Example sentences of "be viewed as [art] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 The emphasis in Working for patients on services to individual patients , and provisions such as ‘ Life-style consultations ’ in connection with the 1990 Contract for GPs , can be viewed as a reinforcement of the individualistic view of health .
2 It is worth emphasizing its major difference from the structuralism of the sixties and seventies : whereas this later structuralism is mainly interested in the structure of literature as a whole , to the extent that this too can be viewed as a system of signs , the Prague School version took as its main object the structure of the individual text and , like the later Formalists , viewed the individual text as a system .
3 Landsbergis reiterated his demand for troop withdrawal in an interview for Radio Moscow 's World Service on Feb. 19 , saying that " army units [ in Kaliningrad ] may be viewed as a survival of the former policy and ideology of the Soviet empire , which was always prepared to expand its influence and possessions " .
4 Even writers working in solitude try to form some idea of the receiver of their work and adjust to it — the meaningfulness of what they say can be viewed as a measure of the success of that prediction and adjustment .
5 Entropy can thus be viewed as a measure of the dispersal of energy .
6 The size of such settlements can easily be overestimated as the number of buildings must be viewed as a factor of the length of time the site was occupied and the frequency with which buildings were replaced .
7 He produced a general landform equation in which landform ( LF ) could be viewed as a function of geologic material ( m ) ; rate of change of geological material , structural factor ( dm/at ) ; rate of erosion ( de/dt ) ; the rate of uplift ( du/dt ) ; and the total time of duration of the process ( t ) in the form LF = , and he then proposed expressions for an erosion factor ( de/dt ) .
8 Indeed , in many societies disease may itself be viewed as a sign of moral failure , either of the victim or of some ‘ witch ’ .
9 Pragmatism may be viewed as a critique of an empiricist epistemology , which is based on the Cartesian distinction between mind and matter .
10 The current trend for publicly sited artworks could be viewed as a by-product of the postmodernist influences in the art world .
11 Social life can thus be viewed as a kind of theatre , an image which , of course , has always appealed to dramatists and poets .
12 Thus the statement that That 's a dog entails That 's an animal can be viewed as a kind of shorthand for a pattern of normality like the following :
13 This part of continental-margin orogens can therefore be viewed as a kind of subduction zone , albeit one that involves orders of magnitude less convergence that oceanic trench subduction zones .
14 Getting acceptance of the technical specification by these functions is the first hurdle for the project manager ; the process should be viewed as a form of insurance that the proposals are not going to give rise to problems in these areas , not as unwarranted interference with the job .
15 Anyone who has ever played with a gyroscope will know that the object displays a distinct aversion to being turned upside-down ; in many ways the spinning Earth can be viewed as a sort of super-heavy gyroscope .
16 This , said Mr Harcourt , would cause Clayoquot Sound to be viewed as a paragon of balance between the interests of industry and those of the environment .
17 The coincidental publication of the Guidance notes on the Code of Professional Conduct during a major test of professional practice can be viewed as a piece of misfortune or as a superb opportunity to affirm the stature of the profession by using the Code to support the Library Association 's case .
18 As events unfolded and the Library Association failed to act it is to be viewed as a piece of misfortune for the Code , and hence the Association and for the profession .
19 Thus labour only sub-contractors can be viewed as a sub-category of free lancers and certain workers on training contracts as a sub-category of workers on performance contracts .
20 From the Comtean perspective the functionalist style in public law should be viewed as a product of the scientific era .
21 The very process of humanization can now be viewed as a product of aesthetic feeling as well as of mind .
22 The model can be viewed as a set of linked industry models .
23 Just as laboratory bacteria are artefacts of the culture media , so the bacterial world can be viewed as an artefact of the rest of the biosphere .
24 Instead of being perceived simply as agents of the shareholders the board of directors came to be viewed as an organ of the company which for many purposes could be treated as the company .
25 A political ideology , then , should be viewed as an abridgement of a particular tradition .
26 The short-lived Mond — Turner talks advocated this new spirit in industrial relations , which can be viewed as an extension of the concept of the General Council acting as representative of the whole trade union movement in national industrial matters .
27 They stated that their model can be viewed as an amplification of Clark ( 1973 ) .
28 Pragmatism may be viewed as the philosophy of the new world of interdependence .
29 The former damage will be viewed as the result of ‘ destructive hooliganism ’ and dealt with accordingly , whilst the latter will be seen as arising from an excess of good-natured high spirits and over-enthusiasm .
30 That is , liberty should not be viewed as the absence of compulsion but as the empowerment of all members of society to make the best of themselves .
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