Theorist
in sentence
74 examples of Theorist in a sentence
And we get it not from a philosopher of art, not from a postmodern art
theorist
or a bigwig art critic.
The great persuasion
theorist
Robert Cialdini says we've got to get our favors back.
And one of the most beautiful descriptions I've come across in this research of how minds interpenetrate was written by a great
theorist
and scientist named Douglas Hofstadter at the University of Indiana.
The
theorist
guy says, "I think this is what's going on," the experimentalist says, "You're wrong."
I'm back to
theorist
again.
Secondly, a political
theorist
who's going to talk about the crisis of democracy is probably not the most exciting topic you can think about.
Personality
theorist
Silvan Tomkins was one of the few to insist otherwise.
I'm a
theorist.
If that makes you immediately feel a little bit wary, that's OK, that doesn't make you some kind of crazy conspiracy theorist, it makes you skeptical.
These tech billionaires were asking a media
theorist
for advice on where to put their doomsday bunkers.
And Johan Galtung, a peace theorist, talks about structural violence in our society.
He's a string
theorist.
A few yrs ago, I remember reading an essay by a feminist film
theorist
who briefly mentioned Rosalind Russell.
It should be allowed that Eisenstein was not the only montage
theorist
and the principles of montage editing would likely have been discovered by another given time.
Call me a conspiracy theorist, but quotes like, "We have to steal the Declaration of Independence to protect it" seem like ways to justify actions like the invasion of Iraq, etc.
Secondly, it ties together aliens, the government and the undead which any conspiracy
theorist
will tell you is a no-BRAINer.
The hacker group's lone egghead is at the same time a conspiracy
theorist
(Dan Ackroyd) who balances out his own personality, while the rest are a complementary lot to their leader, Robert Redford, alias Martin Brice, alias Martin Bishop.
To a conspiracy theorist, nothing ever happens randomly.
Though it takes days to set up a presidential appearance, conspiracy theorists – and Donald Trump, perhaps the “conspiracy
theorist
in chief” – had a field day.
Perhaps the hardest worry to pin down is what Harvard political
theorist
Michael Sandel calls "the drive to mastery."
A century earlier, the German military
theorist
Carl von Clausewitz had written that war is “a continuation of political intercourse carried on with other means.”
The bulk of classical voting theory, pioneered by the mathematical statistician and economic
theorist
Harold Hotelling and the economist and political
theorist
Anthony Downs, assumes that people vote in their self-interest.
In his new and important book The People vs. Democracy, the political
theorist
Yascha Mounk calls this type of regime– in apt symmetry with illiberal democracy – “undemocratic liberalism”.
The nineteenth-century Prussian military
theorist
Carl von Clausewitz is (too) often cited for his dictum that war is a continuation of politics by other means.
As the social
theorist
Robert Putnam has explained, "social capital"--the networks, norms, and social trust that facilitate cooperation and coordination for mutual benefit--is as much a determinant as it is a result of economic growth.
The Dangers of Nuclear BombastMADRID – In the summer of 2012, the international relations
theorist
Kenneth N. Waltz published an article titled “Why Iran Should Get the Bomb,” in which he argued that a nuclear-armed Iran would reestablish a desirable balance of power in the Middle East, by acting as a counterweight to Israel.
In a speech marking the Great Helmsman’s 110th birthday in late 2003, he declared Mao to be a “great proletariat revolutionary strategist and theorist.”
Likewise, Tunisia’s Ennahda (Renaissance) party was originally shaped by the legacy of the Iranian revolution and the thinking of radical Islamist critics of Western values, such as Sayyid Qutb, a leading Muslim Brotherhood
theorist
in the 1950s.
The nineteenth-century Prussian military officer and
theorist
Carl von Clausewitz spoke presciently about the age of total war that would arrive less than a century after his death.
A century ago, the British geopolitical
theorist
Halford Mackinder argued that whoever controlled the world island of Eurasia would control the world.
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