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discourse and with
He opens his discourse, however, with a review of the Eisenhower inaugural festivities at which a sympathetic press had assembled its massive talents, all primed to catch some revelation of the emerging new age.
The monitor of this discourse grinned with pride and amusement as Helva's tone indicated pity for the unfortunate.
However, in more recent years, since the end of the Bretton Woods system in 1971, with the increasing influence of Monetarist schools of thought in the 1980s, and particularly in the face of large sustained trade imbalances, these concerns and particularly concerns about the destabilising effects of large trade surpluses have largely disappeared from mainstream economics discourse and Keynes ' insights have slipped from view.
* Baptism – referred to in Jesus ' born-again discourse with Nicodemus (" born of water and spirit ")
* Holy Spirit – referred to in Jesus ' born-again discourse with Nicodemus (" born of water and spirit ")
Ethnography is concerned with the lives of people within different parts of the world, particularly in relation to the discourse of beliefs and practices.
Eschatology is an ancient branch of study in Christian theology, presumably starting with the Olivet discourse, The Sheep and the Goats, and other discourses of end times by Jesus, with the doctrine of the Second Coming of Christ first touched on by Paul of Tarsus and Ignatius of Antioch ( c. 35 – 107 AD ), then given more consideration by the Christian apologist, Justin Martyr ( c. 100 – 165 ).
Writers of post-colonial fiction interact with the traditional colonial discourse, but modify or subvert it ; for instance by retelling a familiar story from the perspective of an oppressed minor character in the story.
There he had frequent discourse with the Jesuits of the College of La Flèche.
* The Planets: A discourse on the discovery, science, history and mythology, of the planets in our solar system, with one chapter devoted to each of the celestial spheres.
In the gospel of John, the account of the Last Supper has no mention of Jesus taking bread and wine and speaking of them as his body and blood ; instead it recounts his humble act of washing the disciples ' feet, the prophecy of the betrayal, which set in motion the events that would lead to the cross, and his long discourse in response to some questions posed by his followers, in which he went on to speak of the importance of the unity of the disciples with him and each other.
He preached moderation in the political discourse, noting that it was important that the nation present a unified front in its dealings with foreign powers.
At the same time, discourse with other leaders of state constitutes exercising of foreign policy, which is the president's responsibility.
A theory about some topic is usually first-order logic together with: a specified domain of discourse over which the quantified variables range, finitely many functions which map from that domain into it, finitely many predicates defined on that domain, and a recursive set of axioms which are believed to hold for those things.
Postmodernists and Post-Structuralists such as Richard Rorty and Jacques Derrida have attacked foundationalism on the grounds that the truth of a statement or discourse is only verifiable in accordance with other statements and discourses.
* Danish functional grammar combines Saussurean / Hjelmslevian structuralism with a focus on pragmatics and discourse.
and form, with Latin words, the foundation of international scientific and technical vocabulary, e. g. all words ending with – logy (" discourse ").
Most commentators seem to agree that Matthew, alone among the gospels, alternates five blocks of narrative with five of discourse, marking each off with the phrase " When Jesus had finished ..." ( see Five Discourses of Matthew ).
From the authoritative words of Jesus the gospel turns to three sets of three miracles interwoven with two sets of two discipleship stories ( the second narrative ), followed by a discourse on mission and suffering.
The discourse is a set of parables emphasising the sovereignty of God, and concluding with a challenge to the disciples to understand the teachings as scribes of the kingdom of heaven.
Relative-tense indicates temporal distance from a point of time established in the discourse that is not the present, i. e. reference to a point in the past or future, such as the future-in-future, or the future of the future ( at some time in the future after the reference point, which is in the future ) and future-in-past or future of the past ( at some time after a point in the past, with the reference point being a point in the past ).

discourse and established
She situates thealogy as a discourse that can be engaged with by Goddess feminists those who are feminist adherents of the Goddess who may have left their church, synagogue, or mosque, or those who may still belong to their originally established religion ( Melissa Raphael 2000, p. 16 )
Similar to Raphael, she locates thealogy as a discourse involving more than just Neopagans, and including those who have not left their established religion.
It is, however, what Michel-Rolph Trouillot terms “ an age when collective apologies are becoming increasingly common ” as well as a time when the established Holocaust discourse has settled and legitimized claims of the Jewish, Roma and mentally ill victims of Nazi persecution so it would seem an appropriate time to at least bring attention to the debate of the Gay Holocaust, even if the issue is not to be settled.
Moreover, because discourses are bodies of text meant to communicate specific data, information, and knowledge, there exist internal relations within a given discourse, and external relations among discourses, because a discourse does not exist in isolation ( per se ), but in relation to other discourses, which are determined and established by means of interdiscourse and interdiscursivity.
However, the categories have become so firmly established in government and popular discourse over time that they have become de facto distinctions, serving to shape in part today's political discourse within the Republic of China ( ROC ), and affecting Taiwan's policies regarding indigenous peoples.
Once a referent has been established as the topic of the current monolog or dialog, then in ( formal ) modern Japanese its marking will change from wa to ga. To better explain the difference, the translation of the second sentence can be enlarged to " As for the sun, it rises " or " Speaking of the sun, it rises "; these renderings reflect a discourse fragment in which " the sun " is being established as the topic of an extended discussion.
Literary and debating societies established in Calcutta ( Kolkata ) and Bombay ( Mumbai ) became forums for open political discourse.
" They established the group, Ometz Le ' sarev, which distinguishes itself by using conspicuously Zionist discourse: " Refusal to serve in the Territories is Zionism.
The NCTE George Orwell Award for Distinguished Contribution to Honesty and Clarity in Public Language ( the Orwell Award for short ), established in 1975 and given by the National Council of Teachers of English Public Language Awards Committee, recognizes writers who have made outstanding contributions to the critical analysis of public discourse.
A Literary Discourse Analysis of Dag Solstad's Authorship ( University of Oslo, 2009 ), Inger Østenstad argues from different perspectives that Solstad is Norway's greatest contemporary writer, and uses a version of Dominique Maingueneau's discourse theory to analyse the components of oeuvre, reception, para-text and meta-text that in Solstad's case contribute to his established greatness.
The university established a program in civil discourse, including the journal Reason and Respect, which brought in speakers such as Salman Rushdie, David Gergen, First Minister and Nobel Prize – winner David Trimble, Khaled Hosseini, author of Kite Runner, Bob Geldof of Live Aid, and others to campus.
In his address at J Street's plenary session in March 2012, Beinart, who according to the Israeli daily Haaretz " has firmly established his credentials as the Jewish establishment's enfant terrible ", called for providing more space in the public discourse for critics of Israel, saying: " Any Jewish leader who conflates disagreement in policy with anti-Semitism should be fired ".
Some discourse communities are very formal with well established boundaries, while others may have a looser construction with greater freedom.
Most established discourse communities are very strict on what is an “ acceptable argument.
He or she is also forced to construct his or her argument with a basis on the established intertext, or else his or her argument will be rejected from the onset as foreign or ‘ false .’ Should this occur the academic writer would have failed at his or her purpose: to make the discourse community think in a slightly different way.
Within discourse communities, writers build on top of the ideas established by previous writers.
Jürgen Habermas established communicative action as a reaction to postmodern challenges to the discourse of modernity, informed both by critical theory and American pragmatism.
Since then he shaped the cultural and political discourse in Germany for more than two decades and established himself as one of the country's most important and versatile artists.

discourse and Christian
According to Bruce Lincoln, the philosophes " made irrationality the hallmark of myth and constituted philosophy rather than the Christian kerygma as the antidote for mythic discourse.
In the New Testament of the Christian Bible, it appears in two forms: in the Gospel of Matthew as part of the discourse on ostentation in the Sermon on the Mount, and in the Gospel of Luke, which records Jesus being approached by " one of his disciples " with a request to teach them " to pray as John taught his disciples.
Thus, the derogatory meaning of the word " myth " is the traditional Christian meaning, and the expression " Christian mythology ", as used in academic discourse, may offend Christians for this reason.
By contrast, in modern discourse, the term supersessionism arises as a criticism of a ( perceived ) Christian belief in Jewish exclusion, not as a Christian articulation of their own understanding of the relation between the Christians and Jews.
* It is in this last sense, theology as an academic discipline involving rational study of Christian teaching, that the term passed into English in the fourteenth century, though it could also be used in the narrower sense found in Boethius and the Greek patristic authors, to mean rational study of the essential nature of God – a discourse now sometimes called Theology Proper.
However, modern Christian interpretation diverges as to the meaning of the additional topics in the discourse.
* A discourse of the grounds and reasons of the Christian religion, 1737
The final part is a discourse on Christian love.
There are but few remains of Christian scholarly discourse in Muslim Iberia.
This assertion of strictly native support is important in the PRC political discourse, since Christian churches and missionaries have sometimes historically been seen as tools of imperialism.
Over the centuries, rather than a few individual events, Jews were eroded into a minority in their historical patria, while the rabbis " Judaized " Judaism, by prescribing only the Hebrew Bible as authoritative, and Hellenistic-Jewish literature, culture and discourse declined sharply from the 2nd century, not only from Imperial Roman suppressions, but also Christian appropriation of the Greek translation of the Old Testament, the Septuagint, as its authorized version.
Through internal and external pressures, the two communities, Greco-Roman and Jewish, diverged, the former becoming universally Christian, and, in time, self-defined as " Roman ", when the emperor granted citizenship to all, and " Greek " became in patristic discourse synonymous with " pagan ".
In the meanwhile, the meme of a Jewish people in exile entered normative mediaeval Jewish, Christian and, in time, Islamic thought and discourse, when Muhammed would address the Jews of Makkah and Madinah as though they themselves had been expelled from the land, twice, by the servants of Allah, as a punishment for their rejection of Jesus and the prophets.
As such, many of the Vetus Latina " versions " were generally not promulgated in their own right as translations of the Bible to be used in the whole Church ; rather, many of the texts that form part of the Vetus Latina were prepared on an ad hoc basis for the local use of Christian communities, to illuminate another Christian discourse or sermon, or as the Latin half of a diglot manuscript ( e. g. Codex Bezae ).
This field of architectural discourse is explored most notably by the theorist Christian Norberg-Schulz in his book, Genius Loci: Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture.
During his term as governor, Beasley was known for injecting his Christian faith into the public discourse.
Since the 19th century, many apocalyptic millennial Christian eschatologists, starting with John Nelson Darby, have feared a globalist conspiracy to impose a tyrannical New World Order as the fulfillment of prophecies about the " end time " in the Bible, specifically in the Book of Ezekiel, the Book of Daniel, the Olivet discourse found in the Synoptic Gospels, and the Book of Revelation.
World Vision India is accused of the violence and attack to eliminate a Hindu monk Swami Lakshmanananda ; of pumping money into India for religious conversion and also during 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, that is hidden from public discourse and that World Vision India was one of the top recipient of funds for Christian missionary activity in India ; and allegedly hatching plot to kill Swami Lakshmanananda.
According to Timo Eskola, early Christian theology and discourse was influenced by the Jewish Merkabah tradition.

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