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footnote and Paramahansa
Presented as a double album with one track on each side, its concept is based on singer Jon Anderson's interpretation of four Shastric scriptures from a footnote in Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda.
One evening in March 1973, while on a concert tour of Japan to promote Close to the Edge, Anderson found himself " caught up in a lengthy footnote on page 83 " of Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda which describes four Shastric scriptures that cover religion, art, social life, medicine, music and architecture.

footnote and inspired
: " It should be noted as a historical footnote that Richard Stallman who inspired the free software and free culture movement also proposed his own encyclopedia in 1999 and attempted to launch it in the same year that Wikipedia took off.
A modern day interpretation, which has no historical foundation that can be found in the footnote, is that for Arizmendi this was also a national symbol of Puerto Rico by joining his country and God in his heart Arizmendi's statement may have inspired the seizure in 1810 of all ecclesiastical stipends by the royal treasury, but most likely it was the end of the Situado from Mexico the same year.

footnote and entire
This entire matter was a mere footnote to the back-and-forth of religious debate, and was rekindled only when Salman Rushdie's 1988 novel, The Satanic Verses, made headline news.

footnote and double
A third footnote employs the double dagger.
Like the dagger (†) and double dagger (‡), it is also sometimes used to link to a footnote where the asterisk (*) is already in use on a given page ; however, these usages are declining in favor of numbered footnotes, usually linked by a superscripted and / or square bracketed number.

footnote and album
OC Weeklys Dave Segal remarked that the album " offers 14 reasons why we should still care about this footnote in shoegaze-rock history.

footnote and from
The scene is drawn from a footnote to the Letter to M. D ' Alembert on Spectacles | Letter to d ' Alembert where Rousseau recalls witnessing the popular celebrations following the exercises of the St Gervais regiment.
In a footnote to a poem titled Speech to the Western Indians, ( published 1813 ) Arent DePeyster, British commandant at Fort Michilimackinac from 1774 to 1779, noted that " Baptist Point de Saible " was " handsome ", " well educated ", and " settled in Eschecagou ".
It is described in a short footnote as " Excerpt from Walt Mervin's ' Certain Essays in History '".
Moreover, in a footnote added to the 1915 edition of Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality ( 1905 ), Sigmund Freud urged that homosexuals not be segregated from mainstream society.
Mereschkowski was familiar with work by botanist Andreas Schimper, who had observed in 1883 that the division of chloroplasts in green plants closely resembled that of free-living cyanobacteria, and who had himself tentatively proposed ( in a footnote ) that green plants had arisen from a symbiotic union of two organisms.
" While not explained in the book, a footnote of the original radio scripts explains that " just before arriving ( on Earth ) he registered his new name officially at the Galactic Nomenclaturoid Office, where they had the technology to unpick his old name from the fabric of space / time and thread the new one in its place, so that to all intents and purposes his name had always been and would always be Ford Prefect.
* Women and Power in the Middle Ages: Political Aspects of Medieval Queenship PDF of an article from an unknown book, lacks footnote information.
According to the footnote of the " The lunar calender of Qin and Chu " (《 秦楚之际月表 》) from the Index of the Records of the Grand Historian (《 史记索隐 》), the first month Zhengyue, " due to the taboo of the First Emperor's given name Zheng, was reformed as Duanyue ( 端月 ).
As a historical footnote, David Ogilvy's granddaughter Clementine Hozier was married to Winston Churchill from 1908 until his death in 1965.
To which Fitzgerald adds the following footnote ( 1st edition, 1859 ): " Bahram Gur-Bahram of the Wild Ass from his fame in hunting it-a Sassanian sovereign, had also his seven palaces, each of a different colour ; each with a Royal mistress within ; each of whom recounts to Bahram a romance.
The non-canonical 1981 footnote text of the Book of Mormon closely linked the concept of " skin of blackness " with that of " scales of darkness falling from their eyes ", suggesting that the LDS Church has interpreted both cases as being examples of figurative language.
* The quotation in footnote 3 is from Irving Lowens and Allen P. Britton, " The Easy Instructor ( 1798 – 1831 ): A history and bibliography of the first shape note tune book ," Journal of Research in Music Education, I ( Spring 1953 ), 32.
( Burton's footnote comments: " This tale is evidently taken from the escape of Aristomenes the Messenian from the pit into which he had been thrown, a fox being his guide.
In a letter to Lord Salisbury, the British Foreign Secretary, Phillips requested approval to invade Benin and depose the Oba, adding the following footnote: " I would add that I have reason to hope that sufficient ivory would be found in the King's house to pay the expenses incurred in removing the King from his stool.
The character Diana's background is clarified in a multiple-page footnote from the author.
The whistle was not mentioned in the Laws of the Game ( LOTG ) until 1936 when an IFAB Decision was added as footnote ( b ) to Law 2, stating " A Referee's control over the players for misconduct or ungentlemanly behaviour commences from the time he enters the field of play, but his jurisdiction in connection with the Laws of the Game commences from the time he blows his whistle for the game to start.
The story of the letter yat and its elimination from the Russian alphabet makes for an interesting footnote in Russian cultural history.
* In Clayton Rawson's Death from a Top Hat, two recipes by Johann Weyer, a 16th-century demonologist, are given in a footnote:
Schlözer mentioned in a footnote that he adopted this idea from foreign historians, but did not reveal them.
" Sanders ' editor, Robert A. Collins, chides the reviewer with the footnote " Ignore Sanders ' uneasiness, which obviously stems from his difficulty in pegging the book's genre ; Stevie Crye is a marvelous book which transcends genre, as all the best of Bishop does.
The key being " a certain form ", since Bancroft makes clear in a footnote that the majority of his sources, including Clavigero, Ternaux-Compans, Carbajal Espinosa, Oviedo y Herrera, and especially Acosta, believed Durán and others " confounded the custom of drawing blood from the secret organs with circumcision ", and " the incision on the prepuce and ear to have been mistaken for circumcision ", adding that this blood-letting rite was " chiefly performed upon sons of great men " ( p279 ).

footnote and 1973
( JNES 25, p. 123 ) Donald Redford, in a BASOR 211 ( 1973 ) No. 37 footnote observes that the use of Horemheb's name and the addition of a long " Meryamun " ( Beloved of Amun ) epithet in the graffito suggests a living, eulogised king rather than a long deceased one.

footnote and ).
9, footnote 6 ).
A footnote in the New American Bible says: “ Some scholars take the call be eunuchs for the sake of heaven to be meant for those who have been divorced by their spouses and who have refused to enter into another marriage ” ( p. 1041 ).
However, among other disabilities Husserl was unable to publish his works in Nazi Germany ; cf., above footnote to Die Krisis ( 1936 ).
In his Logical Investigations, Husserl mentions Frege only twice, once in a footnote to point out that he had retracted three pages of his criticism of Frege's The Foundations of Arithmetic, and again to question Frege's use of the word Bedeutung to designate " reference " rather than " meaning " ( sense ).
Her brilliant theorem is known only because of the footnote in Legendre's treatise on number theory, where he used it to prove Fermat's Last Theorem for p = 5 ( see Correspondence with Legendre ).
William Whiston, a 17 / 18th century translator of the Antiquities, stated in a footnote that he believed Josephus mistook Seth for Sesostris, king of Egypt, the erector of the referenced pillar in Siriad ( being a contemporary name for the territories in which Sirius was venerated ( i. e., Egypt ).
Peggy Kamuf and others, ( Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1995 ) ( see also the footnote about ISBN 0-226-14314-7, here ) ( see also the French Version Points de suspension: entretiens ( ISBN 0-8047-2488-1 ) there ).
* Use supra with “ note ” to indicate a footnote within the same piece ( internal cross-reference ).
A comment in Grey's Polynesian Mythology may have given the Māori something they did not have before — as A. W Reed put it, " In Polynesian Mythology Grey said that when Tāwhaki's ancestors released the floods of heaven, the earth was overwhelmed and all human beings perished — thus providing the Māori with his own version of the universal flood " ( Reed 1963: 165, in a footnote ).
The Tetragrammaton is often represented ( especially in older English versions of the Bible ) by the word ""; and the expression " Hallelujah " by the phrase " Praise ye the " ( Psalm 104: 35 KJV and footnote ).
This historical footnote has become a significant component of the town's identity and is commemorated by a plaque on Washington Street ( Highway 89 ).
Some elements found in the ' Joyce legends ' appeared in a footnote about Joyce family traditions in James Hardiman's History of Galway ( 1820 ).
This work is cited by William James in his lecture on Neurology and Religion at the beginning of The Varieties of Religious Experience ( footnote 4 ).
Lee identified this as " the faith that is common to all believers " ( Recovery Version, footnote ).
The central extension giving the Virasoro algebra was rediscovered in physics shortly after by J. H. Weis, according to Brower and Thorn ( 1971, footnote on page 167 ).
Nono took strong exception, and informed Stockhausen that it was " incorrect and misleading, and that he had had neither a phonetic treatment of the text nor more or less differentiated degrees of comprehensibility of the words in mind when setting the text " ( footnote in Stockhausen 1964, 49 ).
The joke appears in a 1978 book ( A New Look at Love, by Elaine Hatfield and G. William Walster, p. 75 ), citing an earlier source ( footnote 19, Chapter 5 ).
He argues that it is not likely that the results can be explained by trade: Because developed states have large economies, they do not have high levels of trade interdependence ( 2005: 70 and footnote 5 ; Mousseau, Hegre & Oneal 2003: 283 ).
These were the words written on the ( old ) Mozarabic Missal, though the Roman formula was included as a footnote in the Missal and was used in actual practice in place of the old Spanish formula ( note, however, that it was reinstituted by the modern Mozarabic Missal ).
The zanzithophone is mentioned in a footnote on page 66 of Kim Cooper's book In the Aeroplane Over the Sea ( New York: Continuum, 2005 ).
), Oeuvres de Maitre François Rabelais, Jean-Frédéric Bernard, 1741, p. 129 ( footnote 5 ).
Another one of the 19th century critics of Malthusian theory was Karl Marx who referred to it as " nothing more than a schoolboyish, superficial plagiary of De Foe, Sir James Steuart, Townsend, Franklin, Wallace " ( in Capital, see Marx's footnote on Malthus from Capital-reference below ).

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