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"treatise" Definitions
  1. treatise (on something) a long and serious piece of writing on a particular subject

272 Sentences With "treatise"

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

The film becomes a treatise on the power of archival work.
It's a treatise on cider, so, it's not directly about cocktails.
There, in a room lined with ancient medical manuals—"Treatise on Dislocation", "Treatise on Fractures"—five Republican and five Democratic voters had been gathered by a group called Better Angels for a day of mutual re-humanising.
Hippocrates had written an entire treatise on the treatment of head wounds.
This book is a luscious, strange growth, more bildungsroman than philosophical treatise.
The 70s treatise was excavated and discussed in relation to contemporary capitalism.
The first feminist treatise in Italian was published in Venice in 1600.
As a treatise, then, "Let There Be Laughter" is not very persuasive.
It's as much a treatise on politics as it is a memoir.
Sufjan's take is a short but succinct treatise, which raises serious questions.
However, he gave a lengthy treatise on how the balance should be struck.
The Shower Orange is an extension of the treatise of the Shower Beer.
The first paper is a traditional one written much like a scientific treatise.
Here is his diagram from A Treatise of the System of the World.
It acknowledges Kim's gender, but it doesn't become a treatise on women's rights.
Still, Sontag's treatise remains the top-cited attempt to define a slippery concept.
Dr. Knuth addresses Euler's classic problem in the first volume of his treatise.
It's an unintended hour and half treatise on how timeliness alone doesn't equal significance.
You may have read her treatise last week on the rise of ranch dressing.
According to a 25th century treatise, King Henry V was the ideal role model.
What were you even supposed to call things like that—a treaty, a treatise?
Keeping with the fashion of the time, Döebringer wrote the entire treatise in rhyming couplets.
In 1971, John Rawls published a treatise which has become a seminal reimagining of liberalism.
Could it be possible that Mr. Godwin is delivering a sly treatise on pharmaceutical manipulation?
A contemporary of Luther's who became St. Catherine of Genoa wrote a treatise on purgatory.
Sion Sono uses Antiporno, a treatise on power dynamics and textuality, to indict its audience.
LORD By João Gilberto Noll Noll's "Lord" is a manic treatise on travel and transformation.
In 1762 he produced a tome called 'A Treatise on the Diseases Produced by Onanism.
Hunched over the podium, the Ohio governor gave a folksy, rambling treatise about the America of
She followed Instagram accounts about minimalism and capsule wardrobes, absorbed Kondo's treatise, and researched ethical brands.
Like many monumental works of 15th-century printing, Pacioli's treatise has survived in its original form.
The psychotic, but influential pro-Trump treatise "The Flight 93 Election" began with a stark admission.
Mr. Parks labored for years, but the treatise was not completed when he retired in 2010.
She doesn't, really, and her book (thankfully) is more like an essay than like a treatise.
Recently, he has quoted the 6th Century B.C. treatise three times on Twitter here, here and here.
The past year, I've composed a treatise deconstructing several arguments that called women like me sinners, degenerates.
His best-known work, "A Treatise on Political Economy", ran to six editions between 1803 and 1841.
The treatise fails to explain why Lyft will be the company that accomplishes these extremely lofty goals.
It's possible to read "The Ferryman" as a treatise on the tension between history and the family.
All told, Torment: Tides of Numenera is a more complicated treatise on the the idea of death.
"This is not an aesthetic treatise but, first and foremost, a morality tale about fame and family."
In Composition, Dow's groundbreaking illustrated pedagogical treatise from 2200, he establishes an American approach to Japanese composition.
The first is a didactic treatise on the different ways to categorize art, including color and size.
A Brief Treatise on the Greatest Line in Ready Player One, and Possibly All of CinemaImage: Warner Bros.
It's a treatise on power, so rarely shown through the lense of not just one woman, but three.
Album opener "Nikes" is a lyrical treatise on the trappings of materialism, a frequent subject in Ocean's music.
Christian Egenolff's 1531 treatise, Der altenn Fechter, contains instructions for head-butting, strangle holds, and a 'back-breaker.
Plus, the dude invented calculus, wrote a lengthy treatise about optics, and dabbled in alchemy for good measure.
Hinkie's methodology — the resignation-by-treatise pretty much said it all — did not match his old-school ethos.
His greatest work was "A Treatise on Political Economy", a graceful exposition (and extension) of Smith's economic ideas.
Say himself faced both a ruinous shortage of demand for his cotton and excess demand for his treatise.
"Shaler's Fish" warrants a chapter — beside Faulkner's "The Marble Faun" and Joyce's "Chamber Music" — in that future treatise.
Pope Francis wrote a major encyclical, or papal treatise, last year on the need to respect the environment.
Season three, however, is something different, and perhaps richer, altogether: a treatise on how gendered pressures fail families.
A treatise on the struggles of a spouse who has to share her artist husband with the world?
Every time this show almost does something good it just veers off for the lazy sophomoric treatise instead.
"The Wire," likewise, delivered a five-season treatise on urban policy in the form of a police serial.
His 1543 treatise "On the Jews and Their Lies" calls for the burning of synagogues and Jewish homes.
He tasked her with making from scratch every black pigment listed in "Il Libro dell'Arte," a Renaissance treatise.
Its caption urged people to read "Might is Right," a racist and sexist treatise written in the 19th century.
Bin'ali issued a treatise that rallied militant Islamists to the cause and has denounced Islamic State's many Muslim critics.
Pacioli and Leonardo collaborated on the treatise "Divina Proportione", which married maths with art through the study of perspective.
His treatise on palace dogs, for example, explains that canine "fodder" was mostly bread, donkey meat, and, weirdly, grapes.
Within this novel, there's almost an entire treatise on the decorating habits of the wealthy — and not so wealthy.
The older meanings live on in Thomas Hobbes's treatise on political philosophy, "Leviathan," perhaps the ground zero of civility.
He composed the "Treatise on Tolerance," one of the greatest defenses of religious liberty and civil rights ever written.
To them, the book was like a treatise on music that focussed exclusively on the physics of musical instruments.
As he tours the monasteries, his meditations on the nature of empire are a treat and treatise in themselves.
The idea of "scientific management" dates back to Frederick Winslow Taylor, who wrote a treatise on it in 1911.
"[I]t's a treatise against the sort of society where everything that provokes anyone is deemed problematic," he wrote.
What joins these artists together is their refusal to develop a treatise, a final say on how we see color.
Gauss was really jazzed about cracking this particular nut too, as evidenced by this passage from his treatise Theoria motus.
But as John Locke pointed out in his "Second Treatise of Government," gaps and ambiguities are hallmarks of written law.
In chapter 25 of his seminal treatise on power and statesmanship, The Prince, Niccolo Machiavelli lays out a philosophical conundrum.
The March on Google was announced on August 9th, shortly after Google fired Damore for circulating an anti-diversity treatise.
Many many others deserve special mention, but this is a note not a treatise, and I apologize for all omissions.
In 1965, the Roman Catholic church approached the question in a very different spirit, in its landmark treatise, Nostra Aetate.
Through that lens, Mr. Oshima fashioned a slapstick philosophical treatise that attacked Japanese hypocrisy in general — capital punishment in particular.
The channel donoteat01 is using Cities: Skylines as a vector for a longform treatise about urban development and American history.
And so rather than a treatise, "Tears We Cannot Stop" is a fiery sermon, and an unabashedly emotional, personal appeal.
Mike Huckabee, father of White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, distributed a 950-word treatise Friday questioning Gowdy's position.
The result is a visual treatise on income inequality, global capitalism and the digital world built on shared fashion references.
It would appear that the agnostic Reader was responsible for reading aloud every treatise submitted for publication in the Academy.
This is not to say that the Iremonger books are a treatise on Marx's Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844.
His treatise includes neck breaks, groin shots, and driving one's palm into an enemy's nose and then immediately clawing his eyes.
Twelve Against the Gods: The Story of Adventure is an obscure, out-of-print treatise by William Bolitho, published in 1929.
David Kanaga's surreal art game Oikospiel is inspired by Naomi Klein's excellent treatise on the subject, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs.
This is not about Taylor Swift, even though I started this treatise with a quote from America's foremost fair-weather feminist.
Out of such sessions came books like Anne Koedt's Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm, published the same year as Firestone's treatise.
During that time, Beethoven is known to have read Goethe's treatise on color theory, which includes detailed observations of colored shadows.
In his classic treatise on the university, John Henry Newman made the case for an educational mission; more particularly, liberal education.
"You can have a treatise on income inequality but encased in a really sophisticated dick joke," Farsad says sounding very convincing.
Buy it here >>Cliff Kuang's "User Friendly" is a fascinating treatise on something many of us take for granted: Good design.
While Shakespeare had a more ambiguous position on rebellion, Mr. McCarthy said he clearly mined North's treatise for themes and characters.
"Jessica Jones" was never meant to be "a treatise on women and politics and our lack of power," Ms. Rosenberg cautioned.
For instance, Albrecht Dürer's 21548 treatise on drawing and Andreas Versalius's 21628 anatomy book offered artists insight into the human figure.
In 1929, he met psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan, who recommended he read his treatise on paranoia, which would profoundly influence Dalí's work.
Take the chimera chapter in science writer Carl Zimmer's sprawling new treatise on heritability,  "She Has Her Mother's Laugh"  (Dutton) for example.
In Danse Macabre, his 1980 treatise on horror film and fiction, he outlined three essential types of terror and how they work.
Three centuries later, a more detailed treatise specified the inclusion of obscure, exotic substances such as mercurial salts and compounds of sulfur.
The exhibit lifts its wryly ponderous title, Ethics demonstrated in geometrical order, from an eponymous treatise by the Enlightenment philosopher Baruch Spinoza.
The subject of Alexandre O. Philippe's fascinating treatise is the appallingly ferocious murder scene in Alfred Hitchcock's iconic nerve-jangler, "Psycho" (1960).
"Oh, my polemical treatise on the injustice of slavery is now about how you like to get tied up and spanked."Right.
And within weeks of Napoleon's exile in 1814, he printed a second edition of his treatise (there would be six in all).
If you're seeking a serial killer show that also serves as a treatise against society's ingrown sexism, The Fall is for you.
In a treatise published in 1757, Edmund Burke, an Irish essayist and statesman, outlined the differences between the beautiful and the sublime.
But if you're familiar with this scene, and familiar with Seeking Arrangement's legal treatise, you're well aware of the motives at play.
Destroying one's art has become a kind of art in itself, something between an inconvenient prank and clever treatise on contemporary value.
In 1948, Robert C. Cook reviewed Vogt's "Road to Survival," an eloquent treatise on earth's future that Mann argues birthed modern environmentalism.
An hour inside Barack Obama's post-presidential life included boxed sandwiches, scores of money managers and a treatise on health care reform.
" The treatise noted that such an officer "is punishable by indictment, though no injurious effects result to any individual from his misconduct.
It's part travel book, part scientific treatise and it captures better than any book I know the spirit of that alluring region.
Plus, the whole thing is ultimately just a treatise on how difficult it is to maintain adult male friendships past your 20s.
With Olivier Blanchard," the former IMF chief economist, "he wrote the treatise that defined the state of the art for graduate students.
The treatise contains 13 separate books, covering everything from plane geometry, the Pythagorean theorem, golden ratio, prime numbers, and quite a bit more.
The Buddhist philosopher Nagarjuna, who wrote his major treatise in Sanskrit śloka, is also said to have been a descendant of naga snakes.
Earlier this summer Google engineer James Damore posted a treatise about gender differences on an internal company message board and was subsequently fired.
In addition to outlining Auggie's journey, Wonder is a moving treatise on the power of extreme kindness in the face of unthinkable adversity.
A group of younger members of the faculty began meeting in 1930 to discuss Keynes's "A Treatise on Money," published that same year.
In 2006, he published The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, a philosophical treatise outlining the legal and ethical debate surrounding assisted suicide.
An essay is not supposed to be a dissertation or a treatise, a definitive statement that sums up a subject for all time.
It's also a really compelling treatise on friendship, which is much more interesting to present-day me than any love song could be.
When it focuses on being a tart, melancholy, frequently dirty treatise on indignity, reconciliation and clashing expectations, "Back to Life" works quite well.
She needn't have worried; such is her command of metaphor and assonance that she could rivet a reader with a treatise on toast.
In spite of its treatise-like title, the novel can feel so inwardly directed that Heti appears to be writing only for herself.
"Captain America" No. 1 isn't the start of his treatise on the Trump era nor is it making a case against the character.
It also reflected the Hippocratic treatise dividing acute or infectious diseases as lasting fewer than 193 days and chronic ones lasting far longer.
"Symmetry is one of the guiding principles of Juche architecture, espoused by Kim Jong-il in his 1991 treatise, On Architecture," Wainwright explained.
Democrats have expressed distrust over any attempt to filter their view of the treatise, with lawmakers demanding to see a full, unredacted copy.
Her "project of retrieving memories of my parents" began with a lecture invitation and evolved into a treatise about her mother and father.
Pozzi was a surgeon, and something of a celebrity gynecologist, who transformed his field, wrote an influential treatise and designed an innovative hospital.
The book is a dizzying 198-page treatise, written under the pseudonym of "Bronze Age Pervert"—shorthanded to "BAP" by his ardent fans.
In Coulter's treatise, natives are righteous and aggrieved, desperate for a political leader who's willing to confirm what they can see for themselves.
Although this philosophical treatise didn't deal with contemporary art, its relevance was obvious: Kirchner, it was easy to say, was the anti-Matisse.
"Whistleblowers, to me, are, 'I saw something, here's what I saw,' rather than, you know, writing a treatise about concerns I have," Sen.
In his "Theological-Political Treatise," he praised the tolerant multicultural society of Amsterdam and held it up as a model for the world.
But don't get us wrong: Even the grumpiest among us was won over by this magnificent—what do you call it, a novelized treatise?
It's not primarily a treatise on [those issues], it's a sexy romance, but those are their identities and I can't really get around that.
Force, as Ibn Khaldoun, a great Islamic historian, notes in his classical treatise "al-Muqadamma", is one of four legitimate ways Sunnis gain power.
In his "Second Treatise", he echoes Hobbes's view of the need for strong government, writing: "where there is no law, there is no freedom".
We like diaries that are conversational in tone, so please don't feel like you have to sound like a robot or write a treatise!
Indeed, "The Natural Economic Order" was the title that Silvio Gesell gave to his 1916 treatise in favour of negative interest rates on money.
Iceland's "First Grammatical Treatise", which explored ways to write Old Norse using the Latin alphabet, was written by an unknown hand 150 years earlier.
Saint-Exupéry's short novel is part fairy tale, part satire, and part poetic, philosophical treatise on the nature of companionship in a lonely universe.
It's a sharply structured yet breezy treatise, one that references everything from John Travolta's Battlefield Earth to Jean Cocteau's 1946 Beauty and the Beast.
In the 27 years since its publication, Fukuyama's treatise has been put through the wringer by critics from both sides of the political aisle.
Hayes mentioned "De Arte Gymnastica," a 1569 treatise by an Italian nobleman named Girolamo Mercuriale, which is considered the first book on sports medicine.
A meandering philosophical treatise that explores how all types of systems — your body, nature, the economy, your company — get stronger or weaker with stress.
When we pushed it to the internet, we didn't do it so that everyone could read our treatise and copy the way we worked.
Basically, it's a treatise on why it's cool to be basic, by which Schroeder means a pumpkin-spice-latte sipping, Game of Thrones obsessive.
On its first day, Stanton read the "Declaration of Sentiments," a treatise modeled after the U.S. Declaration of Independence that enumerated the women's grievances.
The wine list was virtually a treatise on natural wines, a long document full of the names of eccentric producers and obscure European villages.
Boldly stating that coal is "killing us," their treatise was just the beginning of a yearslong public campaign by Mr. Inslee against fossil fuels.
This means that "Arturo Ui" is, among other things, a partisan treatise on economics, as the rot within a failed capitalist order is revealed.
While writing an austere dissertation on a neglected treatise by Aristotle, she began a second book, about the urge to deny one's human needs.
His son and successor, Kim Jong Il, penned a witty treatise calling for statues of his father to play "the leading role" in urban planning.
Her most-known work, the 1949 treatise is at once literary and rigorously philosophical in its exploration of feminism and the social construction of womanhood.
That allows my reader to draw connections to their own experience that are going to be more relevant than any treatise that I could write.
In his treatise "On Architecture", Marcus Vitruvius, a Roman architect and civil engineer wrote that buildings should be firmitas, utilitas, venustas: solid, useful and beautiful.
Famously touted as horror maven Christopher Lee's favorite film he worked on, The Wicker Man is a surreal treatise on utopian idealism gone terribly wrong.
It's not television's job to serve as a persuasive, well-researched treatise on the criminal justice system and current attitudes about race and sexual assault.
The Blunk House, which resembles a cottage from a midcentury-modern fairy tale, is no less than one artist's architectural treatise on how to live.
It had tips for analyzing the appearance, nose, and palate, as well as a treatise on what makes a wine taste the way it does.
But if it's going to work as a philosophical treatise and an art object, it has to be every bit as spellbinding as Ramon's game.
We cannot all read reams of military white papers to track the evolving thinking about space dominance or dig up Galileo's first treatise from 1610.
On its first day, Stanton read the "Declaration of Sentiments," a treatise modeled after the U.S. Declaration of Independence but that enumerated the women's grievances.
One could make an easy argument for "Ink" as a treatise on the rotten rise of celebrity culture, but its intellectual properties aren't that expansive.
It's a complicated proposition using a runway show of expensive party clothes as a treatise on wealth disparity and the obliviousness of the ruling class.
I still don't know whether to smile or apologize after reading Byron Darnton's full-page treatise on American soldiers "rubbing elbows with Australia" in 1942.
Reich also recommended Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments and Thorstein Veblen's 1899 treatise The Theory of the Leisure Class: An Economic Study of Institutions.
Satya Nadella, the company's CEO, recently published a treatise of sorts on Slate outlining his thinking about artificial intelligence, and how it should interact with people.
Ultimately, however, I didn't read Three Women as a treatise on the state of human desire in America, or on the state of American Women Today.
Mr O'Rourke, who is reading Joseph Campbell's treatise on heroism, "The Power of Myth", is not only the master of his narrative because of his quirkiness.
Yes, there were segments about colonization (which NBC's hosts called "immigration") and slavery, as well as a lengthy (and somewhat heavy-handed) treatise on climate change.
CEOs "must make stockholder welfare their sole end," as the top judge on Delaware's Supreme Court explained the rule, in a 2015 treatise on corporation law.
For an artist like Lee, the presence of so many colors feels revolutionary, opening his genre of minimalist art to a new treatise on planned chaos.
To make a very long story short, BOETHIUS used his time in prison to write a treatise about how to be happy even in difficult times.
The memo is, in a critical sense, a governing incarnation of the notorious pro-Trump treatise "The Flight 93 Election," published in September of last year.
So I called up Andrew Scherer––an expert attorney at New York Law School and author of an actual treatise on tenant laws in the city.
"The body is not a thing," French feminist-existentialist Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex, her treatise on the role of women in society.
"When I was younger, I felt the formal brilliance of the writing, its total deconstruction of a genre which becomes a philosophical, existential treatise," he explained.
In the decades since, he has been venerated with a statue, an annual award at West Point and even a Malcolm Gladwell treatise on human potential.
This equation of personhood and property goes all the way back to Locke's "Second Treatise on Government," which was arguably an inspiration for the American Revolution.
He began his career as a paperback publisher in Britain, commissioning Germaine Greer's feminist treatise "The Female Eunuch" and works by Ian McEwan and Salman Rushdie.
The title is borrowed from a treatise on harmony by Schoenberg, a composer whose legacy Mr. Adams breaks with even as he acknowledges their common DNA.
He soon received a box of articles and books, including works by Milton Friedman and a treatise on regulatory distortions in the New York taxicab market.
Democrat, introduced Ms. Pelosi by quoting from the ancient Chinese military treatise, Sun Tzu's "The Art of War," according to a Democratic aide in the room.
The treatise is likely to add significantly to our understanding of Russia's 2016 election interference and President Trump's efforts to control federal inquiries into the matter.
These spectacular images — part photograph, part abstraction, and part anthropological treatise — transform the viewers' experience and challenge their senses to comprehend what is shown in the frame.
Just about the best that Garrison could do to assist him was to publish Easton's treatise and write a celebratory eulogy in The Liberator after his death.
He published a 3,200-word treatise explaining that the company that had spent more than a decade playing fast and loose with privacy would now prioritize it.
In fact, he literally wrote the book on the subject—he is one of the contributing authors of a legal treatise entitled The Law of Judicial Precedent.
At various times, it is a political, religious, and/or social satire, a domestic drama, broad Looney Tunes-esque slapstick, a philosophical treatise, scriptural exegesis, and more.
The field's foundational treatise was first presented to a small scientific debating society in London one evening in 290 by a shy Quaker pharmacist named Luke Howard.
By the time her movie ends, Ms. DuVernay has delivered a stirring treatise on the prison industrial complex through a nexus of racism, capitalism, policies and politics.
But the core of the treatise is a look at how the super-competitive world of Formula One is the most extreme example of business in action.
In 1907, the Russian artist Wassily Kandinsky hadn't yet published On the Spiritual in Art, his landmark treatise on nonobjective painting, nor made his first abstract work.
"The theory was that competition is good, and if a monopoly extinguishes competition, that's bad," says Herbert Hovenkamp, co-author of a seminal treatise on antitrust law.
Helena Kelly's treatise Jane Austen, the Secret Radical determinedly if haphazardly attempts to decode Austen's novels in order to demonstrate that they contain radically progressive secret messages.
And while you are staring, please make sure to read John McIntyre's blog "You Don't Say," an educational and often funny treatise on language, usage and journalism.
Samin Nosrat's SALT, FAT, ACID, HEAT: Mastering the Elements of Good Cooking (Simon & Schuster, $260) is an exhaustively researched treatise on the four pillars of successful cooking.
In his authoritative 19th-century legal treatise, Justice Joseph Story of the Supreme Court explained that impeachable acts are by their nature impossible to define in advance.
Reading this movie as a leftist treatise would seem a lot more plausible if we got the sense that anybody else was suffering like Arthur Fleck is.
"The Governesses" is not a treatise but an aria, and one delivered with perfect pitch: a minor work, defiantly so, but the product of a significant talent.
I realized this story was coming out in dribs and drabs in the scientific literature, but it really needed a book-length treatise to bring it together.
Interestingly, the popularity of training with a Master of Defence instigated an epistemic discussion about the pedagogical resonance of learning via treatise in lieu of in-person training.
He compares her treatise of societal beauty standards to the way Sam Peckinpah, director of films like The Wild Bunch and Straw Dogs, addresses violence in his movies.
In May, he's publishing Every Tool's A Hammer: Life is What You Make It, which bounces between a personal memoir and treatise on the maker movement and creativity.
"Rotten Tomatoes critic score (Season 3): 6%What critics said: "Every time this show almost does something good it just veers off for the lazy sophomoric treatise instead.
"Rotten Tomatoes critic score (Season 3): 12%What critics said: "Every time this show almost does something good it just veers off for the lazy sophomoric treatise instead.
The latest make and model of alien, courtesy of Denis Villeneuve's science fiction drama / low-key philosophical treatise Arrival, resembles something between gigantic squids and seven-fingered hands.
I'm like, okay, the reader doesn't want to read a 20-page treatise on the FFC Cambridge Process and how to do anorthite reduction into its base elements.
On the first day of the convention Stanton read the "Declaration of Sentiments," a treatise modeled after the U.S. Declaration of Independence that enumerated the grievances of women.
But in his treatise "Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture," published in 1966, Mr. Venturi argued that ornament, historical allusions and even humor had a place in modern architecture.
Their new album Separation Anxiety is an under-35-minute treatise that forces the listener to look at the cracks in our current structures of living under capitalism.
Besides "The Discourses," his study of republican or non-princely government, he wrote a history of Florence, a treatise on warfare and a constitutional proposal for the city.
In his bedroom, he kept a picture of Trayvon Martin tucked in a mirror and texts like the military treatise "The Art of War" on a small shelf.
Del Castillo would later tell top Mexican journalist Carmen Aristegui her treatise was not so much a hurrah for Chapo but rather a critique of Mexico's political class.
Or perhaps it's best we start with Kanye West, who reemerged this week on Twitter with a meditative shortform treatise on human existence and the nobility of creative production.
While people tended to focus on the chapters involving sex positions, the bit that deals with physical acts of intimacy is just one section of this seven-part treatise.
According to Shakespeare scholar, Neil MacGregor, Mercutio critiques Tybalt's Italian training by quoting English Master of Defence, George Silver, who, in his treatise on swordsmanship, criticized the Italian style.
In Britain in 2017, to tune into any live football game is to be subjected to a long and passionate treatise on the benefits of placing a cheeky bet.
But the man who opened up this field was Vilfredo Pareto, who placed the concept of the elite at the centre of his "Treatise on General Sociology" in 1916.
This treatise, written in the late 11th century, put forward the idea of the death of Jesus as atonement for human sins, a "satisfaction" for the wrath of God.
The narrative alerts the reader from the very beginning to the book's devious agenda: Despite the straightforward title, and misleading back-cover copy, this is not a pedagogical treatise.
Rather than a treatise on how Zuckerberg and company can make the world a better place, "What we saw this morning was an all-out attack on , " said Moorhead.
Images roam across the page like drawings from a loopy treatise on physics or botany, combining studies of observed reality with seemingly random pictograms, numbers, words, lines and arcs.
Though they cite Run DMC and Nas among their influences, the pair avoid hip-hop's usual treatise on drugs, violence and swearing in favor of a more positive message.
Somehow, a cartoon about a middle-aged horse actor turned into a profound treatise on addiction, anxiety, and intergenerational trauma, all wrapped up alongside some really solid animal puns.
We see this change happen between the first and second printings of a French doctor's treatise, The Diseases of VVomen with Child, And in Child-bed by Francois Mauriceau.
Their pressing of Clay Pedrini's "New Dream" was very welcome indeed and here we have the man himself offering up an epic treatise on the classic Victorian horror novel.
Add to that anxiety about this health pandemic, and it is not surprising that we do not read the latest treatise from our company, school or government about coronavirus.
Both were affected by Kandinsky's treatise "On the Spiritual in Art" and both were invited to visit Taos and Santa Fe by the saloniste and patron Mabel Dodge Luhan.
" The MAP Fund, which gave a grant to support the play's development, called the work "a grotesque, an existential romp, and a political treatise about onslaught, escalation, and sequels.
"To me, the most pernicious thing ever written in the history of music is the Hanslick treatise about absolute music," said Michael Lewanski, the conductor of Ensemble Dal Niente.
He wrote a treatise about harpsichord playing, but if you were to play him by his own rules on the modern piano, in my opinion it might not work.
Like, for example, the fact that to a certain extent any women's wear collection, at any level, is a treatise on female identity at that particular moment in time.
After a long treatise on the religious laws and why I, a now-secular Jewish natural wine lover, would never be able to make my wine, we were disconnected.
The senator's acceptance speech was a treatise on his expansive view of America's role in the world — a role that, he fears, is being diminished by Mr. Trump's leadership.
In the 40 years that have passed since James published his first treatise on baseball statistics, the debate between the quants and the traditionalists has been dour and joyless.
Still, even the studio audience of polite party loyalists seemed daunted by Episode 3, "The Immortal 'Das Kapital,'" about Marx's forbidding three-volume treatise on the workings of capitalism.
In "The Clothing of Books," a pocket-size treatise out this month, Jhumpa Lahiri takes on the visual language of book jackets and the search for the perfect fit.
Rather, it's a treatise on truth, identity and the life-altering power of fame, at which point it feels as if we're the ones Dolan is trying to convince.
Although Palladio may not be a household name for many Americans, his 1570 treatise, "The Four Books on Architecture," had a profound impact worldwide, including in the United States.
Last year, he announced the discovery of "Manly Health and Training," a previously unknown 47,000-word self-help treatise that Whitman published in The New York Atlas in 1858.
A New York state appeals court on Tuesday said it would not reconsider an earlier decision throwing out a lawsuit alleging a LexisNexis Inc treatise on housing law contained inaccuracies.
It seems like he's contemplating the meaning of life and mentally composing a philosophical treatise on the importance of cocaine in a person's diet more than running from the DEA.
In addition to publishing a voluminous treatise detailing our planet's physical complexities, the nobleman also designed three planispheres that laid out the wonders of the world in rich, colorful illustrations.
He devoured American polemicists such as F.A. "Baldy" Harper, whose treatise of 21960, "Why Wages Rise" (because of productivity improvements by workers, not union action), he describes as "life-changing".
The two-volume political treatise, which was written by Hitler between 1924 and 1926 and posits a global Jewish conspiracy, is regarded as one of the Nazis' main propaganda tools.
"I think France is a feminist country," Schiappa said, citing French author Simone de Beauvoir, whose book "The Second Sex" is widely considered an essential treatise in modern feminist theory.
He was quoting E. F. Schumacher"—the German economist, who had recently published a best-selling treatise on sustainable development—"talking about lowering expectations, driving around in his blue Plymouth.
Among his many other achievements, Gessner was the first person to publish visual representations of fossils, such as this illustration of an ammonite shell from his treatise On Fossil Objects.
But in Schur's hands (and thanks to a terrific ensemble cast, led by Kristen Bell), the series becomes a very funny treatise on ethics, forgiveness, and fixing a broken world.
Historians have contextualized Le Brun's depiction of children with the surge of interest in child rearing, a trend triggered in large part by Jean-Jacques Rousseau's influential treatise Emile (1762).
It didn't exist legally as a concept until 1890 when Brandeis wrote a famous legal treatise on it, and most of the case law is actually from the 20th century.
Like, for example, the fact that to a certain extent any women's wear collection, at any level, should be a treatise on female identity at that particular moment in time.
The first ever computer program was written in 1843 by Ada Lovelace, a mathematician who hoped her far-sighted treatise on mechanical computers would lead to a glittering scientific career.
In many ways, this is a revealingly personal document, and I suspect that a more modest writer might have conceived of it as a memoir rather than a cultural treatise.
The judge in the case later wrote that the Russian government had "spurned" the Justice Department's request for evidence, instead sending a lengthy treatise on why Ms. Veselnitskaya's client was innocent.
In a stroke of unfortunate timing, Wired magazine published a 20143,000-word treatise on Uber's new corporate logo one day after the drivers went on strike outside its New York office.
His wife doggedly pushed to publish his text, and with the help of de Hooghe, an engraver of the first water, Petter's treatise was released just two years after his death.
The album's title makes it sound like a final farewell treatise, but while Amen & Goodbye comes with its share of nostalgia for the band's past lives, there's nothing conclusive about it.
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said on Twitter that Il Giornale's decision to give away the copies of the Nazi leader's political treatise was "squalid" and expressed solidarity with Italy's Jewish community.
Scholars have long debated this authorship: the book is attributed to one "Hyginus," but the order of constellations echoes that of Ptolemy's 48 constellations, as listed in his landmark treatise Almagest.
Today, Wollstonecraft is best known for writing "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman," her 1792 political treatise advocating for the equal treatment and education of men and women in England.
Schumer is not shy, but rather an introvert, she stresses in the ensuing product: an insouciant mélange of memoir and feminist treatise that commences with an open letter to her vagina.
But the dense, yet often riveting 448-page Mueller treatise offers the definitive word about what we know about Trump's relationship with the Russians and his efforts at obstruction of justice.
Tsai's adaptation of "The Art of War" revitalized the millenniums-old treatise by trimming away the repetitive elements, tightening the narrative until the ancient lessons of warfare leapt off the page.
SEHGAL "Advice for Future Corpses," a treatise on the biological process of death and how to care for the dying by Sallie Tisdale, a longtime palliative care nurse, had me riveted.
In 2016, Ahern read Simone de Beauvoir's 63 seminal feminist treatise, "The Second Sex," and found in it answers to many of the questions she had about femininity, authenticity and power.
" To that point, the palimpsest turned out to contain ideas by Archimedes that had not survived in any other documents, including an entirely new treatise called "The Method of Mechanical Theorems.

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