1. depiction of nature’s cyclical renewal.
2. use of non-representational images.
3. emphasis on arrangement of forms.
4. limited reliance on original models.
emphasis on arrangement of forms.
1. The conservative tendency to aspire to the mystical without a complete renunciation of the symbolic.
2. The discomfort of Indian abstractionists with Malevich’s Suprematism.
3. The easy identification of obvious points of affinity with European and American abstract art, of whichthe Kandinsky-Klee school is an example.
4. The double-edged nature of abstractionism which enabled identification with mystically-orientedschools.
The double-edged nature of abstractionism which enabled identification with mystically-oriented
schools.
1. Some artists have followed their abstractionist logic to the point of extinction.
2. Some artists have allowed chance or pattern to dominate the execution of their paintings.
3. Many artists have avoided the trap of a near-generic and an open symbolism.
4. Many artists have found it difficult to fuse the twin principles of the metaphysical and the painterly.
Some artists have allowed chance or pattern to dominate the execution of their paintings.
1. Economists belong to a different culture.
2. Only mathematicians can understand economists.
3. Economists tend to use terms unfamiliar to the lay person, but depend on familiar linguistic forms.
4. Economists use similes and adjectives in their analysis.
Economists tend to use terms unfamiliar to the lay person, but depend on familiar linguistic forms.
1. Mysterious
2. Secret
3. Covert
4. Perfidious
Secret
1. volatile and non-volatile memories.
2. magneto-resistance and magnetic tunnel-junctions.
3. radiation-disruption and radiation-neutral effects.
4. orientation of magnetised spots on the surface of a spinning disk and alignment of magnetic dots onthe surface of a conventional memory chip.
magneto-resistance and magnetic tunnel-junctions.
1. The geocentric and the heliocentric views of the solar system are equally tenable.
2. The heliocentric view is superior because of better rhetoric.
3. Both views use rhetoric to persuade.
4. Scientists should not use rhetoric.
Both views use rhetoric to persuade.
1. a layer of aluminium oxide.
2. a capacitor.
3. a vertical pillar of magnetised material.
4. a matrix of wires.
a vertical pillar of magnetised material.
1. two magnetic layers are polarised in the same direction.
2. two magnetic layers are polarised in the opposite directions.
3. two aluminium-oxide barriers are polarised in the same direction.
4. two aluminium-oxide barriers are polarised in opposite directions.
two magnetic layers are polarised in the same direction.
1. the low sensitivity of the magnetic memory elements.
2. the thickness of aluminium oxide barriers.
3. the need to develop more reliable and far smaller magnetic memory chips.
4. all of the above.
the need to develop more reliable and far smaller magnetic memory chips.