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"humanistic" Definitions
  1. believing in or based on humanism (= a system of thought that considers that solving human problems with the help of reason is more important than religious beliefs)

275 Sentences With "humanistic"

How to use humanistic in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "humanistic" and check conjugation/comparative form for "humanistic". Mastering all the usages of "humanistic" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The conversation has to be much more personal and humanistic.
"It is more natural and humanistic, in a way," Wetzel says.
It renders these stories in elemental terms, rather than humanistic ones.
Midwives and nurses have been outspoken advocates for better, humanistic language.
Schama offers an appealingly democratic and humanistic approach to Jewish history.
They inspire a hopeless yearning, a thwarted humanistic feeling of hope.
It's more photojournalistic and humanistic, as opposed to being a sports photographer.
Corporate chieftains also face subtle but pervasive humanistic problems, such as gender issues.
They certainly will not give it up based on scientific or humanistic considerations.
Place your subject in an unrealistic setting, or give inanimate objects humanistic traits.
We have the medications and psychological interventions if offered in knowledgeable, humanistic systems.
He said the attack had destroyed the innocence of a multicultural, humanistic city.
These stories have humanistic messages, but their primary purpose is to thrill the audience.
There's a single mission that is everything Far Cry 5 isn't — warm, humanistic, real.
It's a humanistic portrayal that is found in most of the pictures on display.
Heard was among the first to display electronic music's true potential for humanistic warmth.
Through simple storytelling, they provide humanistic insights into the grander sociopolitical narratives of history.
Friends of mine back home tell me her humanistic instincts are impressive and authentic.
Amy Adams relates to her character on HBO's Sharp Objects in a very humanistic way.
Guitars are the future; overdriven guitars are a humanistic screech for freedom from manufactured nostalgia.
In it she recounts the reality of sex work, with a humorous and humanistic eye.
I heard a lot of fans who related to that more humanistic part of it.
"This idea of photography as a kind of humanistic endeavor is gone," Mr. Chanarin said.
Paparoni suggests more humanistic portrayals hint at the biblical"shared destiny" of Lucifer and mankind.
The treatment philosophy embraced by the consulting psychiatrist was based on humanistic and psychodynamic principles.
All I want as a liberal is an honest, fact-based government with humanistic values.
I just wanted to see how the film would land in the Protestant, humanistic tradition.
I was looking for something that was going to be more character-based, more humanistic.
Stanley KrippnerProfessor, Humanistic and Clinical Psychology, Saybrook UniversityMost dreams are recalled upon awakening in the morning.
Let me make it perfectly clear: the United States of America is an enduring humanistic experiment.
There is a need, more than ever, for clearheaded analysis delivered in a pragmatic, humanistic way.
Zumwalt's steadfast, humanistic form of leadership is desperately needed today - and not just in the military.
But "humanistic" in the solution to those problems—a silent gaze, a smile, and a touch.
If we want to place humanistic care in the front seat, the system has to change.
Instead, it's a humanistic one, with a complicated and not entirely complimentary perspective on convent life.
These are all "machines" of sorts, giving the machine humanistic qualities and a human, mechanistic ones.
"These are all features that can enhance the humanistic encounter we've lost over time," Topol said.
For a show fundamentally about the humanistic tension between emotion and logic, that change could be amazing.
These serve as the most touching portraits of him and his deeply humanistic conceptions of the world.
We all understand the importance of putting out factual, humanistic work that can impact so many people.
Sometimes, especially with the many university campuses in these cities, the modernist embrace served humanistic, developmental aims.
Hence Wagner and Richard Strauss were struck from playbills, while the humanistic Beethoven generally got a pass.
They brought us the self-esteem movement, humanistic psychology, and their thinking is still very influential today.
"Darmok" is a powerful example of TNG's ability to use sci-fi trappings to tell humanistic stories.
Mill demonstrated that democratic citizenship is a way of life, a moral stance and a humanistic adventure.
Rather, its members are committed to evidence-based belief — promoting scientific literacy, say — and to humanistic values.
And when it isn't fawning over Bundy's more humanistic moments, Extremely Wicked can feel like a heist film.
Scandinavia&aposs leaders are more humanistic in their approach toward company culture, and US leaders can adopt that.
Beyoncé sharing some of her personal experience with preeclampsia exposes another humanistic side on the deity that is Bey.
That project in particular speaks to the possible clinical and humanistic leaps exascale computing may be able to provide.
From that point on, Dean becomes an encouraging, humanistic film about finding a way back from self-imposed loserdom.
The Garbage Times and White Ibis, a new pair of related novellas by Sam Pink, crackle with humanistic intimacy.
The way I define my feminism comes from a very humanistic place, finding a place as an individual first.
Victoria Schindler, from Hillsborough, N.C., visited a monastery outside Atlanta while studying Humanistic Psychology at graduate school in 1975.
At a time of insecurity for the humanities, Nussbaum's work champions—and embodies—the reach of the humanistic endeavor.
When the internet first arrives, conveyed by the digital rickshaws of caterwauling modems, it seems like an inherently humanistic endeavor.
When asked why he loved Porsches so much, Jerry Seinfeld once described them as the most "humanistic" of sports cars.
I know it sounds touchy-feely but I think that's what's missing, from municipal up to Washington—the humanistic approach.
Instead, Hägglund follows a humanistic tradition that sees ideas of God or gods as displaced expressions of thwarted human wishes.
There, he was influenced by the ideas of Humanistic Buddhism, a movement that aimed to save China through spiritual renewal.
In 20153 the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies was founded as a place of moral instruction for the "power elite".
The finished version of the book on the show doesn't even include Tyrion, arguably the show's most valuable and humanistic character.
Berman fervently believed in the value of humanistic learning, even when it came off as a bit grand and dust-covered.
Alex Davidson, his longtime film collaborator, said Mr. Laurent had a humanistic but unsentimental approach to filmmaking that reflected his personality.
He is the author of "Reframing the Latino Immigration Debate: Towards a Humanistic Paradigm," by San Diego State University Press (2013).
It takes the basic laws of nature, make it cute, and brings it all down to a humanistic and realistic level.
And I love that ancient kind of ritualistic traditionalism, but the spiritual teachings of things... certainly there are useful humanistic teachings.
" He said that Ms. Bhabha had conceived a "dramatic mise-en-scène" with a humanistic theme: "How we approach the Other.
We need to be drawing on social science, on humanistic disciplines, on law, philosophy, as well as anthropology, sociology, criminal justice.
" They've also been bad for "social science fields that most closely resemble humanistic ones — sociology, anthropology, international relations and political science.
"Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 80% What critics said: "Its pure beating heart and humanistic undertones make it somewhat of a standout.
For the Humanistic New Yorker "Cloud Chamber" (Damiani) is a vibrant collection by Dan Ziskie, the actor and candid street photographer.
Few have relied so heavily as Maduro on shadowy police operations, primly redubbed Operation Humanistic Liberation of the People in 2017.
So I think the idea of having a very humanistic approach to the overall marketing message has been actually very good.
A humanistic education is not about memorizing poems or knowing when X wrote Y, and what Z had to say about it.
This humanistic worldview holds that beauty conquers the deadening aspects of routine; it educates the emotions and connects us to the eternal.
Fabian Muir is an Australian photographer whose documentary work aims to develop humanistic narratives in otherwise politically isolated regions of the world.
He is the author of "Reframing the Latino Immigration Debate: Towards a Humanistic Paradigm," published by San Diego State University Press (2013).
I'm not a socialist at all but I do believe in a nice humanistic approach to the way society should be run.
They teach us how, as cultural producers, we can incorporate the humanistic and intuitive ethos as we navigate the space of art.
Our categories include big themes like: God, Greek Roots, Shakespeare, the American Idea, Markets, American Fiction, a Humanistic Perspective on Science, etc.
What sustained this temporary cultural moment, middlebrow and crass in all sorts of ways but still more successfully humanistic than our own?
He even accused people holding humanistic values as being "covert Christians" because it required a leap of faith to hold to them.
The equality of women to me is a given; making that truth real is the most important humanistic revolution of all time.
"They knew how to create modern environments that were humanistic, not stark," said Kenneth Frampton, a scholar of modern architecture at Columbia University.
In order to give Affetto's face more humanistic expressions, the researchers developed a version with a lot more pneumatic actuators behind the skin.
At the Everson Museum in upstate New York, a mini-retrospective highlights the timeliness of the artist's enduring humanistic and nature-focused themes.
In 1950, Teilhard de Chardin wrote about the Ultra-human or Trans-human, but his transhumanism was humanistic and spiritual, not high-tech.
Sundance is where the humanistic, poignant, daring films premiere that large studios concerned with superhero franchises might not ever get around to making.
And somehow, all this has made him a much more humanistic, insightful analyst of what it's like to live in this world too.
Implicitly, we did not want our son and now, our younger daughter to conclude that death is the final outcome of humanistic activism.
"With its unique dramatic structure and a deeply humanistic message, his music transcended the avant garde and became popular with a wide audience."
Nicolás Guagnini, an artist on her roster, has curated a cerebral group show, "Human Applause," whose artists imbue repeated forms with humanistic qualities.
In addition, Mr. Oz wanted the character of Israel to be defined by humanistic Jewish culture, not only by Jewish religion and nationality.
The plea for a broadened scope is also linked to Wilson's view of the relations between the content of humanistic and scientific work.
In those first decades, the Magnum aesthetic was one of humanistic universalism, and photography offered a lingua franca to imagine a new world.
For the 2012 Olympics, SomeOne designed a set of humanistic pictograms that were meant to tie into the overall graphic identity of the Games.
And somehow, all this has made him a much more humanistic, insightful analyst of what it's like to live in the real world, too.
The museum works with Brigham and Women's Hospital as part of the humanistic curriculum which addresses topics such as ethics and work life balance.
Yet here's one of punk's great cultivators, dismissing everything that was reactive or superficially signaling about it and emphasizing, instead, humanistic vigilance and care.
Hull is our humanistic Dante, our guide through and into his blindness, its existential challenges to his life, family, work, and sense of self.
In 1950 he joined Unesco (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) in Paris, heading its international council for philosophy and humanistic studies.
There were certain great figures, like Socrates, Erasmus, Montesquieu and Rousseau, who helped fitfully propel the nations to higher reaches of the humanistic ideal.
"Facebook would tend to take a much more philosophical/rational approach to these kinds of questions, less humanistic/emotional," one former employee told Motherboard.
For some viewers, the fact that such resonant, humanistic messages flow from the heart and life experience of a woman may come as no surprise.
In 2016, she won the Morison Prize at MIT, given every year to an individual whose work in science and towards humanistic values is exceptional.
To accomplish this, leaders must be grounded by humanistic values and must speak up and clearly articulate what's important to them, their employees and stakeholders.
If you don't balance it with the communal, humanistic and spiritual countercultures from the past then the people, naked, will try to reject it altogether.
One student thought that if Westerners read this article about the health care system in China, they would think that most Chinese are not humanistic.
What I had seen as a significant statement about the English class system was in fact a humanistic document about the real issues of life.
Others see him as a symbol of a humanistic country who, in the Trump era, helped a middle-level country punch above its weight globally.
"Memorable, simple, didn't require articles of faith, but completely humanistic in every way that I valued," he said in an interview for Chicago magazine in 2008.
Those perspectives contain warring theologies—Satanic insight, Christian, Islamic, and Judaic mysticism, humanistic materialism—plural perspectives that dissolve into the romantic crucible of the American project.
There are more humanistic and reliable ways to acquire this information and to provide support to a patient if they have an identified social determinant need.
Nance was twice a finalist for the W. Eugene Smith Award in Humanistic Photography for her body of work on African American spiritual culture in America.
Dreamed up by writer and former Air Force pilot Gene Roddenberry, Star Trek began life as a humanistic science fiction TV show on September 8, 1966.
However, the study was weak, Aigen said, "if you think of music therapy in a more humanistic sense" as providing people the opportunity to enrich their lives.
He has to be tough on terror, yet explain to the French that universally accepted standards of tolerance and humanistic values are France's cultural heritage and pride.
It's part of a year's worth of films that propose that men are essentially useless, and it does so with a humor that's both mean and humanistic.
Lu Guang is a documentary photographer who was awarded the W. Eugene Smith Grant in Humanistic Photography to pursue his work on pollution in China in 2009.
His intimate and humanistic images typified Soul's sensibility, an important outlet for black artistic expression during a period when the mainstream media was not always paying attention.
Joysa Winter, a Humanist celebrant who is a rabbinic candidate with the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism, led the ceremony, which incorporated Jewish and Christian elements.
His sprawling but carefully crafted narratives (with meticulous staging to match) are, on one level, sentimental "gotcha" stories, suggesting Rod Serling or O'Henry in a humanistic mood.
This week was a potent reminder that even in a humanistic liberal country that tends to shy away from global conflicts, we are not immune to violence.
"How indignant a humanistic liberal will be when he is told that his particular type of immanentism is one step on the road to Marxism," he wrote.
In the present-day sections, every other conversation threatens to become an op-ed piece or a humanistic monologue out of lesser John Steinbeck or Arthur Miller.
Rather, he identifies a specific cultural change—the rise of an evidence-based, humanistic approach to scientific inquiry—which led to a shift in behaviour that enabled industrialisation.
Plenty of other shooting and action games have faced this conundrum, struggling to tell serious and humanistic stories through experiences that are designed to make mass murder fun.
But even the more conventional fighting films balance nail-biting bouts with interesting, humanistic stories — most of which are about the lives of economically distressed working-class men.
So when I called Dr. Damasio, who teaches at the University of Southern California, I worried that he might strike down my humanistic observations with unflinching scientific objectivity.
"I can see on a regular basis, firsthand, the respect that Germany has won around the world for its deeply humanistic approach to refugee issues," Ms. Lagarde said.
These two animal drawings are just savage and self-aware enough to wobble with a deeply humanistic esprit fou that imagines the possession of an outrageous animal consciousness.
Institutions like these, curators of humanistic values and culture, are shifting to embrace open exhibition practices as a way to facilitate productive connections between individuals past and present.
Gestural, sprayed, dripped, printed, broken, cropped, layered, rotated, and wiped-away, the letters simultaneously weave information, emotion, frustration, and hope into a powerful humanistic, social, and political message.
For example, Caspary and her community were intrigued by humanistic psychology, the psychological school that emphasized personal growth and fulfillment and which had a significant West Coast following.
The works in Second Nature do so with a humanistic view, as seen in Marija Markovic's three channel video, Dokolica or Katie Chambers painted red tulle on canvas, ILYYLMWAHF.
In one pair of recesses, rows of human heads, their faces symbolically marked, resemble specimens ripe for some variation of humanistic study; overhead, canonical busts rest atop shallow plinths.
"Frank was interested in livability, and the idea of a humanistic architecture that grew with its inhabitants," said Ilse Crawford, a British interior designer who has long admired him.
Watch this from VICE: A recent study published in the Journal of Humanistic Psychology explores the clinical implication of the "wounded healer" archetype in therapist's day-to-day work.
These include "humanistic" (cooing over the creatures and wanting to snuggle them as pets), "dominionistic" (emphasizing turf and control), and "negativistic" (the idea that certain animals are simply gross).
With "Shaft," Mr. Parks translated his humanistic view of urban crime to the screen, inverting racial stereotypes: The film's hero is black, while some of its villains are white.
In such trite spectacles — this one was titled "Fairytale" — the subject is always Ai. By contrast, some of the most humanistic works here were made with very limited resources.
"I identify nontheistically with a Miltonic Satan that defies all subjugation, exalts scientific inquiry and promotes Humanistic, pluralistic values," Temple co-founder and spokesperson Lucien Greaves wrote in 2017.
It continued a trend that began in the 1960s with humanistic and existential psychology, which emphasized the importance of reaching one's innate potential and creating meaning in one's life, respectively.
Even the corporate search and social platforms that later came to monopolize the net originally vowed never to allow advertising because it would taint the humanistic cultures they were creating.
Although the Czech reformers bent over backward to accommodate Russian anxieties, the Soviets invaded in August 1968, bringing the dream of a more humanistic form of socialism to an end.
As that option receded, he said, Mr. Peres increasingly turned his attention to the boundless possibilities of technology and science and the pull of a secular, humanistic type of Judaism.
I am all in favor of proteomics' entering humanistic discourses, but I hope the same rigor will be required of scientific readings as is required of literary and historical ones.
Mr. Master's custom designs, weighing five to 20 pounds, each utilize one of many preset narratives, including secular humanistic, traditional spiritual and nonreligious sentiments, which are often engraved into wood.
Liliya and Alexander Vilenchik, whose families came from Moscow and St. Petersburg, were married in the Jerusalem hills in July by Nardy Grun, a secular rabbi or humanistic spiritual leader.
She said that that might be true in some rare cases, as it is around the world, but that there were many humanistic doctors and health care professionals in China.
A humanistic approach to preventing these shootings could steer us away from the kind of societal panic that leaves ordinary people wondering if it's safe to go to the mall.
It's both a calculated attempt to recapture some of the emotional magic of his successes, and a clinical analysis of how exactly humanistic but effects-driven filmmaking is supposed to work.
The project shares not only a label with Mare Cognitum (with whom Ayloss collaborated on a split, Sol, in 2013) but also a more humanistic approach to the writing of music.
In condemning Spencer, atheists have the chance to offer a robust, humanistic alternative to alt-right atheism that affirms the worth and dignity of all people to an increasingly secular generation.
He chastises his colleagues for blaming terrorism on economics or geopolitics when it is obvious that "many of the precepts of Islamic doctrine" are "floridly anti-humanistic," like religion in general.
A beautiful presentation of Mr. Opalka's art at the Fondazione Querini Stampalia, hung by the inventive curator Chiara Bertola, places his stark, humanistic paintings amid the splendors of a Renaissance palazzo.
Tang said the police will take a "humanistic" approach to minor incidents but warned of resolute measures against more violent actions, and added that he hopes the march will be peaceful.
Its perfectly humanistic androids have deeply human hearts, in contrast to actual humans, who've been cruising in space for so long that they've fallen into a lethargic simulacrum of real life.
Also, if you read about (LSD inventor and chemist Albert) Hofmann, who was a humanistic person with a deep mind, he said that these things (psychedelics) don't just have to be recreational.
Around 1550 in Augsburg, Germany, a strange and intriguing publication called The Book of Miracles was making its way around humanistic circles, depicting various "signs from God" of the approaching Judgment Day.
He's certainly not refusing to accept the reality, but he's also clear ... he feels there's a missing "humanistic" chip in Trump's DNA, so New Yorkers need to rally together to protect themselves.
Straddling the line between the modern, interconnected world and an earlier, humanistic, physically-motivated era, Brooklyn-based artist Dan Funderburgh's illustrations and printed works exemplify the beauty in crafted patterns and ornamentation.
These schools combined an interest in Eastern spirituality with the principles of humanistic psychology and the human potential movement, which emphasized the goodness in all humans and their gift for self-actualization.
"Game of Thrones" is broadly about the evolution from a dynastic, tribal world defined by cycles of violence and revenge toward a more humanistic, cooperative one equipped to confront big existential challenges.
Mark Peterson has received this year's W. Eugene Smith Grant for Humanistic Photography for his long-term work on the rise of white nationalism and how the American confederacy manifests itself today.
Mr. Lindbergh conveyed a timeless, humanistic romanticism in his work, producing instantly recognizable imagery in advertising campaigns for luxury industry names like Dior, Giorgio Armani, Prada, Donna Karan, Calvin Klein and Lancôme.
Nietzsche argued that the humanistic values of most secular people, such as the importance of the individual, human rights and responsibility for the poor, have no place in a completely materialistic universe.
What Seligman named "positive psychology," using a term coined in 1954 by humanistic psychologist Abraham Maslow, promises personal transformation through the redemptive power of devotional practices: counting blessings, gratitude, forgiveness, and meditation.
The somber, muted film still bears Linklater's ramshackle stamp and humanistic approach, but the grief and regret streaked throughout its framework is impossible to ignore and even harder not to be affected by.
That humanistic approach is reflected in his new Florida paintings, just as it was in his series One Hundred Views of Kesennuma, which he began in 2011 following the natural disasters in Japan.
Question 4: The way that might affect the corporate culture, I don't think it's particularly surprising that there's rampant sexism at a company that has essentially anti-humanistic values, but call me crazy.
And it was these children, allergic to authoritarian values, who as young adults were at the center of the student revolts, finding common ground with disaffected "humanistic" intellectuals bent on changing the world.
In today's context, taking a humanistic view of American education reveals the cultural implications of the adversity score: Quantifying students' pain and their relationships to their environments is flip, condescending, and potentially dangerous.
Three months ago, Branson called me from Necker, his private island in the Caribbean, and said, "We see ours being the spaceship for Earth"—a vehicle whose purpose is not escapist but humanistic.
Some scientists might disagree that it was Neanderthals who painted such humanistic, advanced art, said Wil Roebroeks, a paleolithic archaeologist at Leiden University who was not involved in the study, in an email.
Honorees included Brunello Cucinelli, who received the Community and Social Justice award for what was described as his "humanistic capitalism" in Solomeo, the town in Perugia that he has helped restore and support.
It is troubling to see historic preservation turn away from this humanistic ethos into a set of arcane bureaucratic procedures that appear to the layperson as reactionary, elitist and contrary to social solidarity.
The tension between containment and release is fertile humanistic ground, and the viewer wonders if the oppositional pressures animating  the "Accumulations" could be applied to the relationship  between the individual and the institution.
People has lost credibility about political parties, about government and this has to be change, again that's why I always claim, love, compassion - a humanistic attitude is what really will make this world better.
I would imagine working in that environment would be very different from any other job because you're dealing with all of these large, humanistic, ethical, moral questions as you go about your daily tasks.
Humanistic and reasonable policy, fair and balanced representation of physicians, and promotion of the health of this nation matter far less to the AMA than does having a friend in Washington who will listen.
The Satanic Temple (TST) a nontheistic religious group that says it is dedicated to humanistic values, evidence-based scientific inquiry, and the separation of church and state, is currently suing Twitter for religious discrimination.
This lively, intriguing and insistently humanistic flight of fancy — imagined conversations between hard-line conservative Pope Benedict XVI and his more progressive successor, Pope Francis — brims with wit, warmth and some tantalizing what-ifs.
Yet these very walls contain a record of human existence that serves as an inspiration for this multi-generational group of artists, who share a humanistic philosophy and have a tremendous sense of social responsibility.
But the fact that the quake is coming is only a small sliver of the story—what happens when it does is, arguably, the most important part, at least from a humanistic point of view.
It was, in a lot of ways, the speech that you'd expect from the spouse of a political candidate—it took the policy details that they sell on the stump and colored in humanistic detail.
A similar conversation occurs midway through McDonagh's second feature, Seven Psychopaths—a less successful picture, mostly because it's more concerned with its winking meta-textual framework than the larger humanistic concerns of his other work.
"It is a perfect expression of Michael's humanistic design philosophy, with its thoughtful integration of architecture, interiors, furniture, artifacts, artwork and landscape," Linda Kinsey, a principal at Michael Graves Architecture & Design, said in a statement.
But despite the erotic charge, Mac seems more interested in promoting Whitman as a humanistic alternative (who happened to be gay) to the carnage of the war and to the fatuous minstrelsy of Stephen Foster.
Indeed, we are now seeing a good deal of work on "continental" philosophers move from philosophy to other humanistic disciplines (for example, in language, communication and film studies departments) and to the softer social sciences.
This isn't a sprawling canvas like its predecessor but a frighteningly intimate portrait of a woman in crisis, as well as — surprisingly — a humanistic and personal history of the idealistic beginnings of the Zionist movement.
He had finally proved that popular entertainment was a real and serious job, one that could combine his political and his humanistic interests, and he was able to relax his neurotic grip on social issues.
And it cannot ignore the importance of "instrumental" knowledge: Organized policy research in areas like economic development and urban planning can genuinely serve the common good (just as, conversely, humanistic inquiry can nourish reactionary elitism).
De Chirico's humanistic, Italianate take on Cubism, however, did exactly that, and to gaze into the crisp space and crystalline color of his greatest compositions is to scrub your vision clean, time and time again.
They learn that racist ideology emerged out of the need to reconcile the dehumanizing and violent practice of slavery with Christianity as well as attempts at more humanistic secular thinking that emerged during the Enlightenment period.
They are bewildered by the impression that Israel is abandoning the humanistic vision of Theodor Herzl and taking on a character that does not suit its own core values or the spirit of the 21st century.
The Dries news will put new focus on whether a designer known for his singular aesthetic and highly humanistic approach to business will be able to maintain his signatures under the aegis of a corporate parent.
The use of robots takes advantage of the fact that political campaigns, elections and even open markets make humanistic assumptions, trusting that there is wisdom or at least legitimacy in crowds and value in public debate.
A manifesto published by one of five founding members, Barbara Jones-Hogu, makes their intentions explicit, citing humanistic depictions, vivid color schemes, and educational pro-Black subject matters as vital to the collective's praxis, among other things.
Putin said the decision to bar Russian athletes, including those who had not tested positive for any banned substances, was a vivid manifestation "of how the humanistic foundations of sport and Olympism are shamelessly flouted by politics".
"By supporting the gay and lesbian community, you're communicating that you're a progressive, forward-thinking, humanistic brand ... a brand for everybody," Adam Ferrier, global chief strategy officer at media agency Cummins & Partners, told Mashable at the time.
Reacting against the rising proletarianism of American writing before World War II and the specter of Soviet power, American writer-teachers promoted the idea of creative writing as a defense of the individual and his humanistic expression.
Reich inherited from his parents a humanistic bent: His mother, Tova, is a novelist of some renown; his father, Walter, is a psychiatrist who was the first director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.
When Rabbi Borowitz began publishing his groundbreaking philosophical works in the 1960s, liberal and humanistic Jewish thinkers who had stressed the pre-eminence of reason as the basis for human values were in something of a postwar crisis.
She'll doubtlessly be remembered for her sophisticated, nuanced and profoundly humanistic speculative fiction, and of course for her series of magical coming-of-age novels, the Earthsea series, without which the Harry Potter megafranchise could scarcely be imagined.
While it doesn't quite depict Tesla as the "nicest geek ever," as The Oatmeal dubbed him, it thoroughly averts the "arrogant genius" archetype and makes a case for Tesla being mostly uninterested in people but still deeply humanistic.
But this year's offering, a musical adaptation of the Shakespeare comedy by Shaina Taub, directed by Laurie Woolery, may have been the finest yet, with the humanistic theme built into its title made evident everywhere you looked onstage.
The issue that the tech industry is trying to maneuver their way around, for better or worse, is the same issue that can stunt the progress of "humanistic thinking" in the development of artificial intelligence, according to Dean.
The son of a dealer of diamonds and luxury goods and the heiress of a mint master, Hoefnagel was supposed to enter the family business, and to that end received a comprehensive humanistic education with extensive travels throughout Europe.
The "slightly worn" earth tones of the final product — the "tan and sandy stuff" of Guinness's relaxed yet noble raiment — Tom Mollo said, represent a soft, humanistic contrast to the stark slabs of color worn by his imperial enemies.
Over the course of his 60-year filmmaking career, Wajda became known for drawing on political subjects in his native Poland to make humanistic movies focusing on ordinary people's lives that were also, somehow, a political call to action.
To the Editor: I went into medicine because I've always thought that the field existed on a truly egalitarian and humanistic plane of its own, outside of things like a patient's finances, class, nationality, ethnicity, gender, politics or religion.
Nearby is also the Barenboim-Said Academy, a college combining musical and humanistic education for students from the Middle East and an outgrowth of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra founded by Mr. Barenboim and the cultural critic Edward Said.
We were particularly interested to find that the quantitative section of the GRE had some of the strongest predictive power for success in law school, perhaps because legal reasoning is similarly rigorous and structured, notwithstanding its other humanistic aspects.
That sense of empathy is one of her art's abiding, motivating impulses; it is a humanistic starting point from which much of it seems to flow — a spirit that both emanates from and envelops the paintings of Love-Birth-Death.
Flanagan clearly has the chops to deliver films that combine great pacing and suspense with a lot of humanistic warmth, but when left to his own devices, he tends to take lots of narrative shortcuts and sometimes fumbles the ending.
The United States has worried for many years about the security of its satellites and how to best protect them, said Barry Strauss, a military and naval historian who is a humanistic studies professor at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.
It is the contemporary analogue of Ildefons Cerdà's plan for the city in the 19th century (see my piece: "Barcelona's remarkable history of rebirth and transformation"), reflecting the same holistic perspective and humanistic goals, as well as similar morphology and geometry.
These days, on university campuses and beyond, the old, humanistic faith that everyone is the same at heart has been ousted by an essentialist idea of black- and whiteness, which sees the experiences of each as distinct, even mutually incomprehensible.
So, I have to concede that at least 80 percent of my negative reaction to this inspiring and deeply humanistic people-gathering was a function of my own psychopathology, rather than the presence in one place of so many astrologers.
During his visit, Auden met James Conant, then the president of Harvard and a man associated with the Apollonian transformation of the modern university, its remaking as a scientific-technical powerhouse with its old religious and humanistic purposes hollowed out.
Magnum was founded as a photographer-run commercial agency in the years after World War II, and its first members, among them Henri Cartier-Bresson and Robert Capa (the brother of this museum's founder), shot humanistic reportage with new, lightweight cameras.
For every dish that conspicuously originated from one particular city or county or region, there is a backstory—often an odd, humanistic one, pertaining to things our uncles and great-grandmothers and former mayors did that make us squirm to think about.
Along the way he's exhibited work all over the US and Europe and racked up awards; he is the three-time recipient of the New York State Arts Council fellowship and was also awarded the Leica Medal of Excellence for Outstanding Humanistic Photojournalism.
Meanwhile, the academy is filled with blisteringly smart, well-sourced scholars of technology and communications who carry Weizenbaum's humanistic torch—such as Latanya Sweeney, who has studied online discrimination, and Shoshana Zuboff, who has written on "surveillance capitalism," a term she helped popularize.
For younger Jews who may question their Judaism, the more they see that there is such a thing as Jewish civilization—with humanistic values that represent the answer to growing intolerance and xenophobia internationally—the more they are likely to retain their identity.
I am profoundly committed to and believe that it is impossible to operate a democracy, and the specific society that I assume that we all value, without a very strong commitment to the humanities and to the values of the humanistic enterprises.
"The whole concept of Multics was going to be something that revolutionized the way people used computers in a way that was humanistic and friendly," said Peter Neumann, a computer scientist who was then a Bell Labs researcher who participated in the project.
His vision is humanistic, and he insists that the most important goal of developing virtual reality is human connection, although he does talk about the fascination of seeing his own hand in V.R. a bit too often to be convincing on that point.
I think I'm hopeful because I do think there is another narrative, a narrative that could be more humane and humanistic and not quite as cutthroat, and maybe I'm hopeful because, as I'm talking to you, that I do believe there are cycles.
Meanwhile, exhibitions that continue to employ such tactics end up making use of semiotic sabotage that threatens the humanistic foundations upon which progressive movements have been working toward for decades, a strategy that ought to met, contested, and resisted at every possible turn.
This precise combination is not recoverable: Communism is dead (I think), the religious landscape of the 1950s is even deader, and the humanistic history of midcentury was Eurocentric in a way that a more globalized and multiracial society could neither embrace nor sustain.
The density of Ms. Molnár's drawings, whether executed by pen or plotter, embodies a pleasure in repetition and exactitude that feels closer to the humanistic minimalism of Agnes Martin and Nasreen Mohamedi than to Paris's groovy-for-groovy's-sake Op and Kinetic art.
Jean Renoir transformed the history of cinema with humanistic, precisely edited films like "The Grand Illusion," and especially "The Rules of the Game" — considered one of the greatest films ever made, though it was a box-office flop on its release in 1939.
Jean Renoir transformed the history of cinema with humanistic, precisely edited films like "The Grand Illusion," and especially "The Rules of the Game" — considered one of the greatest films ever made, though it was a box-office flop on its release in 233.
Its Center for Humanistic Education, founded in 1995 by Raya Kalisman after she spent a year at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, runs a six-month program for Jewish, Arab and Druze high school students, mostly from northern Israel.
The billionaire CEO reportedly met and Cucinelli in San Francisco four years ago and the two men bonded over the designer's belief in the philosophy of "humanistic capitalism," the idea that business should be ethical and that employees should have a healthy work-life balance.
Rajneesh mesmerized his followers with a stupefying amalgam of Eastern mystical mumbo jumbo (Rajneesh, like Charles Manson, talked frequently about the need to "lose" or "give up" the ego) and the language and techniques of the then-prevalent humanistic psychology and human potential movements.
But the potential for these humanistic ideals—that societies should lift up their most vulnerable, that quality of life for all is more important than the material advancement of some—to actually elbow their way into the system seemed to die right around 1980.
Just how fertile, Americans seem to have forgotten of late, and in this, her fifth collection of essays, Marilynne Robinson is here to remind us — of the Midwest's intellectual and political heritage, of the public university's democratic and humanistic origins, and of much else.
" Daniel Mizrahi said in an email that his father "credited growing up in cosmopolitan Alexandria as being decisive in establishing his humanistic and pluralistic worldview, and he was a firm believer and supporter of the possibility of good will and understanding between Arabs and Jews.
The Existential-Humanistic Institute, founded in 1997, is a collective of therapists and philosophers who have been puttering along in mostly quiet private practice for years, working with clients who are struggling not only with relatively ordinary issues but with their very purpose on earth.
He has chosen to focus on "Rashomon" as the fulcrum of Kurosawa's career, emphasizing what he regards as the early influences in the filmmaker's life that fed his thematic vision — specifically, its mixture of the appalling and the redemptive, the apocalyptic and the humanistic.
In this way, sharing my method not only satisfies the most basic requirement of ethical participation in humanistic culture — citation and the acknowledgment of other artists — but also reflects an awareness of a scientific tradition of reproducibility and an intellectual commitment to sharing knowledge freely.
It was a sign that Moffat, who took over as showrunner with that episode just as Chibnall did with this one, was making a break from Davies's sometimes cheesy but always humanistic approach to Doctor Who, in favor of elaborate structural games and puzzle-solving.
Usually but not always this means romantic love, although "How I Tell Him" cuts that distinction close and those first two songs make you wonder exactly how secular this humanistic Swede might be--the Mormon is envied, the cancer survivor learns his friend was praying for him.
This 1987-set prequel to the "Transfomers" movies is the first one in the series not directed by Michael Bay, and Travis Knight — who made the Oscar-nominated 2016 animated film "Kubo and the Two Strings" — looks like he's bringing a more humanistic approach to the material.
His solution is one of the most enduring swindles the management elite has ever perpetrated on the rank-and-file—the substitution of the spiritual rewards of work for higher pay; the humanistic argument that money doesn't bring happiness to the worker, kindness and personal fulfillment do.
Though Mr. Owens and Mr. Gvasalia grew up at opposite ends of the earth and represent radically different parts of the design spectrum, they have it in common that they seem to operate from a similar respect for humanistic values that, alas, are generally in short supply.
This little-known curio stars Walter Huston as a corrupt, apathetic and adulterous president who, after nearly losing his life in an accident, undergoes a humanistic change of heart, becoming an all-powerful but benevolent leader under the tutelage of the titular angel and, ahem, Abraham Lincoln.
But they are captivated by the Expo's lofty, humanistic rhetoric and nationalist underbelly — and while the show fits into a larger vogue in the art world for all things late '267s, it also pulses with a tenderness toward Expo's utopianism that makes it more than just a belated critique.
Machines have become quite good at measuring the acquisition of arithmetical operations, but they are much less good at quantifying such skills as creativity or flexibility—let alone measuring less easily definable aspects of a humanistic education, such as literary appreciation or artistic sensibility or the development of empathy.
Like the previous two records, Until Then, Goodbye and A Day In The Life, Marx's wobbly ink work paints an organic face on Lawrence's humanistic machine music, much of which is derived from field-recording sources and, on the new album, samples from his band project, Sky Walking.
It was less algorithmic and much more humanistic, but at the same time, when I was there and after being a surfer, I ultimately became a ... I think I was called at one point a brand assistant, which is the lowest guy on the totem pole in the marketing department.
In Scandinavia, 25 to 30 days of annual paid leave is the norm — and most people take them, compared to the much fewer days which many don&apost even use in the US. Scandinavian leadership tradition is quite humanistic, informal, and less authoritarian than what we see in many American companies.
The NFL is not alone in attempting to retroactively apply a visionary and humane sheen to their pursuit of profit; the idea that there is something not just courageous and great-hearted but humanistic about the products we're sold is the singular affectation of the version of capitalism under which we currently live.
Herman Deparice-Okomba, director of the Montreal-based Center for The Prevention of Radicalization Leading to Violence, said the sheer obscenity of someone gunning people down in a place of worship in peace-loving Canada had convulsed the country because it shattered Canadians' image of themselves as the ultimate humanistic, open nation.
Netflix has done a good job of finding and cultivating shows that have that same humanistic attention to the cultural and social importance of food; the way that great food can be found anywhere, even in our own homes; why having an adventurous palate actually can make us less insular, more interesting people.
In all, while the visual portion of Insect Artifice can appeal to whoever likes botanical and naturalistic artworks with heavy use of line work (Brooklyn tattoo artists, I'm looking at you!), the written text requires a high level of humanistic education and erudition, and the reader might have benefitted from a little more handholding.
Centering on the A.I. Avenger (who recently made his way into the Marvel Cinematic Universe with Avengers: Age of Ultron and Captain America: Civil War) and the family he created for himself, it's a deeply humanistic science fiction tale about the suffering and trauma that accompany the "normal" lives the Vision family strives toward.
Initially this took the form of increasingly intense biblical hermeneutics — notably including a quest to find out the "true" date of Easter, which he thought most churches had gotten wrong — but a vision of God he claimed to have experienced in 1972 transformed his faith, convincing him he had been too literal and insufficiently humanistic.
Programs that focus on humanistic applications for the greater good perform remarkably better where diversity is concerned: A new UC Berkeley Ph.D. program in development engineering boasted a 50 percent female enrollment rate in its inaugural 2014 class, and MIT's D-Lab, which aims to build technology to improve the lives of the impoverished, is 74 percent female.
But you seem to make an effort to empathise with the people you disagree with... Ms Wynn: I try to swim against the current as much as possible when it comes to the tribalism that defines the way people do politics on social media, and I try to present myself as an individual and humanistic voice.
A humble farmer's son and onetime engineering student who dropped out of university, Cucinelli became a self-taught philosopher before he began selling cashmere sweaters, and eventually launched his company with a distinctively humanistic formulation of what a capitalist enterprise could achieve — for which he is being awarded Germany's prestigious Global Economy Prize for "Honorable Merchant" this Sunday.
Tom Matano, who teaches industrial design at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, calls the whole thing "anti-humanistic" (though notes he'd like to see the truck on the road before he can really judge it.) Blade Runner, which Musk has said helped inspire his newest creation, is about lab-grown humanoids created to be slaves.
It's always been a conundrum that the same company that deliberately lies about the news in order to push its right-wing agenda is also the one that produces such humanistic movies as 12 Years a Slave and Slumdog Millionaire, and TV shows like Modern Family and Glee — shows that have tried explicitly to push the country in a progressive direction.
In those discourses, originally delivered in Bombay in the early seventies, before the establishment of the ashram in Pune (Poona), India, Rajneesh drew parallels between the theories of the humanistic psychology and human potential movements and his interpretation of the Eastern sexual philosophy and practice of Tantra, which all share the theme of liberation from the emotional and sexual repressiveness of society.
" Nathaniel Branden, a well-known humanistic psychologist in Los Angeles, had a similar reaction to some of Rajneesh's published discourses, particularly certain passages in The Mustard Seed, In an October 2, 1978, letter to a friend at Rajneesh's ashram, Branden wrote that Rajneesh "explains and justifies the slaughter of millions of Jews throughout history on the grounds that the Jews killed Jesus.
Their noble, classicizing piers and temple-like porticos, which recall Greek and Roman architecture, and the soaring romantic I-beams, which recall the intricate ribbing of Gothic cathedrals, proclaimed that a democratic, capitalist country like the United States could carry on the traditions of a great civilization — "America's humanistic nationalism," as the religious scholar Martin E. Marty said at the time.
Auden is one of his main subjects; the others are T.S. Eliot, Simone Weil, Jacques Maritain and C.S. Lewis, a group of religious thinkers whose wartime writings Jacobs depicts as a sustained attempt, in the shadow of totalitarian ambition and liberal crisis, to offer "a deeply thoughtful, culturally rich Christianity" as the means to a postwar humanistic renewal in the West.
The analyst is a historian named Ben Schmidt, who just five years ago wrote an essay arguing that the decline of the humanities was overstated, that enrollment in humanistic majors had declined in the 1970s, mostly as women's employment opportunities began switching to more pre-professional tracks, but that since then there has been a basic stability, at best a soft declension.
It makes "the activist community" sound approachable; it makes "the skin-care community" sound important; it makes "the Christian community" sound inclusive and kind; it makes "the medical community" sound folksy and skilled at the bedside; it makes "the homeless community" sound voluntary; it makes "the gun rights community" sound humanistic; it makes "the tech community" sound like good citizens.
And I believe that he entered them not so much to establish the dominance of his own view — as a believer in God, in humanistic education, or in the promise of the United States — but to help put the debates on sane ground, to level them through reason and friendly engagement, to be a peacemaker and to advance the invaluable work of civil public discourse and argument.
But as with another, more literally humanistic pursuit — childbearing — that had seemed to stabilize after a post-1960s collapse but now is in decline again, the absence of a post-Great Recession bounce-back for the humanities suggests that the economic calamity of 2008 was a precondition but not the only cause, and that other cultural shifts had left the humanities ripe for another era of collapse.

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