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Page "Philo's Works" ¶ 39
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pupils and Philo
The earlier Megarian dialecticians – Diodorus Cronus and Philo – had done work in this field, and the pupils of Aristotle – Theophrastus and Eudemus – had investigated hypothetical syllogisms, but it was Chrysippus who developed these principles into a coherent system of propositional logic.
They are the words of the ἱερὸς λόγος, ϑεῖος λόγος, ὀρϑὸς λόγος ( holy word, godly word, upright word ) uttered sometimes directly and sometimes through the mouth of a prophet, especially through Moses, whom Philo considers the real medium of revelation, while the other writers of the Old Testament appear as friends or pupils of Moses.
But more recent pupils of Philo, chiefly Herakleitos of Tyre, were able to assure him of the book's authenticity.
His pupils included Philo the Dialectician, and Zeno of Citium-the founder of the Stoic school.

pupils and may
However, the teacher who understands the influence of emotions on behavior may be highly influential in helping pupils gain confidence, security, and satisfaction.
One upward-mobile teacher may be a hard taskmaster for lower-class pupils because she wants them to develop the attitudes and skills that will enable them to climb, while another upward-mobile teacher may be a very permissive person with lower-class pupils because he knows their disadvantages and deprivations at home, and he hopes to encourage them by friendly treatment.
Dosing of all opioids may be limited by opioid toxicity ( confusion, respiratory depression, myoclonic jerks and pinpoint pupils ), seizures ( tramadol ), but there is no dose ceiling in patients who accumulate tolerance.
Likewise, the term photophobia may be used to define a physical complaint ( i. e. aversion to light due to inflamed eyes or excessively dilated pupils ) and does not necessarily indicate a fear of light.
Others may require the operator to manually select the regions of the pupils to which correction is to be applied.
When performed manually, correction may consist of simply converting the red area of pupils to grayscale ( desaturating ), leaving surface reflections and highlights intact.
* To establish and maintain at such University an educational system, which will, if followed, fit the graduate for some useful pursuit, and to this end to cause the pupils, as easily as may be, to declare the particular calling, which, in life, they may desire to pursue ; ...
Symptoms of overdose may include dry mouth, dilated pupils, ataxia, urinary retention, hallucinations, convulsions, coma, and death.
Mild symptoms may only consist of increased heart rate, shivering, sweating, dilated pupils, myoclonus ( intermittent tremor or twitching ), as well as overresponsive reflexes.
Although Degas had no formal pupils, he greatly influenced several important painters, most notably Jean-Louis Forain, Mary Cassatt, and Walter Sickert ; his greatest admirer may have been Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
At this stage the pupils do not remain completely still, therefore may lead to oscillation, which may intensify and become known as hippus.
Boarding school pupils ( a. k. a. " boarders ") normally return home during the school holidays and, often, weekends, but in some cultures may spend the majority of their childhood and adolescent life away from their families.
The locus coeruleus-noradrenaline system is associated with anxiety and may mediate the autonomic symptoms associated with stress such as increased heart rate, dilated pupils, tremour and sweating.
Already a successful opera composer, in 1715 Porpora was appointed at the Conservatory of S. Onofrio, where his pupils included such well-known castrati as Giuseppe Appiani, Felice Salimbeni, and Gaetano Majorano ( known as Caffarelli ), as well as distinguished female singers such as Regina Mingotti and Vittoria Tesi ; Farinelli may well have studied with him privately.
As one scholar has explained, " The overwhelming evidence from internal documents of these Synod churches, and particularly their schools ... indicates that the German-American school was a bilingual one much ( perhaps a whole generation or more ) earlier than 1917, and that the majority of the pupils may have been English-dominant bilinguals from the early 1880s on ".
" There are two ways of reconciling the difficulty: either we may suppose him to have thrown out such aphorisms as an exercise for his pupils, as Sextus Empiricus, who calls him a Sceptic, would have us believe ; or he may have really doubted the esoteric meaning of Plato, and have supposed himself to have been stripping his works of the figments of the Dogmatists, while he was in fact taking from them all certain principles.
These include having a larger eyeball, a larger lens, a larger optical aperture ( the pupils may expand to the physical limit of the eyelids ), more rods than cones ( or rods exclusively ) in the retina, and a tapetum lucidum.
For this version, it seems he may have used the same female sitter for The Satyr and the Peasant as he did for The Adoration of the Shepherds, and it is thought that Jordaens used this painting as instruction for his assistants and pupils, as many versions and copies of the scene have been found which bear the same style, but without the master's stamp.
In some schools near the Netherlands – Germany border, pupils may choose a form of tvwo that offers 50 % of the lessons in German and 50 % in Dutch.

pupils and subsequently
One of his pupils was Lodewijk Elzevir ( 1547 – 1617 ), who established the largest bookshop and printing works in Leiden, a business continued by his descendants through 1712 and the name subsequently adopted ( in a variant spelling ) by contemporary publisher Elsevier.
This subsequently became the " finest private school in England " and had many famous pupils in the 19th century such as William S. Gilbert and Cardinal Newman.
It was a highly explosive event that included the miraculous cure of the film star, Eva Bartok, and, subsequently, the violent death of one of Bennett's pupils.
He subsequently became a teacher at the College himself, his pupils including Richard Arnell and Ernest John Moeran ( who both admired him ); Benjamin Britten ( who found Ireland's teaching less interesting ); the socialist composer Alan Bush ; Geoffrey Bush ( no relation to Alan ), who subsequently edited or arranged many of Ireland's works for publication ; and Anthony Bernard.
This delicate and difficult task I subsequently undertook, and re-edited the violin solo part, and it is this edition which has been played by me, and also by my pupils, up to the present day.
More taught many notable pupils, including Anne Finch, sister of Heneage Finch, subsequently Earl of Nottingham.
His fellow pupils included Archibald Levin Smith, subsequently Master of the Rolls, and Arthur Charles who became a judge of the Queen's Bench.
However, at the end of the 2004-05 school year, the Polack's trust announced that Polack's House would be closed due to the low numbers of boys in the house ( although many pupils were turned down subsequently ).
This new school was subsequently expanded to accommodate all pupils under the Ysgol Glan y Môr name.
One of the pupils, Ignacy Neufeld, subsequently shot himself ; Modrzejewska attended his funeral.
The London Oratory defended its right in law to interview prospective pupils to ascertain Catholicity and it won its case in 2006, but subsequently dropped the interview process when the law was changed.
In 1758, with the aid of his pupils, Lagrange established a society, which was subsequently incorporated as the Turin Academy.
His popularity and success as a teacher are strikingly illustrated by the great increase in the number of his pupils, many of whom subsequently became distinguished men, among them being Walter Scott, Lord Brougham and Francis Jeffrey.

pupils and have
If Russian pupils have to take these languages, how come American students have a choice whether or not to take a language, but have to face so many exceptions??
Undoubtedly you have read the case histories of some of his prize-winning pupils ( every pupil has a physique title of some kind or other ).
Teachers and administrators in many elementary schools have assumed that dividing the pupils in any grade into groups on the basis of test scores solves the problem of meeting the needs of individuals.
This last point is important because if high school pupils are aware that few, if any, graduates who have chosen a certain vocational program have obtained a job as a consequence of the training, the whole idea of relevance disappears.
And over 66 per cent of the elementary schools with 150 or more pupils do not have any library at all.
Cane toads have been confused with the giant burrowing frog ( Heleioporus australiacus ), because both are large and warty in appearance ; however, the latter can be readily distinguished from the former by its vertical pupils and its silver-grey ( as opposed to gold ) iris.
The school was fashioned as " a Free Academy for the purpose of extending the benefits of education gratuitously to persons who have been pupils in the common schools of the city and county of New York.
The recognition of these latter qualities requires time ; only great masters have them, while their pupils have access only to violent passions.
Though he seems to have kept a workshop, his only registered pupils were Nicolaes van Berchem, Jan Steen, and Adriaen van der Kabel.
Sekien is known to have had a number of other pupils, who failed to achieve distinction.
His biographer Paolo Giovio says, " His nature was so rough and uncouth that his domestic habits were incredibly squalid, and deprived posterity of any pupils who might have followed him.
Darlington notes that Gerbert's preservation of his letters might have been an effort of his to compile them into a textbook for his pupils that would illustrate proper letter writing.
Red-eye effect is seen in photographs of children also because children's eyes have more rapid dark adaption: in low light a child's pupils enlarge sooner, and an enlarged pupil accentuates the red-eye effect.
Their eyes have two pupils each, giving them good peripheral vision.
To hold him who has taught me this art as equal to my parents and to live my life in partnership with him, and if he is in need of money to give him a share of mine, and to regard his offspring as equal to my brothers in male lineage and to teach them this art-if they desire to learn it-without fee and covenant ; to give a share of precepts and oral instruction and all the other learning to my sons and to the sons of him who has instructed me and to pupils who have signed the covenant and have taken an oath according to the medical law, but to no one else.
New teachers have to act in a way that is different from pupils and learn the new rules from people around them.
Former pupils of Monmouth School have included politicians Colin Moynihan and Derek Ezra ; international rugby players Eddie Butler and John Gwilliam ; and show jumper David Broome.
Only Eugène Delacroix and other pupils of Pierre-Narcisse Guérin — the leaders of that romantic movement for which Ingres throughout his long life always expressed the deepest abhorrence — seem to have recognized his merits.
All bovids have even-toed hooves, horizontal pupils, ruminating guts, and ( in at least the males ) bony horns.
The UK Sports Council defended the deal on the grounds that the whole community would benefit, while the bursar claimed that Windsor, Slough and Eton Athletic Club was " deprived " because local people ( who were not pupils at the College ) did not have a world-class running track and facilities to train with.

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