For the first time in fiction, in Don Quixote's absolute inwardness, we discover something like the self. |
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In their discussion of prayer the rabbis of the Talmud introduced the concept of kavvana, or inwardness. |
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The abbey's inwardness and composure is fascinating, amidst such a roar of nature. |
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His studies of the Quakers and of pietism described passive inwardness and feeling as the dominant characteristics of the German Enlightenment. |
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Its expansive, often elusive syntax was conveyed with finely graduated dynamics, and an inwardness that infused each element with significance. |
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Slowly I began to grasp what Sisko was after, namely a sense of inwardness and detachment. |
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As early as 1931, he had fully grasped the kind of inwardness that the camera required for the expression of maximum behavioral intimacy. |
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Their emphasis is on inwardness and the spiritual life, a differentiation between the self of the body and that of the true self, or tman. |
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If the Chinese sages had it right, there's something about womanhood and its yin energy that embraces inwardness, acceptance, inner strength, compassion, joy. |
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In any case, they were all clearly under the spell of the work itself, and the seething inwardness of the poetic vision conjured up by Barenboim and his orchestra. |
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The greatest inwardness was not incompatible with public display of piety. |
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More and more I am trying to discover an organic form that is true to the particular moment of the particular poem, the simple plain inwardness of that moment. |
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The inwardness and resentfulness of too many British Muslims will endure at least until the second immigrant generation gives way to the third. |
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Thus, a religion professedly of love and spiritual inwardness gets embodied in a Church Militant. |
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Crucially, Capildeo's descriptions of arid, dormant inwardness reveal a preoccupation with the static or unchanging, which relates to her book's encounter with myth. |
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In these new oils and gouaches, John Brown again makes visible the inwardness of enfleshed existence. |
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Ruth Berther creates her art in a magical moment and reveals, thereof I am convinced, the inwardness of a blooming fantasy. |
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It is possible to tell about itself, about the inwardness, about the soul, about spiritual experience in more details. |
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The lightning flash of inspiration, the passion of creation give way to inwardness, concentration and composure of movement. |
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What makes our personal rhythm of life dynamic and what slows it down and gives it inwardness? |
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Argonauts of the future, or shipwrecked sailors of the past, we move from actual space to imaginary space, from inwardness to outwardness, from intimacy to immensity. |
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I know that I wanted to be in love, and that my own past, and my own inwardness, made this impossible. |
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Throughout, these weighty matters are examined candidly and wistfully, with the wisdom that only age and inwardness can bring. |
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A poet of inwardness, he focuses on the delicate self-consciousness of the young man as thematic contrast to his behaviour's transgressive nature. |
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She often has an inner pensiveness of expression, the same inwardness of mood that is communicated by Botticelli's saints. |
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They also rue the inwardness of Japanese firms that resist co-operating with others. |
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Becoming a self in this way is called existence, inwardness, and subjectivity. |
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The sincere prayer of the simple man is preferable to the prayer of the sage if feeling and inwardness is lacking. |
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Perrenoud's text highlights the question of inwardness and personal effectiveness. |
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Cherubini dispensed with solo parts throughout, preferring an inwardness with strongly characterized text. |
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In liturgies and gatherings, inwardness can be combined with a communal and festive dimension. |
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A full bibliography of the work on inwardness and outwardness in early modern religion and theater would be far too extensive here. |
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The crowds and disciples are present in chapter 23, where the exhortation to humility, and to inwardness of halachic observance are addressed to both groups. |
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She continued on her own way of inwardness and imagination to point the pure? of her feeling, a kind of abstract expressionism, behind her painting glimmers a clear pure blue or radiant yellow? |
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Could our liturgies, without in any way neglecting the communal dimension, lead to more adoration, to inwardness, to a personal communion with God? |
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They also go beyond the religion of hidden inwardness, whether A or B, in which the relation between God and the soul takes place out of public view. |
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Reverence for authority lends itself to a unity of spirit toward the development of philosophical attitudes including spirituality, inwardness, intuition and the strong belief that truth is to be lived and not merely known. |
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The use of varied instrumental ensembles provides for a wealth of expression ranging from inwardness and longing to tonally splendid Christmas jubilation. |
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The truth of art, according to Wilde's romantic aesthetics, is the incarnation of the inwardness of suffering in outward form, the expression of deep internality in externality. |
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Not much managed to write in such genre as a depressive underground, probably, for this purpose it is necessary to go through real inwardness of an intolerable pain, a sudden break and infinite loneliness. |
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