Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Where it is different, Moore calls the whole in question an organic unity.
Like an army, it could take any form without destroying its organic unity.
Each, of course, tended to maintain itself as an organic unity.
To them, this consciousness lay in the organic unity of the Party.
The playing had little organic unity and even less rhythmic kick.
Eisenstein was obsessed with the need for an organic unity between image and sound.
This can lead to a sense of structural fragmentation, with no organic unity apparent.
From this it would follow that the principle of organic unities has no clear meaning.
Moore grants that all very great goods are organic unities which have pleasure as a part.
Organic Unity is the idea that a thing is made up of interdependent parts.
On the contrary, Hegel argues for the organic unity between universal and particular.
It ignores our national, historical and organic unity.
The State is an organic unity-"a living spiritual being."
The concept of organic unity gained popularity through the New Critics movement.
What is really significant is the organic unity of Pinter's career.
As a globular cluster, M-13 seemed to be an organic unity; but the aspect was deceiving.
But the score lacks coherence, one misses a sweep from beginning to end, a sense of organic unity.
"Organic unity" lends structure to the entire work.
The principle of organic unities is wielded as yet another weapon against hedonism.
Currently, the three churches are exploring opportunities for greater cooperation and the possibility of achieving organic unity.
In literature, Organic unity is a concept founded by the philosopher, Plato.
Aristotle's writings all maintained respective, metaphoric reflections of organic unity.
This seems a more satisfactory way of looking at the possibility that a society may be an organic unity than Moore's principles allow.
Gordon perceived nature as an organic unity.
Organic unity lacked a true definitive role or theme in literary history until the principle was adopted by Aristotle.