Examples of symbolic boundary in the following topics:
-
- One important factor in how symbolic boundaries function is how widely they are accepted as valid.
- Symbolic boundaries are a "necessary but insufficient" condition for social change.
- He saw the symbolic boundary between the sacred and the profane as the most profound of all social facts, and the one from which lesser symbolic boundaries were derived.
- Rituals, whether secular or religious, were for Durkheim the means by which groups maintained their symbolic and moral boundaries.
- Mary Douglas has subsequently emphasized the role of symbolic boundaries in organizing experience, private and public, even in a secular society.
-
- The straight line shown is called a boundary line.
- Note that because the inequality uses the $>$ symbol, rather than the $\geq$ symbol, the inequality is strict: points on the boundary line are not solutions, so the line is drawn dotted.
- This is called the boundary line.
- First, we need to graph the boundary line.
- This gives the boundary line below:
-
- From a symbolic interactionist perspective, gender is produced and reinforced through daily interactions and the use of symbols.
- Symbolic interactionism aims to understand human behavior by analyzing the critical role of symbols in human interaction.
- The meanings attached to symbols are socially created and fluid, instead of natural and static.
- Because of this, we act and react to symbols based on their current assigned meanings.
- The woman in this picture blurs the boundaries between the symbols that are traditionally considered masculine or feminine.
-
- The Star of David is a Jewish religious symbol that represents Judaism.
- Religious symbolism is the use by a religion of symbols including archetypes, acts, artwork, events, or natural phenomena.
- The symbolism of the early Church was characterized as being understood by initiates only.
- The study of religious symbolism is either universalist, a component of comparative religion and mythology, or seen in a localized scope within the confines of a religion's limits and boundaries.
- Religious symbolism is effective when it appeals to both the intellect and the emotions.
-
- At one extreme, they might consist of symbols in texts or sounds in verbalizations; at the other extreme, nations in the world system of states might constitute the population of nodes.
- In each case, however, the elements of the population to be studied are defined by falling within some boundary.
- The boundaries of the populations studied by network analysts are of two main types.
- Probably most commonly, the boundaries are those imposed or created by the actors themselves.
- Network analysts can expand the boundaries of their studies by replicating populations.
-
- The oldest African art dates to the Mesolithic and late Upper Paleolithic boundary and includes mostly rock-art.
- The oldest African art is dated to the Mesolithic and late Upper Paleolithic boundary, about 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.
- Discoveries of engraved stones in the Blombos Caves of South Africa has led some historians to believe that early Homo Sapiens were capable of symbolic art .
- Engraved ochre from the Blombos Cave has led some historians to believe that early Homo Sapiens were capable of symbolic art.
-
- The Pop Art Movement began in the 1960s and questioned the boundaries between "high" and "low" art.
- One of the goals of Pop Art was to blur and draw into question the boundaries between "high" and "low" art or popular culture.
- In contrast to the Abstract Expressionists, who not only disdained subject matter but also took their paintings to be an index of the artist's presence on the canvas, Neo-Dadaists sought to create meaning solely through the use of conventional symbols and icons such as targets, flags, letters and numbers.
- Combines served as instances in which the delineated boundaries between art, sculpture, and the everyday object were broken down so that all were re-contextualized in a single work of art.
- Flag by Jasper Johns presents the American flag as subject matter, thus invoking a plethora of associations and juxtapositions between the popular image, symbol, and fine art.
-
- Glyphs from the Nordic Bronze Age (c. 1700-500 BCE) seem to refer to some form of territorial boundary between tribes, in addition to possible religious meanings.
- One common symbol called the cup-and-ring mark has been found on petroglyphs in the British Isles, as well as on the European continent in locations as diverse as Spain, Scandinavia, and Greece.
- This symbol consists of a concave depression, no more than a few centimeters in diameter, pecked into a rock surface and often surrounded by concentric circles also etched into the stone.
- Some scholars have suggested that the cup-and-ring mark were symbolically linked to water, having sacred associations in late prehistoric society.
- They have been identified as (top to bottom, left to right): Plowing with oxen (the branch in the farmer's hand is assumed to be part of a fertility ritual), archer/hunter with bow, fishing from a small boat, (middle row) a procession of unknown nature, foot prints, (bottom row) man with dog, typical Scandinavian rock carving ship symbol.
-
- For example, a positron (the antiparticle of the electron, with symbol e+) and an antiproton (symbol p-) can form an antihydrogen atom .
- If antimatter-dominated regions of space existed, the gamma rays produced in annihilation reactions along the boundary between matter and antimatter regions would be detectable.
-
- This often happens at phrase boundaries, with the old-key tonic ending one phrase and the new-key tonic beginning the next.
- When a direct modulation happens across a phrase boundary, it is also called a phrase modulation.
- The pivot chord receives its analytical symbol for the old key, as usual.
- Below that symbol is the new key, colon, and the analytical symbol for the pivot chord in the new key.