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Page "Historicism" ¶ 27
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By and means
By the same means he perceives this fact as having communicated itself to the audience ; ;
By no means would we discourage the production of ideas: they provide raw materials with which to work ; ;
By 1937 he had clarified his intentions to serve his people: `` I have striven for clarity and melodious idiom, but at the same time I have by no means attempted to restrict myself to the accepted methods of harmony and melody.
By means of geographical isolation and high fertility rates, inbreeding can be fostered and the pattern of isolation from the greater society maintained.
By means of this social control, deviance is either eliminated or somehow made compatible with the function of the social group.
By all means the most important distinction is that between those total-cost apportionments which superimpose a distribution of admittedly unallocable cost residues on estimates of incremental or marginal costs, and those other apportionments which recognize no difference between true cost allocation and mere total-cost distribution.
By no means.
By no means are these isolated cases.
By means of charts showing wave-travel times and depths in the ocean at various locations, it is possible to estimate the rate of approach and probable time of arrival at Hawaii of a tsunami getting under way at any spot in the Pacific.
By no means do all Jews today believe in reincarnation, but belief in reincarnation is not uncommon among many Jews, including Orthodox.
By " impressions ", he means sensations, while by " ideas ", he means memories and imaginings.
By " chance ", he means all those particular comprehensible events which the viewer considers possible in accord with their experience.
By " necessary connection ", Hume means the power or force which necessarily ties one idea to another.
By allowing a new kind of equality among citizens this opened the way to democracy, which in turn called for a new means, chattel slavery, to at least partially equalise the availability of leisure between rich and poor.
By extension, the term " embark " literally means to board the kind of boat called a " barque ".
By such subtle means were Cranmer's purposes further confused, leaving it for generations to argue over the precise theology of the rite.
By contrast, in civil law jurisdictions ( the legal tradition that prevails in, or is combined with common law in, Europe and most non-Islamic, non-common law countries ), courts lack authority to act where there is no statute, and judicial precedent is given less interpretive weight ( which means that a judge deciding a given case has more freedom to interpret the text of a statute independently, and less predictably ), and scholarly literature is given more.
By means of her mother, Catherine had a stronger legitimate claim to the English throne than King Henry VII himself through the first two wives of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster: Blanche of Lancaster and the Spanish Infanta Constance of Castile.
By no means ... there is a necessary connexion to be taken into consideration.
By means of the atonement and his offering of divine grace to humankind, Christ provided access to divinity for humankind.
By the time DDT was introduced in the U. S., the disease had already been brought under control by a variety of other means.
" By this Derrida means that all claims to know something necessarily involve an assertion of the metaphysical type that something is the case somewhere.
By many, education is understood to be a means of overcoming handicaps, achieving greater equality and acquiring wealth and status for all ( Sargent 1994 ).
By this means, power dissipation in the active device is minimised, and efficiency increased.

By and tendency
By the early 1970s there was a tendency to change to one large drinking room and breweries were eager to invest in interior design and theming.
Gravity, interpreted as an innate attraction between every pair of particles of matter, was an occult quality in the same sense as the scholastics ' " tendency to fall " had been .... By the mid eighteenth century that interpretation had been almost universally accepted, and the result was a genuine reversion ( which is not the same as a retrogression ) to a scholastic standard.
It is for them alone to point out what we ought to do … By the principle of utility is meant that principle which approves or disapproves of every action whatsoever according to the tendency it appears to have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interest is in question: or, what is the same thing in other words to promote or to oppose that happiness.
By early 1942, Raeder and Dönitz were openly feuding with each other, with Dönitz mocking Raeder's obsession with " dinosaurs ", as Dönitz called battleships, and Raeder complaining of Dönitz's massive ego and his tendency to run the U-boat arm as it were his own private navy.
By the time of his resignation, Wilson's own perceptions of any threat may very well have been exacerbated by the onset of Alzheimer's disease ; his inherent tendency to chariness was undoubtedly stoked by some in his inner circle, including Marcia Williams.
By recounting all the moves, Asimov reacted against the common tendency of novelistic portrayals of chess games to neglect the action on the board.
By 1927, Karl Kilbom, the Comintern representative to Germany, had started to combat this ultra leftist tendency of Thälmann within the German Communist Party, but found it to be impossible when he found Stalin was against him.
By supporting the idea that demons could rape women and sexual relationships with them were painful, Nicholas Remy assigned a sadistic tendency to their sexuality.
By 1911, there was said to have been a tendency on the part of many Skoptsy to consider their creed fulfilled by chaste, solitary living.
By lowering the net production of early successional plants by consuming them and then augmenting the nutrients in the soil available to later successional plants through defecation, the walking stick ensures the tendency of early successional plants to swiftly immobilize soil nutrients in light gaps does not stymie new substantial growth and the recycling of the tropical forest.
By the 1985 conference of the iSt an " external tendency " had split from the iSt.
By many of the older and more traditional football fans in Germany he was decried for his " revolutionary " attitude and his tendency for voicing strong opinions on political and social issues.
By this desertion his self-esteem, one of his strongest passions, though curiously united with singular sincerity and humility, was doubtless hurt to the quick ; but the wound inflicted was of a deeper and deadlier kind, for it confirmed him finally in his despair of the world's gradual amelioration, and established his tendency towards supernaturalism.
By 1964 the America Surgeon ’ s General report on smoking and health included four features that characterize drug habituation according to WHO: 1 ) “ a desire ( but not a compulsion ) to continue taking the drug for the sense of improved well-being which it engenders ”; 2 ) “ little or no tendency to increase the dose ”; 3 ) “ some degree of psychic dependence on the effect of the drug, but absence of physical dependence and hence of an abstinence syndrome ”; 4 )” detrimental effects, if any, primarily on the individual ”.
By 1941 the party had developed a minority tendency which was grouped around the figures of two leading intellectuals CLR James and Raya Dunayevskaya.
By 1963, Dr. William Bruce, aware of the tendency of people with coronary artery disease to experience angina ( cardiac chest discomfort ) during exercise, developed the first standardized method of " stressing " the heart, where serial measurements of changes in blood pressure, heart rate and electrocardiographic ( ECG / EKG ) changes could be measured under " stress-stress " conditions.
By this reasoning, a person holding contempt would not have the urge to openly confront the person with whom they are at odds, nor would they themselves try to remove the object of contempt ; rather, one who holds contempt would have the tendency to hold the view that others should remove the object of contempt, or hold the view that the object of contempt should remove itself.
By the time of the World Wars, liberal authors attempted to impose an ultimate and unquestionable historical perspective ; Ricardo Levene and the Academia Nacional de la Historia were exponents of this tendency, which still kept most perspectives of Mitre.
By contrast, value homophily refers to a tendency to associate with others who think in similar ways, regardless of differences in status.
By the same token, he recognized that ascertainment was responsible for a phenomenon known as anticipation, the tendency for a genetic disease to manifest earlier in life and with increased severity in later generations.
By then the team had a tendency to put in lacklustre performances and in the end had to make do with third place in the league.

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