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... and Conrad
He quotes Conrad as saying, " Heart of Darkness is experience ... pushed a little ( and only very little ) beyond the actual facts of the case.
* Conrad Celtis Protucius ... Four cities of Germany
* Hugo Award: Frank Herbert, Dune and Roger Zelazny, ... And Call Me Conrad
* Conrad Keely of American rock group ... And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead was a resident of Bedworth.
While his previous works such as ... And Call Me Conrad and The Dream Master cast science fiction themes into a mythic mold, Lord of Light is the first to use Zelazny's technique of " anachronistic myth ," in which a mythical or legendary story has science-fiction underpinnings and features occurrences of 20th century American vernacular and culture: Hindu deities smoke cigarettes, characters refer to Marxism and old drinking songs like " It's a Long Way to Tipperary ", and two characters engage in an " Irish Stand-down ," in which they take turns punching each other until one collapses.
On the other hand, " Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf never admitted his share of responsibility for the onset of the First World War or the defeat of Austria-Hungary ... he claimed to have been " just a military expert " with no voice in the key decisions.
Conrad Keely ( formerly Conrad Sobsamai ) ( born 15 May 1972 ) is a British-born, American musician, known primarily as the lead singer for the rock band ... And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead.
* ... Trail of Dead's Conrad Keely featured in SPIN's " In My Room "
He commented, " The popularity of Things Fall Apart in my own society can be explained simply ... this was the first time we were seeing ourselves, as autonomous individuals, rather than half-people, or as Conrad would say, ' rudimentary souls '.
Godfrey believed that natural law was dependent on individual self preservation rather than a religious obligation ; he says, “ because by natural law each person is obliged to maintain his life ... each person has dominion and a certain right in the common exterior goods of this world, a right that he cannot licitly renounce ”, says author Jussi Varkemma as noted in Conrad Summenhart ’ s Theory of Individual Rights.
* Conrad ... Jeffrey Richman
Robert Conrad ... Pete
Ulffers ... and A. Hoeppner ... ( with ) Route followed by the command of Maj. Joseph Conrad ... from near Bentonville, Ark.
Ulffers ... and A. Hoeppner ... ( with ) Route followed by the command of Maj. Joseph Conrad ... from near Bentonville, Ark.
Conrad, also known as Karaghiosis, the protagonist of Roger Zelazny's ... And Call Me Conrad ( also known as This Immortal ), which won the 1966 Hugo Award for Best Novel, is partially inspired by this character.
* Conrad II ( 1546 – 77 ) with ...
* Conrad III, Count of Fürstenberg ( 1337 – 1370 ) with ...
* Conrad Nagel ... Bearded narrator in cave

... and argues
Bede was familiar with pagan authors such as Virgil, but it was not considered appropriate to teach biblical grammar from such texts, and in De schematibus ... Bede argues for the superiority of Christian texts in understanding Christian literature.
Ravi Batra argues that " all official economic measures adopted since 1981 ... have devastated the middle class " and that the Occupy Wall Street movement should push for their repeal and thus end the influence of the super wealthy in the political process, which he considers a manifestation of crony capitalism.
Searle disagrees with this analysis and argues that " the study of the mind starts with such facts as that humans have beliefs, while thermostats, telephones, and adding machines don't ... what we wanted to know is what distinguishes the mind from thermostats and livers.
As historian John McManners argues, " In eighteenth-century France throne and altar were commonly spoken of as in close alliance ; their simultaneous collapse ... would one day provide the final proof of their interdependence.
* Michael Halliday's systemic functional grammar argues that the explanation of how language works " needed to be grounded in a functional analysis, since language had evolved in the process of carrying out certain critical functions as human beings interacted with their ... ' eco-social ' environment ".
He argues that ‘ theoretical categories, and their inter-relations, construe an abstract model of language ... they are interlocking and mutally defining.
He argues that the explanation of how language works " needed to be grounded in a functional analysis, since language had evolved in the process of carrying out certain critical functions as human beings interacted with their ... ' eco-social ' environment ".
Douglas Haldeman similarly argues for a client's right to access to therapy if requested from a fully informed position: " For some, religious identity is so important that it is more realistic to consider changing sexual orientation than abandoning one's religion of origin ... and if there are those who seek to resolve the conflict between sexual orientation and spirituality with conversion therapy, they must not be discouraged.
Opponents of this view include revisionist historians and a number of post – Cold War and otherwise dissident Soviet historians including Roy Medvedev, who argues that although " one could list the various measures carried out by Stalin that were actually a continuation of anti-democratic trends and measures implemented under Lenin ... in so many ways, Stalin acted, not in line with Lenin's clear instructions, but in defiance of them ".
Jose Ignacio Cabezon, who argues that the use of " theology " is appropriate, can only do so, he says, because " I take theology not to be restricted to discourse on God ...
On the other hand, Carla Hesse, in The Other Enlightenment: How French Women Became Modern ( 2001 ), argues that " female participation in the public cultural life of the Old Regime was ... relatively marginal ".
The feminist academic and author Sally R. Munt argues that American Beauty uses its " art house " trappings to direct its message of non-conformity primarily to the middle classes, and that this approach is a " cliché of bourgeois preoccupation ... the underlying premise being that the luxury of finding an individual ' self ' through denial and renunciation is always open to those wealthy enough to choose, and sly enough to present themselves sympathetically as a rebel.
Anker argues that " they are helpless in the face of the prettified economic and sexual stereotypes ... that they and their culture have designated for their salvation.
* Gay men and lesbians are significantly more likely to be left-handed or ambidextrous than non-gay men and women ; Simon LeVay argues that because " and preference is observable before birth ... he observation of increased non-right-handness in gay people is therefore consistent with the idea that sexual orientation is influenced by prenatal processes ," perhaps heredity.
This universal exclusion of woman ... argues, conclusively, that, not as yet, is there one nation so far emerged from barbarism, and so far practically Christian, as to permit woman to rise up to the one level of the human family.
Lastly Grahn argues that one must " insterstand ... engage with the work, to mix with it in an active engagement, rather than ' figuring it out.
Trotsky argues: " All historical experience ... shows that the peasantry are absolutely incapable of taking up an independent political role.
Chris Turner argues in Planet Simpson that McClure and Lionel Hutz " together ... represent the most significant contribution to the show outside of its permanent cast ", adding that " the show's Golden Age is hard to imagine without them ".
Quint argues that Cleopatra ( not Antony ) fulfils Virgil's Dido archetype ; " woman is subordinated as is generally the case in The Aeneid, excluded from power and the process of Empire-building: this exclusion is evident in the poem's fiction where Creusa disappears and Dido is abandoned ... woman's place or displacement is therefore in the East, and epic features a series of oriental heroines whose seductions are potentially more perilous than Eastern arms ", i. e., Cleopatra.
A critic from the New York Times argues that Wilco has a " roots-rock ... which reached back to proven materials: the twang of country, the steady chug of 1960s rock, the undulating sheen of the Beach Boys, the honky-tonk hymns of the Band and the melodic symmetries of pop.
However, Dominic Montserrat in Akhenaten: History, Fantasy and Ancient Egypt argues that " there is now a broad consensus among Egyptologists that the exaggerated forms of Akhenaten's physical portrayal ... are not to be read literally ".
Furthermore he argues that, " The entire structure of the dominator culture ... is based upon ' our alienation from nature, from ourselves and from each other '".
In a highly provocative chapter titled “ Creating Leaders ”, this eclectic group of scholars argues for adopting a decidedly ontological approach to leadership education ... For these authors, integrity, authenticity, and being committed to something bigger than oneself form the base of ‘ the context for leadership ,’ a context that once mastered, leaves one actually being a leader.
Kurzman argues that " cuts ... meant less stringent quality control and thus looser safety rules.

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