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corollary and Law
Finagle's Law of Dynamic Negatives ( also known as Finagle's corollary to Murphy's Law ) is usually rendered:
::( Daníelsson formally labels this a corollary of Goodhart's Law.
The corollary of Brooks's Law is that there is an incremental person who, when added to a project, makes it take more, not less time.
As a corollary, he noted that, since this growth rate is slower than that predicted by Moore's Law of processor power, user experience would remain bandwidth-bound.
Kirchhoff's Law has another corollary: the emissivity cannot exceed one ( because the absorptivity cannot, by conservation of energy ), so it is not possible to thermally radiate more energy than a black body, at equilibrium.

corollary and together
At Bellagio in this period, favoured by the ideal position for transport and trade, there flourished various small industries among which that for the production of candles was particularly notable and that for silk production together with its corollary, the breeding of silk worms and the cultivation of mulberry trees.
Of these, the first five are mentioned together in the Qur ' an and Prophet Muhammad, while including a corollary of belief in Allah – the good and evil of fate ordained by God – has referred to all six together in the following manner in the Hadith of Gabriel ;

corollary and with
After the success of vaccination in preventing smallpox, scientists thought to find a corollary in tuberculosis by drawing a parallel between bovine tuberculosis and cowpox: It was hypothesized that infection with bovine tuberculosis might protect against infection with human tuberculosis.
The coupling of this corollary with the initial statement of the law proves every threaded discussion to be finite in length.
The historical definition differs from the length-based standard in that a minute of arc, and hence a nautical mile, is not a constant length at the surface of the Earth but gradually lengthens in the north-south direction with increasing distance from the equator, as a corollary of the Earth's oblateness, hence the need for " mean " in the last sentence of the previous paragraph.
Jews may use the term omniscience, or preordination as a corollary of omniscience, but normally reject the idea of predestination as being incompatible with the free will and responsibility of moral agents, and it therefore has no place in their religion.
* The first corollary is that employees who are dedicated to their current jobs should not be promoted for their efforts ( as in The Dilbert Principle ), and instead should be rewarded with, say, a pay raise, while remaining in their current position.
* A corollary is a proposition that follows with little or no proof from one other theorem or definition.
As a corollary to the fact that Congress, and only Congress, is vested with the legislative power, Congress ( in theory ) cannot delegate legislative authority to other branches of government ( e. g., the Executive Branch ), a rule known as the nondelegation doctrine.
This policy of parliamentary procedure was based on the assumption of the political equality of every " gentleman ", with the corollary that unanimous consent was needed for all measures The Commonwealth could never be liquidated unless its longtime ally, Austria, allowed it, and first Catherine had to use diplomacy to win Austria to her side.
Another corollary is that the distribution of, where b is a constant vector of the same length as x and the dot indicates a vector product, is univariate Gaussian with.
Since the volume-specific corollary of the Dulong-Petit specific heat capacity relationship requires that atoms of all elements take up ( on average ) the same volume in solids, there are many departures from it, with most of these due to variations in atomic size.
A corollary of the law of sines as stated above is that in a tetrahedron with vertices O, A, B, C, we have
For that goal to be met, the corollary required that they " maintain order within their borders and behave with a just obligation toward outsiders ".
The corollary shows that for any computable function Q of two arguments there is a program that takes one argument and evaluates Q with the index of that very program as the first argument and the given argument as the second.
The corollary to this is that, by definition, failure to conceive in women under 35 isn't regarded with the same urgency as it is in those over 35.
The development of Yin Yang Theory and its corollary, Five Phase Theory ( Five Element Theory ), have also been linked with astronomical observations of sunspots.
Razin proclaimed that his object was to root out the boyars and all officials, to level all ranks and dignities, and establish Cossackdom, with its corollary of absolute equality, throughout Muscovy.
In the treaty which partitioned Poland there was a secret clause which engaged the contracting powers to uphold the existing Swedish constitution as the swiftest means of subverting Swedish independence ; and an alliance with the credulous Caps, " the Patriots " as they were called at Saint Petersburg, guaranteeing their constitution, was the corollary to this secret understanding.
The Convention Parliament did not see that the offer of joint monarchy carried with it the corollary of a declaration of war, but the subsequent actions of the deposed king finally swung Parliament behind William's war policy.
The correlation of the corollary discharge signal with the actual afferent signal returned from the periphery can then be used to determine if, in fact, the intended action occurred as expected.
The most typical way of constructing new examples is the following corollary from the O ' Neill curvature formulas: if is a Riemannian manifold admitting a free isometric action of a Lie group G, and M has positive sectional curvature on all 2-planes orthogonal to the orbits of G, then the manifold with the quotient metric has positive sectional curvature.
" If God were to hold in his right hand all the truth and in his left the unique ever-active spur for truth, although with the corollary to err forever, asking me to choose, I would humbly take his left and say ' Father, give ; for the pure truth is for you alone!
So as a corollary to advice of writing about what we know, maybe we should add getting familiar with our ignorance, and the possibilities therein for writing a good story.
The hour of Bestuzhev's triumph coincided with the peace congress of Aix-la-Chapelle ( April to October 1748 ), which altered the whole situation of European politics and introduced fresh combinations: the breaking away of Prussia from France and a rapprochement between England and Prussia, with the inevitable corollary of an alliance between France and the enemies of Prussia.

corollary and law
There is a widely recognized corollary that any such ulterior-motive invocation of Godwin's law will be unsuccessful.
In this world view, the Mishnaic and Talmudic rabbis are closer to the Divine revelation ; by corollary, one must be extremely conservative in changing or adapting Jewish law.
*** The corollary from the previous two properties and De Morgan ’ s law is that is also closed under countable intersections: if A < sub > i </ sub >∈ for i = 1, 2 ,…, then also (∩< sub > i </ sub > A < sub > i </ sub >)∈
When this rule is applied to criminal process ( whether or not that was done in Roman law itself ), it places the burden of proof upon the accuser, which has the corollary that the accused is presumed to be innocent.
The 23 Enigma is regarded as a corollary of this law, since 2 + 3 = 5.
Accepting the doctrine of evolution as the only true one, with its corollary, the law of cause and effect, he condemns the idea of creator and strictly forbids inquiry into it as being useless.
With this definition, a corollary of Kirchhoff's law is that for an arbitrary body emitting and absorbing thermal radiation in thermodynamic equilibrium, the emissivity is equal to the absorptivity.
The Newton law will arise and its corollary Poisson's equation.
The Nelson Act of 1889 was a corollary law that enabled the land to be divided and sold to non-Natives.
and Canadian case law has found that as a corollary of this right, there is a right to legal aid.
By corollary, the judicial and executive branches should properly be limited in their powers with regard to the law: the judicial in interpreting the laws, and the executive in enforcing the laws.

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