The seventies were very sleek and empty, more concerned with structure, form, and a certain kind of ascetic rigorousness. |
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Nor will we gain any great wisdom through the more punitive, ascetic methods. |
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For Brendan, salvation is best accomplished through the monastic way, understood as a combination of ascetic practices and liturgical observance. |
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Cornet always led a frugal and ascetic life, able to live contentedly for weeks on end with the same menu of rice and dried fish. |
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His earlier life of self-indulgence had been unsatisfying, as was his six-year experiment with ascetic penances. |
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He walked away from every system of thought and every ascetic setup that was offered to him as an alternative. |
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I was simply fighting against what I perceived as biblical, doctrinal, and ascetic fundamentalism. |
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The Hesychasts were, in the Eastern Church, supporters of the ascetic mysticism propagated by the monks of Mount Athos in the XIVth Century. |
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Not surprisingly, the one-armed baba and other members of the militant ascetic Juna Akhara sect are big fans of the Ram temple. |
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This revolt, joined to an ascetic and sterile devotion to positive fact, would ultimately slay even God. |
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The secret history of toleration has been disclosed to us by that fierce ascetic republican and Calvinistical pope. |
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The spareness of her art during this period perfectly mirrored her ascetic tendencies and feelings of self-deprivation. |
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A friend of mine has gone for an ascetic existence, having denounced the demon drink, and even resolved to stop swearing. |
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His Dialogues inspiringly portrayed the Italian Church as ascetic, preaching, thaumaturgic, but episcopally controlled. |
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In every ascetic morality man worships a part of himself as God and for that he needs to diabolize the other part. |
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After only three years her natural frailty and the rigours of her ascetic devotions killed her. |
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Today it numbers some 20 monks, well educated, who concentrate mainly upon the publishing of patristic, ascetic and hagiological books. |
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He resolved to give up princely life and become a wandering ascetic in search for the Truth. |
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Forty-something Innes is renowned as an ascetic abstractionist, his cool squares now a distinctive presence in the history of Scottish art. |
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The initial impression of these first few minutes leaves something to be desired because the sonic details appear uninvolving and overly ascetic. |
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Orphaned and blinded from childhood, he became an ascetic freethinker and materialist. |
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Like Taine, Cezanne had only contempt for the adepts of a dry, linear style, whom he associated with ascetic, religious spirituality. |
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Only by scourging ourselves and retreating to some bizarre ascetic vision of humanity can we be redeemed. |
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I'd asked Mark Twight to be my partner because he was a bold alpinist known for climbing fast and light, an ascetic philosophy I live by. |
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We've seen the interview with the ascetic visionary who squats before a frugal meal among his disciples. |
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A yogi, or yogin is one who practices yoga or who, in a more general sense, is a Hindu ascetic. |
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Alekhine once commented that the chess master should be a combination of a beast of prey and an ascetic monk. |
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They lived together continently for a year, and Birgitta was especially fervent in her prayers and ascetic devotions. |
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But by ascetic restraint and by introspective contemplation, the soul can ascend to its true fulfilment. |
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Shiva was depicted as a Himalayan ascetic, Vishnu as a blue youth holding in his four hands a discus, mace, conch, and lotus. |
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It is mystical and ascetic, with the sisters observing vows of poverty, chastity and silence. |
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Imagine a particularly ascetic monastic order, whose rule not only enjoins chastity, but forbids sexual desire. |
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The people communicate with him by way of ascetic disciplines on certain sacred mountains. |
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The motive was mainly ascetic, but was in part connected with the greater authority which, in antiquity, attached to such renunciation. |
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Indeed most martial arts are based on the creations of Chinese ascetic monks almost a thousand years ago. |
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Bernard's over-rigorous pursuit of ascetic discipline adversely affected his health. |
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He himself lived a rigorously ascetic life and observed the monastic precepts faithfully. |
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Buddhism requires ascetic behaviour, including fasting, by its monks, but not from other followers. |
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True spirituality, or godliness, is found in everyday social relationships as well as in prayer, learning, or ascetic practices. |
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Soyinka is a food and wine enthusiast, but he also sinks easily into a kind of ascetic mode and fasts regularly. |
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As ascetic as Aries is, you delight in luxuries now, indulging any urge to splurge. |
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He may not be gregarious but Petraeus wields a bony and ascetic charm which he combines with practical intelligence. |
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Maybe this is better than self-denying ascetic teenage subculture anarchism. |
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Nevertheless the rigorism of his ascetic resolve was never relaxed. |
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By contrast, the sort of Church that Montanus offered was one of ecstatic prophecy, immediate eschatology, ascetic moral rigorism, and, at the same time, institutional chaos. |
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Godfrey's ascetic prose will hold little interest for logophiles, but the slapdash feel of the writing is a compelling evocation of the teenage mind. |
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It will doubtless surprise some viewers to learn that the monks' daily routine is not dominated by the strict, ascetic activities one might suppose. |
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Sufism emphasises the more mystical and ascetic aspects of the religion. |
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While there is not too much on the theology of the cross, or on the phenomenon of monasticism, all authors speak from the reality of a crucified, ascetic tradition. |
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The two figures, one highly individualised, dedicated to self-assertion and pleasure-seeking, the other ascetic and self-denying, are sharply contrasted. |
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He was noted for his immaculate tidiness and rather ascetic, priestly air. |
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With its mendicant and ascetic traditions, Buddhism has always been associated with non-violence, non-confrontation, and the inner or spiritual life. |
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His ascetic aspirations did not make him wish to be a hermit. |
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He balances imaginative contemplation of Christ's Passion with calls to ascetic efforts, regarding each as balancing and correcting the dangers of the other. |
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The highest ideal in Jainism is the wandering, possessionless, and passionless ascetic, which is why jinas are always depicted as mendicants or yogis. |
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There is something priestly about him, a lofty, ascetic air. |
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Ascetic structuralism was a major line of enquiry in the London-based structural movement. |
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Gautama initially went to Rajagaha and began his ascetic life by begging for alms in the street. |
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The spiritual insight gained from their ascetic struggles make monastics preferred for missionary activity. |
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Russell said he returned from the war a changed man, one with a deeply mystical and ascetic attitude. |
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Many separate but related religious groups of that era shared similar mystic, eschatological, messianic, and ascetic beliefs. |
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Edhi lived in a humble, ascetic way, even as his charity became a multimillion-pound enterprise. |
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A Jain ascetic has neither a permanent home nor any possessions, wandering barefoot from place to place except during the months of Chaturmas. |
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Montanism appealed to Tertullian's zealous moral and ascetic rigorism and his antagonism towards secular culture. |
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These depressed him, and he initially strove to overcome ageing, sickness, and death by living the life of an ascetic. |
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The Vedas are believed to have documented a few Tirthankaras and an ascetic order similar to the shramana movement. |
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His followers, who were won over by his eloquence and his severely ascetic example, included the bishops Instantius and Salvianus. |
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However, the famous transformation of Becket into an ascetic occurred at this time. |
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On these he encountered a diseased man, a decaying corpse, and an ascetic. |
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And no, we don't mean bland, boring and ascetic rabbit food. |
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Increasing urbanisation of India in 7th and 6th centuries BCE led to the rise of new ascetic or shramana movements which challenged the orthodoxy of rituals. |
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In its diffuse and open structure, numerous schools and sects of Hinduism have developed and spun off in India with help from its ascetic scholars, since the Vedic age. |
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Ignoring for a moment the problem of the akratic will, one must acknowledge that these businesspersons may now wish to be ascetic but then later feel differently. |
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Buddhist monk Yusai Sakai, known for twice achieving a significant feat of ascetic training in the 1980s, died of heart failure on Monday, his family said Tuesday. |
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