Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "sidedness"

Lexicographically close words:
side; sideboard; sideboards; sided; sidedly; sidehill; sidelight; sidelights; sidelines; sideling
  1. Thus, alike at Bagdad and at Cordova, Arabian philosophy represents the temporary victory of exotic ideas and of subject races over the theological one-sidedness of Islam, and the illiterate simplicity of the early Saracens.

  2. Christ's place in history, and won such reverence from the purest souls, was what he claimed to be, and that his many-sidedness comes to focus and harmony when we recognize him as the Christ of God and the Saviour of the world.

  3. Frage, argues the authenticity of the fourth gospel from the one-sidedness of the synoptic story.

  4. The consideration of the one-sidedness of Mark's narrative simplifies the problem of harmony, but it does not solve all of the perplexities.

  5. The question of the trustworthiness of the fourth gospel is greatly simplified by the consideration of the one-sidedness of Mark's representation.

  6. In the same way the Church cut off the extremities and one-sidedness in empiricism and supernaturalism, in rationalism and mysticism, in optimism and pessimism.

  7. Both lack of emotional discipline and narrow one-sidedness of emotions interfere with the harmonious development.

  8. Yet this alone would mean a one-sidedness in which the equilibrium would be lost.

  9. A psychology which is the basis of psychotherapy thus conceives every mental process in relation to both the ideas and the actions; it avoids all one-sidedness by which the mind is cut off either from its resources or from its effects.

  10. And through the development of this many-sidedness man may come to finding enjoyment in bloodshed.

  11. Their many-sidedness is really amazing, and goodness knows what it may develop into later on, and what the future has in store for us.

  12. And the richness and many-sidedness of his mind qualified him for gaining such a knowledge.

  13. The one-sidedness of immediacy on the part of the Ideal involves the opposite one-sidedness (ยง 556) that it is something made by the artist.

  14. Yet the mistake lies in the one-sidedness of sentiment and convention.

  15. Thus while the given object is rendered subjective, the subjectivity divests itself of its one-sidedness and becomes objective to itself.

  16. He has been well called, from the many-sidedness of his efforts, the Faust of the Renaissance.

  17. In the many-sidedness of his genius he may be compared to Leonardo da Vinci.

  18. But, you may now ask, would not this one-sidedness be cured if we should all espouse the science of religions as our own religion?

  19. Great schools of art work out the effects which it is their mission to reveal, at the cost of a one-sidedness for which other schools must make amends.

  20. Excess, in human faculties, means usually one-sidedness or want of balance; for it is hard to imagine an essential faculty too strong, if only other faculties equally strong be there to cooperate with it in action.

  21. Hence, like all abstractions, they represent the essence of a question, but not its completeness, its many-sidedness as we may see it in reality.

  22. The whole-hearted, instinctive life of the Elizabethan age was narrowed and deepened into the severe one-sidedness of Puritanism, which cast on the bright earth the sombre shadow of a life to come.

  23. It is this many-sidedness that leads to the different estimates that are formed of him.

  24. Lauderdale, Inquiry, 219, reacts so forcibly against the one-sidedness which this involves that he believes no circumstance possible "which could so far change the nature of things as to turn parsimony into a means of increasing wealth.

  25. Yet, not to err in our classification here, it is necessary to possess the impartiality and many-sidedness of the historian, which enable one to put himself in the place of others and feel after them as they felt.

  26. Care must be taken not to confound many-sidedness with all-sidedness.

  27. I do not know how far it is wise to go in this effort to repair the one-sidedness in which most of us are compelled to live.

  28. Temporary one-sidedness and extravagance is not too high a price to pay for originality.

  29. It is easy, then, to see how Goethe's one-sidedness prepared the way for that of the Romanticists; it is not so easy to show that the same was the case with Schiller.

  30. But to Schlegel's critical intellect, Goethe's wonderful many-sidedness was now revealed.

  31. But as opposed to the one-sidedness to which fresco painting at Munich was given up, the encouragement of oil-painting at Duesseldorf must be looked upon as praiseworthy.

  32. The only point in question was, how to avoid the one-sidedness of Classicism.

  33. The reformation of the academy, instigated by him at Munich, demonstrated the one-sidedness of his point of view.

  34. This brings us back to many-sidedness of interest (83-94).

  35. For the possible cases of one-sidedness are differentiated far more minutely than could be shown by the discrimination of only six kinds of interest.

  36. The mere fact that we can never know with certainty, beforehand, what will influence the pupil most, warns us against one-sidedness of instruction.

  37. Since many-sidedness cannot be interpreted to mean knowledge of all subjects, this being impossible, it must be interpreted to mean knowledge of all departments of learning.

  38. But no instruction is able to prevent the special varieties of one-sidedness that may develop within the limits of each main group.

  39. The case is different in higher education, however, for election and many-sidedness are here quite reconcilable.

  40. Moreover, the above-mentioned forms of one-sidedness are not all equally detrimental, because they do not assert themselves with the same degree of exclusiveness.

  41. Of instruction-material there is no lack; we must select and arrange, guided in the main by what was said on the conditions of many-sidedness and of interest.

  42. The mere thoroughness and many-sidedness of good instruction, which emphasizes and aims to effect rational connection and balance of mind, obviously supply the corrective.

  43. Much of this one-sidedness is brought about in later life by one's vocation.

  44. It was just in his immobility and his one-sidedness that his significance lay.

  45. It gives us a feeling of the many-sidedness of her character to remember the long list of persons, differing from each other in every possible way, with whom she was on intimate terms.

  46. In its fear of one-sidedness it takes refuge in the arms of an often faint-hearted policy of reconciliation.

  47. Cumberland, recognizing the one-sidedness of the first of these positions, announces the principle of universal benevolence, at which Bacon had hinted before him, and in which he is followed by the school of Shaftesbury.

  48. But their intellectualism was checked by the aesthetic and eudaemonistic element, and preserved from the one-sidedness which it manifests in the modern period, because of the lack of an effective counterpoise.

  49. Indeed, the external events of his early life are of value only as they reveal the many-sidedness of his nature and the growth of his mental powers.

  50. This one-sidedness robs of its significance what should be the American epic of the nineteenth century.

  51. I owe him thanks for preserving me from the one-sidedness to which zealous reformers are so apt to run.


  52. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sidedness" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.