It tended to read as a superficial organicism applied over the work's underlying axiality. |
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Much of his work at Harvard focused on metaphysics, especially his emphasis on organicism and process. |
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One felt, in her marriage of geometry and chaos, something of the Post-Minimal organicism of Eva Hesse. |
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Hesse's abstract organicism feels very present, especially in the many wall-mounted sculptures featuring the large pods that have become something of a hallmark for Neff. |
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Similarly, contextualism and organicism are world hypotheses that tend to see things in terms of wholes, even though they are preoccupied with different dimensions. |
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Modern organicism had its proximate roots in the speculations of Driesch and J. S. Haldane. |
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Such organicism is certainly not unique to Winthrop but had filtered to the Puritans through ancient, medieval, and Elizabethan sources, many with Anglican and Papal roots. |
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But piece by piece this is absorbing stuff, and its shared organicism is cohesive. |
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Importantly, then, organicism becomes precisely the basis for valorizing a certain difference in ethics, being, and thought. |
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But organicism in the late work more often takes abject form. |
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It must rethink both free exchange and central administration such that a new model emerges, in which an old organicism empowers all and abandons none. |
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The music of Montréal composer Louis Dufort ranges from a cathartic form of expressionism mostly found in his early works to organicism focusing on the inner structure of sound matter in his latest works. |
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Broadacres was the ultimate landscape combining the best of the cities and the country, organicism, decentralization and usonianism. |
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This line fuses voluptuous organicism with technophilia, producing heteroglot descriptions that have a certain intuitiveness despite not existing in time and space. |
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