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corollary and is
The impact of noncompliance under the Wagner-Peyser Act is clear: the withdrawal of some $11 million a year of administrative funds which finance our employment service program or, as a corollary, the taking over by the Federal Government of its operation.
he further reasoned that frequent formulas in epic verse indicate oral composition, and assumed the slightly less likely corollary that oral epic is inclined towards the use of formulas.
Kant is not generally considered to be a modern anthropologist, however, as he never left his region of Germany nor did he study any cultures besides his own, and in fact, describes the need for anthropology as a corollary field to his own primary field of philosophy.
This bold attempt is entirely factitious and verbal, and it is only his employment of various terms not generally used in such a connection ( axiom, theorem, corollary, etc.
A corollary of Artin's theorem is that alternative algebras are power-associative, that is, the subalgebra generated by a single element is associative.
Finagle's Law of Dynamic Negatives ( also known as Finagle's corollary to Murphy's Law ) is usually rendered:
This is opposed to the idea of freedom as the capacity to " begin anew ," which Arendt sees as a corollary to the innate human condition of natality, or our nature as " new beginnings and hence beginners.
There is a widely recognized corollary that any such ulterior-motive invocation of Godwin's law will be unsuccessful.
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.
Egoism is a corollary of setting man's life as the moral standard.
The corollary is that high-Z materials make good gamma-ray shields, which is the principal reason that lead ( Z
The pope sat briefly on two " pierced chairs " at the Lateran: "... the vulgar tell the insane fable that he is touched to verify that he is indeed a man " a sign that this corollary of the Pope Joan legend was still current in the Roman street.
* As an easy corollary of the Nikolov-Segal result above, any surjective discrete group homomorphism φ: G → H between profinite groups G and H is continuous as long as G is topologically finitely-generated.
* 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.
* The second corollary is that employees might be promoted only after being sufficiently trained to the new position.
As a corollary, every finite p-group is nilpotent.
A corollary to Kleene's recursion theorem states that for every Gödel numbering of the computable functions and every computable function, there is an index such that returns.
By the corollary to the recursion theorem, there is an index such that returns.

corollary and her
In the editorial notes of his compendium Portraits by Sir Joshua Reynolds, Hilles theorizes that " as a corollary one might say that he was somewhat lacking in a capacity for love ", and cites Boswell's notary papers: " He said the reason he would never marry was that every woman whom he liked had grown indifferent to him, and he had been < u > glad </ u > he did not marry her.
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.
Much verbiage, however, has gone into exactly what constitutes an investment adviser and his or her corollary investment advice.

corollary and rejection
The rejection of emigration from Israel is a central assumption in all forms of Zionism as a corollary of the The " Negation of the Diaspora " in Zionism which according to Eliezer Schweid was a central tenet of Israeli Zionist education until the 1970s when there was a need for the State of Israel to reconcile itself with the Jewish diaspora and its massive support of Israel following the Six-Day War.

corollary and doctrine
3 ; Issue 16261 ; col E. (" annihilates the doctrine of spontaneous and progressive evolution of life, and its impious corollary, chance ")
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.
Perseverance of the saints, as well as the corollary though distinct doctrine known as " Once Saved, Always Saved ", is a Calvinist teaching that asserts that once persons are truly " born of God ", or " regenerated " nothing in heaven or earth " shall be able to separate ( them ) from the love of God " ( Romans 8: 39 ).
Deification is the central idea in the spirituality of St. Maximus the Confessor, for whom the doctrine is the corollary of the Incarnation: ' Deification, briefly, is the encompassing and fulfillment of all times and ages ,'.
Deification is the central idea in the spirituality of St. Maximus the Confessor, for whom the doctrine is the corollary of the Incarnation: ' Deification, briefly, is the encompassing and fulfillment of all times and ages ,'.
Deification is the central idea in the spirituality of St. Maximus the Confessor, for whom the doctrine is the corollary of the Incarnation: ' Deification, briefly, is the encompassing and fulfillment of all times and ages ,'.
Two corollary rules of the doctrine, the personal attack rule and the " political editorial " rule, remained in practice until 2000.
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.
Reprobation, in Christian theology, is a corollary to the Calvinistic doctrine of unconditional election which derives that some of mankind ( the elect ) are predestined by God for salvation.

corollary and
In topology it is often quoted as in the Brouwer fixed point theorem and some applications in Morse theory in order to use the weaker corollary that “ a non-constant smooth map has a regular value ”, and sometimes “... hence also a regular point ”.
which became important to Judaism, to ongoing strands in the Christian tradition, and as a corollary to Islam.

corollary and which
In 1905, he issued a corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, which allows the United States to " exercise international policy power " so they can intervene and keep smaller countries on their feet.
A corollary of Faraday's Law, together with Ampère's law and Ohm's law is Lenz's law: The EMF induced in an electric circuit always acts in such a direction that the current it drives around the circuit opposes the change in magnetic flux which produces the EMF.
Christologically Maximus insisted on a strict dyophysitism, which can be seen as a corollary of the emphasis on theosis.
There is no corollary to English middle names, which are both official and generally ignored.
Miranda was undermined by several subsequent decisions which seemed to grant several exceptions to the " Miranda warnings ," undermining its claim to be a necessary corollary of the Fifth Amendment.
This development came alongside the growth of the Civil Rights movements and its corollary, the Ethnic Pride movement, which led to the creation of Ethnic Studies programs in most major universities.
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.
Peirce held that, in practical affairs, slow and stumbling ratiocination is often dangerously inferior to instinct and traditional sentiment, and that the scientific method is best suited to theoretical research, which in turn should not be bound to the other methods and to practical ends ; reason's " first rule " is that, in order to learn, one must desire to learn and, as a corollary, must not block the way of inquiry.
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.
A corollary to the attorney – client privilege is the joint defense privilege, which is also called the common interest rule.
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.
An edition of a magazine published by the Brewers ' Society called A Monthly Bulletin from July 1956 describes activities of the Cheese Bureau, which it says " exists for the admirable purpose of popularising cheese and, as a corollary, the public house lunch of bread, beer, cheese and pickle.
The CIP's main initiatives included the strengthening of ARVN to combat the Communist insurgency, which had the corollary effect of strengthening Diem's political position.
• The choice corollary: " a person chooses for himself that alternative in a dichotomized construct through which he anticipates the greater possibility for extension and definition of his system.
• The commonality corollary: " to the extent that one person employs a construction of experience which is similar to that employed by another, his psychological processes are similar to the other person.
• The fragmentation corollary: " a person may successively employ a variety of construction subsystems which are inferentially incompatible with each other.
* The result above is a corollary of a general theorem by Christiaan Huygens which is also known as gambler's ruin.
The " Matilda effect " is a corollary to the " Matthew effect ", which was postulated by the sociologist Robert K. Merton.
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.
There is a converse, which is a corollary to the Riemann-Roch theorem: a non-singular curve C of genus g embedded in projective space of dimension g − 1 as a linearly normal curve of degree 2g − 2 is a canonical curve, provided its linear span is the whole space.

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