Sentence examples for pursuing the implications of from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

It was in this way that Wittgenstein reached metaphysical conclusions by rigorously pursuing the implications of his logical views.

Similar(59)

In "Crowds and Power" (1960), Canetti pursued the implications of this insight across an encyclopedic range of scholarly sources.

You prefer to believe Jill Abramson, who says that she does not recall my suggestion in July 2003 that we pursue the implications of my conversation about Joe Wilson.

Downey, especially, is so audacious an actor that I'm sure he would have been happy to pursue the implications of such hints, but Phillips veers away from them, lest he unsettle a portion of his audience.

Mr. Brown's statements on criminality closely echo remarks made last week in the House of Commons by Tom Watson, a member of Parliament who has vigorously pursued the implications of the phone hacking scandal over the past two years.

Locating tension between ideas in texts has also allowed them to pursue the implications of conceptual tension in their own thinking, giving their analytic arguments the momentum to move forward and evolve.

The point is made early on in a group of 10 resolutely abstract collages from 1950 by Alejandro Otero of Venezuela that simultaneously pursue the implications of Mondrian's "Broadway Boogie-Woogie" and of Matisse's cut-outs, and in the small, bright free-standing forms in gouache on cardboard of Lygia Pape's marvelous "Book of Creation" from 1959-60.

Faced with many skeptics, Dr. Bak pursued the implications of his theory at a number of institutions, including the Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, N.Y., the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico, the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and the Imperial College in London, where he became a professor in 2000.

As she pursues the implications of her mystical visions, Jeannette summons a neighbor, Gervaise — who has earned the community's ire and derision by entering a convent and taking her vows — to whom she can confess her extreme religious ideas and test their political consequences.

As she pursues the implications of her mystical visions, Jeannette summons a neighbor, Gervaise who has earned the community's ire and derision by entering a convent and taking her vows to whom she can confess her extreme religious ideas and test their political consequences.

Zimmerman begins where Richards leaves off, proposing to pursue "the implications of the denial of the relevance of luck to moral responsibility" to their "logical conclusion" (2002, 559).

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