 he was identified as God in the fullest sense, being ' of the same substance, essence or being '.
Chesterton sums up the essence of his intention in the introduction when he says, " When the word ' orthodoxy ' is used here it means the Apostles ' Creed, as understood by everybody calling himself Christian until a very short time ago and the general historic conduct of those who held such a creed.
Liberal Catholicism has been defined as " in essence a trend among sincere Catholics to exalt freedom as a primary value and to draw from this consequences in social, political, and religious life, seeking to reconcile the principles on which Christian France was founded with those that derived from the French Revolution ".
Liberal Christianity looks upon the Bible as a collection of narratives that explain, epitomize, or symbolize the essence and significance of Christian understanding.
He said that it was of a Christian essence, divine language.
Even as, for the ancient philosophers, the essence of perfection had been harmony, so for the Gospel and the Christian theologians it was charity, or love.
Scholarship since that time has problematized Bultmann's theory, but in Biblical and theological discussions, the term kerygma has come to denote the irreducible essence of Christian apostolic preaching.
The mutual respect for their respective cultural beliefs has woven the essence of a tri-people ( Christian, Muslim & Lumad ) cohabiting the area giving way to a rich cultural exchanges peculiar to the City of Koronadal.

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