A lot of Bresson's work has been read to have spiritual transcendence, yet also can be read existentially, politically and morally. |
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A postponement of joy for some future, but existentially uncertain, pay-off. |
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The entire world of Grimus is engulfed in the closing pages by existentially obliterating mists. |
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She is a mathlete and all-around geek who is shaken existentially by witnessing her grandmother's death. |
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One thing I won't do is put the central characters into a beach-party situation and have them talking existentially about why they surf. |
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Permanent irony, however, has to be categorised as existentially destructive. |
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All persons are essentially and existentially touched by the transcendent Spirit of God. |
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The events between 1939 and 1945 marked the end, at least existentially, of a beautiful dream and of a dangerous illusion. |
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This was I realized, existentially, what Oikocredit was doing more generally. |
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Also, I will not only read the text scientifically, but existentially, having had my own little experience of leadership. |
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Such threshold questions arise inevitably and existentially when we engage with eurythmy as the active art of shaping and forming living forces. |
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Information security in the use of broadband communication is existentially important! |
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Moreover, the one-sidedly romantic approach discounts the degree to which stability and support through the mundane challenges of life can be existentially attractive. |
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It says that this absolute level is not attained experientially, but is attained in the Paradise Trinity existentially. |
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And in 2009 he scored a personal best, playing opposite himself as an existentially troubled spaceman in Duncan Jones's acclaimed Moon. |
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Human relationship is thus an all-embracing, basic cultural experience, which determines human life existentially. |
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Its purpose is to provide people with support in existentially difficult situations. |
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It is existentially important to know yourself, your background, your standards and your values. |
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I've lived existentially for 25 years, imagining a moment at a time. |
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The other characters struggle, too, to varying material degrees, but all existentially. |
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For a society which so worships youth and health and so fears disease and death, nothing could be more existentially devastating than the death of a child. |
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And work on the promotion concept for the joint cause between the institutional authorities and the dance scene is existentially crucial for the future of the immaterial and fleeting art of dance in Switzerland. |
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General Peter Pace, former US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said we may see the threat differently, but we are existentially threatened. |
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An arsenal of Wittgenstein, hipster slang and literary experimentation helped him pick apart the existentially terrifying contradictions of American life at the turn of the 21st century. |
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Though requiring book length explanation, the meaning is a far more existentially peaceful one that does not contradict freedom of speech. |
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We ought to live Gospel values communally before bringing them to others, because these values are born of lived experience that is shared existentially and they are not the result of intellectual and abstract learning. |
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Since properties depend existentially on something that instantiates them a self must be postulated as the instantiator of all the mental properties we observe. |
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Spirituality is an essential aspect of being that is existentially subjective, transrational, non-local, and non-temporal. |
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The Berlin Theses should be understood as a scientific conception for justifying the existentially necessary replacement of capitalism as a social system and for the creation of a new world-wide community order. |
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The justification of the community order that is existentially necessary to strive for is provided by a more complex point of view in comparison to the Marxist approach. |
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You don't know what to expect because it's just completely, existentially out of anything that you've ever experienced before and it's quite indescribable. |
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Existentially ghosts lie between fact and fiction, between the orbits of believer and nonbeliever, and provide bounteous fodder for storytelling, literature, and film. |
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