0 a position between two opposite opinions in an argument, or between two descriptions:
1 the area in a painting or photograph that is between the foreground and the background
Rather, we need to consider the struggle to control the middle ground, the press controls themselves.
Yet they can be measurably consistent, and they are language-related, so they seem to be in some middle ground.
However, suggesting that music education should occupy a middle ground, a 'space-between, praxis guided by phronesis' (p. 41) is a compelling one for our times.
The problem, of course, is in finding the middle ground for the exercise of the virtues of bioethics.
Attempts to reach some compromise, some middle ground, lead to incoherence.
The events of 1546 made the middle ground yet more difficult to hold.
Yet, in 1966, the middle ground within which such ambiguity was possible was fast disappearing.
This middle ground is the disputed territory inhabited by practicing teachers.