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corollary and fact
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.
A particularly important corollary is that many knots and links are in fact hyperbolic.
In fact there was an eighth province, i. e. the Lordship of Drenthe, but this area was so poor it was exempt from paying confederal taxes and, as a corollary, was denied representation in the States-General.
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 end result ( corollary as a matter of fact ) of practical interest for antenna engineers is the following formula:
The completeness of first-order logic is an easy corollary of results Skolem proved in the early 1920s and discussed in Skolem ( 1928 ), but he failed to note this fact, perhaps because mathematicians and logicians did not become fully aware of completeness as a fundamental metamathematical problem until the 1928 first edition of Hilbert and Ackermann's Principles of Mathematical Logic clearly articulated it.
A related corollary is that if almost all prime ideals of K split completely in L, then in fact L
') ( This conclusion is reached after taking as initial fact the observed proportionality between square of orbital period and cube of orbital size, considered in corollary 5 to Theorem 1.
The fact that the self-interested action evokes this conflict, often implies that the tendency to use opportunities to advantage is excessive or improper, the corollary being a deficiency of character or at least a lack of propriety.

corollary and Congress
A corollary of this is that EOP personnel may act independent of, without regard for, and without accountability to Congress.
* Lodge's defense of the corollary before the 62nd Congress

corollary and only
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.
* The second corollary is that employees might be promoted only after being sufficiently trained to the new position.
Though he had mentioned the basis of his idea beforehand in private letters, he officially announced the corollary in 1905, stating that he only wanted the " other republics on this continent " to be " happy and prosperous ".
An immediate corollary is the " weak Nullstellensatz ": The ideal I in kX < sub > n </ sub > contains 1 if and only if the polynomials in I do not have any common zeros in K < sup > n </ sup >.
* The corollary of this, and the second of the two main principles, is that optimization of each aspect alone ( socio or technical ) tends to increase not only the quantity of unpredictable, " un-designed " relationships, but those relationships that are injurious to the system's performance.
The only corollary is the Regional Airline Association, an industry trade group, defines " regional airlines " generally as "... operat ( ing ) short and medium haul scheduled airline service connecting smaller communities with larger cities and connecting hubs.
• The range corollary: " a construct is convenient for the anticipation of a finite range of events only.
As a corollary, a sequence in C ( X ) is uniformly convergent if and only if it is equicontinuous and converges pointwise to a function ( not necessarily continuous a-priori ).
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.
Its political corollary is the kabyle sovereign, various trends ( autonomy, federalism, independence ) with the goal: creating a Kabyle sovereign state with Kabyle as the only official language.
A corollary of this problem is that, should such a vicious circle indeed exist, its only overriding tendency is to allow for outside multinational investment to provide the service and food needs to the society, which can no longer function in a productive, cost effective manner.
As a corollary, supposing that there is no net growth of output and capital, capital accumulation can continue only if some people and organizations get richer while other people and organizations get poorer.
The Church regards these " antisocial personalities " as being those " who possess characteristics and mental attitudes that cause them to violently oppose any betterment activity or group ," This concern with " groups " continues in the official Scientology Handbook, which states the corollary: " The antisocial personality supports only destructive groups.
* The corollary of that is wage labour (“ employment ”) by the direct producers, who are compelled to sell their labour power because they lack access to alternative means of subsistence ( other than being self-employed or employers of labour, if only they could acquire sufficient funds ) and can obtain means of consumption only through market transactions.
A corollary of Myhill's theorem is that two total numberings are one-equivalent if and only if they are computably isomorphic.

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.
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.
A corollary to Rand's endorsement of self-interest is her rejection of the ethical doctrine of altruism — which she defined in the sense of Auguste Comte's altruism ( he coined the term ), as a moral obligation to live for the sake of others.
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.
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.

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