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"intellectualize" Definitions
  1. intellectualize (something) to deal with or explain things by thinking about them in a logical way, rather than responding emotionally
"intellectualize" Antonyms

64 Sentences With "intellectualize"

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

I don't really intellectualize much of the processes of it.
My music is written for ears; you don't need to intellectualize it.
A great shift around how you intellectualize you feelings will take place today.
"It's hard to intellectualize whether an idea is good or not," Horwitz says.
What I loved is that it was so grounded in a spirit that you can't intellectualize.
You have to go into that spiritual place; you can't intellectualize your way out of it.
I know you're thinking I'm just looking for ways to intellectualize petty crime, but fuck it.
"They over-intellectualize everything away, they talk about labels and they are rigid in that way," she said.
We have a huge culture of spectacle, but I think that sometimes we over-intellectualize dressing too much.
He possesses the ability to intellectualize his father's passion, but unlike Casey, he is not moved emotionally by it.
I think you can intellectualize and say, "I agree with the movement," but you have to make it personal.
"People ask me that a lot, and I'm trying to intellectualize why I don't, but I just don't," she says.
Be mindful of a tendency to intellectualize heartfelt topics when partners or close friends are leaning in for more intimacy.
I found myself quickly trying to intellectualize my loss by turning it into a feminist issue that I could analyze.
"I realize that my privilege has made me intellectualize or otherwise minimize race issues like this," he wrote to Netflix staff.
I want to know how she was able to intellectualize her experience and how she was able to make it beautiful.
Publications like American Greatness and American Affairs, which are trying to intellectualize Trumpism, could conceivably present a commercial challenge down the line.
"I have never really approached or addressed the slavery comment fully, and it's not something for me to over-intellectualize," West said.
And they'd just stand there and sway and stroke their beard and over-intellectualize music that was quick thick and fucking obvious.
The moon is in Taurus today, asking you to slow down and feel your feelings—don't hide from them or over-intellectualize things.
David Duke understood that robes and hoods were no longer viable and believed his responsibility was to repackage, intellectualize and dress up its ideas.
Today he is their lead spokesperson and first line of defense -- a man whose job it is to intellectualize the argument for self-imposed segregation.
I think that song when I was singing it, it was also trying to convince myself it didn't matter, trying to intellectualize an overwhelming emotion.
Much of Ms. Womack's catalog has pushed against the perception of countrified emoting as a maudlin affair, but she's never been one to intellectualize her approach.
Let's not let the perfect be the enemy of the good as we debate, intellectualize, testify, criticize — and continue to leave the F.T.C. holding the bag.
Let's not let the perfect be the enemy of the good as we debate, intellectualize, testify, criticize — and continue to leave the F.T.C. holding the bag.
Venus retrograde also inspired you to reconnect to your body, and to remember what feels good—and to reflect on how you intellectualize your response to pleasure.
I hate almost every superhero movie, and it bums me out when adults try to intellectualize them and talk about them like they're not big video-game commercials.
It is easy to intellectualize a problem from far away, but to actually witness the living nightmare that others go through on a daily basis is something else.
To fully enjoy it, it is best to follow Carrington's advice to her visitor: "You're trying to intellectualize something desperately, and you are wasting your time," she tells him.
Appropriation has a long and storied history within the context of art, and that makes it easy to intellectualize a process that, at its heart, means taking something from someone else.
With "Art as Ritual," the work on display was that of human emotion, art action as a means of processing difficult experiences, and my immediate response was to recoil and intellectualize.
I think there was a lot of kind of zen like stuff going on there without realizing it at the time, and without really being able to intellectualize or process it.
According to Schwartz, no matter how much she tried to intellectualize the trolling, nothing could have prepared her for how vulnerable the attacks on her appearance, religion, and values made her feel.
Where most media depictions try to intellectualize such points of friction through incredulous think pieces, Chicklet captures the sloppiness of what it's actually like to go through it, camera shakes and all.
"I have never really approached or addressed the slavery comment fully, and it's not something for me to over-intellectualize," West said in an interview on radio station 107.5 WGCI last month.
"It seems like Cary could apply his intelligence to any project, that he can intellectualize telling the story of anything, even if it doesn't have to do with him," Jonah Hill says.
And openness is protective against the things that went wrong at MIT — a culture of secrecy that enabled people to intellectualize the indefensible and end up giving cover to a sexual predator.
Conversations is about how often smart young people can over-intellectualize themselves to death while trying to actually enjoy the spoils of their youth — and it's about female friendship-meets-romance, and love, and sex, and ambition, and family.
"The brands are finally starting to intellectualize the fact that to succeed in China, they need to go online," said Alexis Bonhomme, co-founder of CuriosityChina, a Beijing-based digital marketing and tech company that works with luxury brands.
I worked with a lot of the concept artists, a lot of the people who helped me design and intellectualize the film were very familiar with the original, which is why they were all desperate to work on the project.
There's a quote I came across in 2013, when I was trying to intellectualize my way out of depression with books and TED talks, that I didn't internalize or believe until I discovered how raving to techno could make me feel.
Big dreams and good vibes went down early this morning, with the Moon in Capricorn trine lucky Jupiter at 3:33 AM. The Moon meets chatty Mercury at 12:39 PM, giving us all a chance to intellectualize or talk about our feelings.
Yet, Germany would rather import most of the limited coal they use and is in the process of ending its nuclear power generation capability by 85033, thus increasing their dependency on Russian natural gas, even as they intellectualize the potentially devastating effects of that dependency.
While there's probably something enlightening to say about its pastiche of dance music, to intellectualize would be to miss the point a bit, because for all "903UL"'s cleverness, it also just absolutely fucks, and is easily the closest humanity got to achieving the power of flight all year.
I try to put myself in the shoes of that immigration officer and, though I'm unable to imagine the situation in which I make the same choices, I can, thanks to the Stanford prison experiment, intellectualize the psychological mechanisms that have allowed seemingly average, rank and file officers throughout history to carry out atrocities.
Knowing war as I do, being on a 100 percent total permanent disability from the Vietnam War, I understand that those who are armchair warriors who intellectualize war and make reference to what war is all about will crawl out from under their rocks and make up excuses as to why President Trump shouldn't have used deadly force, but they would be dead wrong.
He works through feeling and inspiration. As soon as he feels a move, he can reproduce it and interpret it. He does not need to intellectualize." According to Bourzat, "Nathalie is always pulling the couple ahead and pushing us to work.
As soon as he feels a move, he can reproduce it and interpret it. He does not need to intellectualize." According to Bourzat, "Nathalie is always pulling the couple ahead and pushing us to work. She brings her extraordinary capacity to work.
"Experience" is an essay by Ralph Waldo Emerson. It was published in the collection Essays: Second Series in 1844. The essay is preceded by a poem of the same title. In one passage, Emerson speaks out against the effort to over- intellectualize life - and particularly against experiments to create utopias, or ideal communities.
Yet it was also Erich Heller who, earlier, in his own youth, had diagnosed the main theme of Tonio Kröger to be the infatuation and entanglements of a passionate heart, destined to give shape to, intellectualize, its feelings in artistic terms.Erich Heller, Flucht aus dem zwanzigsten Jahrhundert: Eine kulturkritische Skizze (Vienna, Saturn-Verlag, 1938), p. 9.
It premiered on Lifetime Movie network on August 29, 2009. The director of Stranger With My Face, Jeff Renfroe, greatly praised what he saw when working with Johnson and her costar Andrew Francis. "They're both young actors who came from the school of working from the gut and not trying to intellectualize everything." Before the album's release date, Epic Records removed Johnson from their Artist Lists.
The Greeks considered paideia to be carried out by the aristocratic class who tended to intellectualize their culture and their ideas. The culture and the youth were "moulded" to the ideal of kalos kagathos, "beautiful and good." Greek paideia is the idea of perfection, of excellence. The Greek mentality was "to be always pre-eminent"; Homer records this charge of King Peleus to his son Achilles.
When under stress, Rationals may intellectualize or repress their feelings. The informative Rationals (Architects and Inventors) prefer theorizing, designing, and prototyping their ideas, which may cause them to feel overburdened when called upon to finalize their ideas into practical operation by themselves. This can result in feelings of inadequacy, which can lead to poor or no execution. The directive Rationals (Masterminds and Fieldmarshals) experience stress when their long-range vision is resisted or derailed.
I never intellectualize – the eyes and senses dictate my hands directly. Once the work has been completed a symbolism becomes so obviously and profoundly evident that I have to regard it as supernatural.” - Imogen Stuart (Notes On The Life Of A Sculptor, Milltown Studies 22 (1988) 92–94. A book on her work and life was published in 2002 (Imogen Stuart, Four Courts Press), with an introduction by Brian Fallon and a personal tribute by Peter Harbison.
Instead, a feminist is less likely to view the object as a disinterested interpreter, and intellectualize the sensation (Hilde Hein). Morse discusses how art is a social institution. The influence of institutions comes from those who created the structure, which is mainly by men. From a spectator's point of view, men looking at women, compared to women looking at women, produces different social implications. When understanding a feminist perspective, Morse discusses the ideas of “self-defined” and “self-determined” art by women artists.
" Lyons calls the book a "superior entertainment" and remarks that "Deighton seeks a literate audience" but that protagonist Patrick Armstrong "display[s] only the vestigial personal memory needed to flesh him out, so that he may neither learn significantly from previous adventures, nor (God forbid) intellectualize overmuch." However Pearl K. Bell writing in The New Leader called the book "an impenetrable lemon". "The artful fuzziness so completely overwhelmed the plot that the book was unreadable, all murk and no menace." Bell said that "evasive indirection has been Deighton's trademark since his first spy novel, The Ipcress File, appeared in 1963.
Hugues Panassié, Red Prysock, and Tiny Grimes, New York, New York, between 1946 and 1948 (William P. Gottlieb photo) Jazz Hot is acclaimed for having innovated scholarly jazz criticism before and after World War II — jazz criticism that was also distinguished with literary merit, and in some articles before 1968, with leftist political views. Several of its early contributors are credited for helping to intellectualize jazz journalism and to draw attention to it from fine arts establishments and institutions. Jazz Hot has played an integral role integrating jazz into a French national identity. From inception of the First and Second Series, until November 2007, Jazz Hot was published monthly but irregularly, typically combining months in the summers and sometimes the winters.
Both films are true to his signature fusing of picture to music and were specifically designed as a way for viewers to connect emotionally with the beauty of our planet, rather than intellectualize it through a discussion about it. Using music as the narrative, Echoes of Creation is a 40-minute journey through Alaska, the Pacific Northwest and as far south as California, featuring a soundtrack by Grammy nominated composer David Arkenstone and spoken word by Karen Hutton. Its prequel Sacred Earth also follows Nickman's unique fusion of picture to music throughout the American Southwest, featuring music by Grammy-nominated composer David Lanz and spoken word by Academy Award-winning actor Linda Hunt and in the finale features a dance performance by Caroline Richardson, former First Soloist with the National Ballet of Canada.
This behavior may arise from an instinctive imperative to ensure that the prey is weak enough to be killed without endangering the cat. In colloquial usage, it has often been generalized to mean the advantage constantly shifts between the contestants, leading to an impasse or de facto stalemate. In classical game theory, cat and mouse classifies as a "copycat" archetype whereby there exists no equilibrium, and most importantly, no endgame, its two protagonists, Dot and Ditto, running amok in their game space to infinity, with no endpoint to their game anywhere in sight attributable to a defective reward system; conflicting incentives. Theoretical active reading on "cat and mouse," or "Dot and Ditto" is ominous in its implication; multiple protagonists, each armed a passive strategy, can remain theoretically locked in total perpetual war indefinitely, wholly unable to rise to a plateau sufficient to intellectualize their plight.
Trilling defines an idea as the product of the juxtaposition of two emotions, and as the key dialectic component of literature. He sees the anxiety about ideas in literature as actually an anxiety that ideology, a "respect for certain formulas" whose "meaning and consequence we have no clear understanding," will intellectualize the power and spontaneity out of life. Poets, Trilling argues, can be attracted to ideas without being "violated" by them, and poets often try to develop consistent intellectual positions along with their poetry. Trilling elevates the importance of "activity" in literary thinking that keeps ideas constantly at play with one another. He categorizes the American writers John Dos Passos, Eugene O’Neill, and Thomas Wolfe as violated by an idea because of passivity, and argues that the "piety" of writers like Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner allowed them to engage their hearts deeply with ideas.
He is grabbed in the dark by two henchmen, and Scharlach emerges from the shadows. Scharlach reveals that Lönnrot arrested his brother—who then died in prison—and that Scharlach swore to avenge his death. Killing the rabbi was accidental, but Scharlach used Lönnrot's tendency to over-intellectualize (a police report in the newspaper clued him in to the fact that Lönnrot was following a kabbalistic pattern to track the criminals) to lure Lönnrot to this place. Lönnrot becomes calm in the face of his death and declares that Scharlach made his maze too complex: Instead of a four sided rhombus it should have been but a single line of murders, with each subsequent murder taking place on the halfway point (A 8 km from B, C 4 km from each, D 2 km from A and C). Lönnrot says that philosophers have been lost on this line, so a simple detective should feel no shame to do the same (a reference to Zeno's Paradox).
Torun doesn't intellectualize this in any way; no experts show up to discuss our tendency to anthropomorphize animals, seeing ourselves in them. But several people talk frankly about having felt broken in some way, and about how taking care of homeless cats feels redemptive." In The Washington Post, Vanessa H. Larson wrote, "The camerawork skillfully mimics a cat’s-eye view, with extended sequences filmed just over the animals’ shoulders using remote-controlled camera rigs that follow them as they saunter around, forage for meals and get into hissing matches. Interspersed throughout the film are also beautiful drone-captured aerial shots of Istanbul’s sprawling streets and the Bosporus waterway, which impart a strong sense of place." Glenn Kenny wrote in The New York Times, "There’s a good deal of projection in the verbal accounts of the animals' lives, but the movie, with its mobile camera low to the ground or looking down at cat-navigated rooftops, doesn’t do much to contradict the indirect anthropomorphizing.... The movie is replete with ingeniously constructed mini-narratives, including a turf war.
TED in 2007 Pollan's book In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto, released on January 1, 2008, explores the relationship with what he terms nutritionism and the Western diet, with a focus on late 20th century food advice given by the science community. Pollan holds that consumption of fat and dietary cholesterol does not lead to a higher rate of coronary disease, and that the reductive analysis of food into nutrient components is a mistake. Throughout the book, Pollan questions the view that the point of eating is to promote health, pointing out that this attitude is not universal and that cultures that perceive food as having purposes of pleasure, identity, and sociality may end up with better health. He explains this seeming paradox by vetting, and then validating, the notion that nutritionism and, therefore, the whole Western framework through which we intellectualize the value of food is more a religious and faddish devotion to the mythology of simple solutions than a convincing and reliable conclusion of incontrovertible scientific research.

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