Sentence examples for imagined perspective from inspiring English sources

Exact(9)

Comic strips have long relied on the disjunction between a character's imagined perspective and his or her physical reality.

Still other stations allow you to see the world from the dinosaur's imagined perspective -- and that of its prey.

The strength of this commitment is clear from the latest theater work the company has commissioned, "Jocasta," which uses opera, dance and the spoken word to tell the story of Oedipus from the imagined perspective of Jocasta.

Appearing in the paper's Sunday edition, color pictures leavened the news with wonder: a pioneering night photographer captured the glorious electrification of St . Louisduring the World's Fair; an illustrator charged with covering the Great Airship Race of 1904 before anyone had seen the ships resourcefully drew the imagined perspective of an airborne competitor.

Literature reports that the pointing tasks from an imagined perspective misaligned with the body are more difficult to perform because the body SFR conflicts with that of the environment (Presson and Montello 1994).

With the latter, people imagine a different perspective with respect to that from which they learn the environment; this process forces people to align with the new imagined perspective and therefore rotate the initial spatial frame of reference (SFR) (Huttenlocher and Presson 1973; Péruch and Lapin 1993).

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Similar(51)

However, 19th-century readers relied on other, more unusual sources of information about slavery as well – most notably fictionalized slave narratives, written primarily by white authors from the imagined perspectives of ex-slaves.

Though the book revolves around Reagan, he remains a remote, hard-to-reach figure; it is through the richly imagined perspectives of an orbit of insiders including Richard Nixon, Christopher Hitchens, and a restless, astrology-hooked Nancy Reagan that we see these crises unfold.

Who and what one "imagines" other persons to be, what one thereby "imagines" they mean when communicatively interacting, who and what one "imagines" oneself to be, including from the imagined perspectives of others all of the preceding is encompassed under the heading of this register.

Indeed, the phrases 'moral point of view' and 'impartial (or 'impersonal') point of view' are sometimes used interchangeably to refer to the imagined impersonal perspective from which, it is supposed, moral judgments are to be made (Baier 1958, chapter 8; Harsanyi 1982; Scheffler 1982, 1985; Smith 1976 [1759]; Wolf 1992; see also Blum 1980, Chapter 3).

As I'd imagined, the perspective was sweeping, over town and then fields to the River Severn beyond.

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