Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Guilt (emotion)" ¶ 10
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

and produces
In deontology, an act may be considered right even if the act produces a bad consequence, if it follows the rule that one should do unto others as they would have done unto them ”, and even if the person who does the act lacks virtue and had a bad intention in doing the act.
On the futuristic side, the butterbugs ” of A Civil Campaign host a microbial suite which produces a nonperishable perfect ” ( in terms of human nutritional needs ) food.
Aircraft used to create a weightless state for purposes of experimentation, such as NASA's Vomit Comet ,” follow a vertically parabolic trajectory for brief periods in order to trace the course of an object in free fall, which produces the same effect as zero gravity for most purposes.
Reduction is incomplete combustion of fuel, caused by a shortage of oxygen, which produces carbon monoxide ” ( Arbuckle, 4 ) Eventually, all of the available oxygen is used.
In reality, the differential selection ” of a trait, or an adaptation, is a consequence of the functional effects it produces in relation to the survival and reproductive success of a given organism in a given environment.
This process produces a fair value ” of the team.
:: Example: A defendant is entitled to a diminished capacity instruction when he produces expert testimony establishing that he suffered from a mental disorder, and the evidence logically and reasonably connects the defendant's alleged mental condition with the ... inability to possess the required level of culpability to commit the crime charged .” State v. Griffin, 100 Wn. 2d 417, 418 – 19, 670 P. 2d 265 ( 1983 ); see also Cienfuegos, 144 Wn. 2d at 227 ; State v. Ellis, 136 Wn. 2d 498, 521, 963 P. 2d 843 ( 1998 ).
: The island of apples which men call The Fortunate Isle ” ( Insula Pomorum quae Fortunata uocatur ) gets its name from the fact that it produces all things of itself ; the fields there have no need of the ploughs of the farmers and all cultivation is lacking except what nature provides.
Each year, it produces a well-publicized State of the Lake ” assessment report.
That is, man is able to objectify his intentions, by means of an idea of himself, as the subject ”, and an idea of the thing that he produces, the object ”.
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines Working Group is probably the most well-known working group in WAI ; the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1. 0 are often simply referred to as the WAI guidelines ,” even though WAI also produces other guidelines and specifications.
Even the smile of a stranger produces more Good Samaritan ” effects on the receiver.
Tillmans puts it like this: I take pictures, in order to see the world .” Tillmans produces his photographs in different sizes and formats in meticulous wall-installations, combining them with photocopies, magazine and newspaper clippings ( particularly in the installation known as Soldiers – The Nineties ”).
Mentorn Oxford produces Heart and Soul, described as a new multi-faith programme featuring a panel and a studio audience ”, followed by Life from the Loft which is made by the Leeds-based company True North.
According to the Mackinac Center Web site the Project produces legal analysis of state and national policy issues in order to better inform policymakers, the media and the public ,” and in strategic cases at both the state and federal levels the initiative writes and submits amicus curiae briefs that explore the broader constitutional, statutory and public policy considerations at stake .” These briefs are published on the Center s Web site.
This way transcends the simple categories of intended and unintended altogether, representing instances in which the very process of technical development is so thoroughly biased in a particular direction that it regularly produces results heralded as wonderful breakthroughs by some social interests and crushing setbacks by others ” ( Winner, p. 25-6, 1999 ).
" A party that supposedly implemented democracy to such an extent that " the general control ( in the literal sense of the term ) exercised over every act of a party man in the political field brings into existence an automatically operating mechanism which produces what in biology is called the survival of the fittest ”.
However Durkheim made a clear distinction between historical and functional analysis, saying, When … the explanation of a social phenomenon is undertaken, we must seek separately the efficient cause which produces it and the function it fulfills ” in Coser, 1977: 140.
Just because a mathematical method produces a straight line does not mean it represents a real trend ” or reflects the relationship of the two variables.

and perceptual
Shklovskij s formulations negate or cancel out the existence / possibility of real perception: variously, by ( 1 ) the familiar Formalist denial of a link between literature and life, connoting their status as non-communicating vessels, ( 2 ) always, as if compulsively, referring to a real experience in terms of empty, dead, and automatized repetition and recognition, and ( 3 ) implicitly locating real perception at an unspecifiable temporally anterior and spatially other place, at a mythic first time ” of naïve experience, the loss of which to automatization is to be restored by aesthetic perceptual fullness.
Here, rather than defining a social group based on expressions of cohesive social relationships between individuals, the social identity model assumes that psychological group membership has primarily a perceptual or cognitive basis ”.
The blame for this perceptual parallax does not fall upon the mass media technology ( print, radio, cinema, television ) or logistical concerns, rather, upon certain members of society who attend to life with little intellectual engagement, because they suffer from anemia, from lack of appetite and curiosity for the human scene.
A rivalry is defined as as a perceptual categorizing process in which actors identify which states are sufficiently threatening competitors ”) Ritualism is a series of … iterated acts or performances that are … famous in terms not entirely encoded by the performer ;’ that is, they are imbued by meanings external to the performer .< ref > Everyone that is part of the sports event in some capacity becomes a part of the ritualism.
According to this theory, feature degradation ” or increased noise ” occurs in the perceptual system.

and shift
Some researchers add that Nichiren strongly criticized the esoteric rituals of other schools: As Sasaki notes, Nichiren s view of the shift of authority from GoToba to Yoshitoki was inseparable from his criticism of the esoteric teachings.
His discovery of quasicrystals revealed a new principle for packing of atoms and molecules ,” stated the Nobel Committee and pointed that this led to a paradigm shift within chemistry .”
Artists and critics often credit Rakim with creating the overall shift from the more simplistic Old School flows to more complex flows near the beginning of Hip Hop s new school – Kool Moe Dee says, any emcee that came after 1986 had to study Rakim just to know what to be able to do ... Rakim, in 1986, gave us flow and that was the rhyme style from 1986 to 1994 ... from that point on, anybody emceeing was forced to focus on their flow ”.
Since that time, Lovejoy s formulation of unit-ideas ” has been discredited and replaced by more nuanced and more historically sensitive accounts of intellectual activity, and this shift is reflected in the replacement of the phrase history of ideas by intellectual history.
The Minister of Overseas Development, Barbara Castle, set a standard in interest relief on loans to developing nations which resulted in changes to the loan policies of many donor countries, a significant shift in the conduct of rich white nations to poor brown ones .” Loans were introduced to developing countries on terms that were more favourable to them than those given by governments of all other developed countries at that time.
In 1923, Compton published a paper in the Physical Review which explained the X-ray shift by attributing particle-like momentum to photons ” which Einstein had invoked the use of for his Nobel prize winning explanation of the photo-electric effect, however was first postulated ( unenthusiastically ) by Planck, these " particles " conceptualized as elements of light quantized ” as containing a specific amount of energy depending only on the frequency of the light.
* A 02 Language Impairment – diagnosed based on language abilities that are below age expectations in one or more language domains ; LI is likely to persist into adolescence and adulthood, although the symptoms, domains, and modalities involved may shift with age ”
This stems largely from the junk-food hypothesis ” representing a shift in their diet from fatty herring and capelin to leaner fare like pollock and flounder, thereby limiting their ability to consume and store fat. Other hypotheses include increased predation by orcas, indirect effects of prey species composition shifts due to changes in climate, effects of disease or contaminants, shooting by fishermen, and others.
These results were obtained as participants learned through specific mindfulness techniques and biofeedback tools how to make a positive shift in their heart rhythm which stabilizes the autonomic nervous system, reduces the stresshormone cortisol and raises ones level of DHEA, a feel-good ” hormone.
The home should shift from being an economic entity ” where a married couple live together because of the economic benefit or necessity, to a place where groups of men and groups of women can share in a peaceful and permanent expression of personal life .” Gilman believed having a comfortable and healthy lifestyle should not be restricted to married couples ; all humans need a home that provides these amenities.
Citizens worked to change the form of government, and on November 5, 1963, in order to better deal with the village s growing population, the citizens of Shoreview voted to shift to a Plan A ” form of government under which the village clerk and treasurer were appointed rather than elected.
Section 23A generally prevented banks from funding securities purchases by their affiliates before the financial crisis ( i. e., prevented the affiliates from using insured deposits to purchase risky investments ”) by limiting the ability of depository institutions to transfer to affiliates the subsidy arising from the institutions access to the federal safety net ,” but the Federal Reserve Board s exemptions allowed banks to shift the risk of such investments from the shadow banking market to FDIC insured banks during the crisis.
Madeline Levine criticized what she saw as a large change in American culture – a shift away from values of community, spirituality, and integrity, and toward competition, materialism and disconnection .”
Footing ” addresses the role that footing, or alignment, can shift during a conversation.
Ex hypothesi, the experience of the agent under transformation would change ( as the parts were replaced ), but there would be no change in causal topology and therefore no means whereby the agent could notice ” the shift in experience.
In 2006 Wired s Chris Anderson blogged on the shift from secrecy to transparency blogging culture had made on corporate communications, and highlighted the next step as a shift to radical transparency where the whole product development process laid bare, and opened to customer input ”.
An electric welder and gas torch modified an old 1927 Ford Model T ” Roadster to accept a 1948 Mercury Block, 39 Ford floor shift transmission, and a 48 Ford rear.
The early 1930s saw a shift in ideological focus away from collectivist propaganda and towards positive heroism .” Instead of glorifying socialist collectivism as a means of societal advancement, the Soviet Communist Party began uplifting individuals who committed heroic actions that advanced the cause of socialism.
He gives the example of Israeli professor of archaeology, Ze ' ev Herzog, who caused an uproar in Israel and abroad when he gave voice to the " fairly widespread " view held amongst his colleagues that there had been no Exodus from Egypt, no invasion by Joshua and that the Israelites had developed slowly and were originally Canaanites ," concluding that the Sojourn, Exodus and Conquest was a history that never happened .” However, Rohl contends that the New Chronology, with the shift of the Exodus and Conquest events to the Middle Bronze Age, removes the principal reason for that widespread academic skepticism.

0.649 seconds.