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Chapter and 7
The title was an implicit admission that such chapters as Chapter 7, " The Piper at the Gates of Dawn ", could not survive translation to the theatre.
However, according to Josephus, in Antiquities, Book 7, Chapter 1, Joab had forgiven Abner for the death of his brother, Asahel, the reason being that Abner had slain Asahel honorably in combat after he had first warned Asahel and had no other choice but to kill him out of self defense.
* Folio 7 recto: Lion ( Leo ) ( Physiologus, Chapter 1 ; Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae, Book XII, ii, 3-6 )
Finally, much of this happened during and after a period of World War, and the effect of such a conflict in dissolving older social customs was considerable .< ref name = Franks >< sup > Chapter 7 </ sup ></ ref >
'" The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling ( 1749 ) Chapter 7.
These groups, along with other Christians opposed to capital punishment, have cited Christ's Sermon on the Mount ( transcribed in Matthew Chapter 5 – 7 ) and Sermon on the Plain ( transcribed in Luke 6: 17 – 49 ).
In contrast, Chapter 7 governs the process of a liquidation bankruptcy ( although liquidation can go under this chapter ), while Chapter 13 provides a reorganization process for the majority of private individuals.
When a business is unable to service its debt or pay its creditors, the business or its creditors can file with a federal bankruptcy court for protection under either Chapter 7 or Chapter 11.
In Chapter 7, the business ceases operations, a trustee sells all of its assets, and then distributes the proceeds to its creditors.
Individuals may file Chapter 11, but due to the complexity and expense of the proceeding, this option is rarely chosen by debtors who are eligible for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 relief.
In this way, jobs may be saved, the ( previously mismanaged ) engine of profitability which is the business is maintained ( presumably under better management ) rather than being dismantled, and, as a proponent of a chapter 11 plan is required to demonstrate as a precursor to plan confirmation, the business's creditors end up with more money than they would in a Chapter 7 liquidation.
That we live is therefore not only true, but it is altogether certain as well " ( Chapter 7 section 20 ).
Confessional Baptists believe in pneumatic presence, which is expressed in the Second London Baptist Confession, specifically in Chapter 30, Articles 3 and 7:
Chapter 5 deals with a visit to Jerusalem, and chapter 7 opens with Jesus again in Galilee since " he would not walk in Jewry, because the Jews sought to kill him " — a consequence of the incident in Jerusalem described in chapter 5.
* In Chapter 7: 41-42, and again in 7: 52, John records some of the crowd of Pharisees dismissing the possibility of Jesus's being the Messiah, on the grounds that the Messiah must be a descendent of David and born in Bethlehem, stating that Jesus instead came out of Galilee ( as is stated in the Gospel of Mark ); John made no effort to refute or correct ( nor did he affirm ) this, and this has been advanced as implying that John rejected the synoptic tradition of Jesus's birth in Bethlehem.
In February 2012, Busey filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, with reported liabilities of $ 500, 000 to $ 1, 000, 000.
:: Example 7 ( semi-presidential republic ): Chapter VI, Article 77 of the Constitution of Lithuania states:
In 1908's The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, in Chapter 7, " The Piper at the Gates of Dawn ", Ratty and Mole meet a mystical horned being, powerful, fearsome and kind.
2 Corinthians ( Book 3, Chapter 7 )
* Portal 2: Chapter 7 The reunion ( 2011 ) Valve Corporation

Chapter and Friedan
Betty Friedan, in the Feminine Mystique, openly criticizes Mead for contributing to infantilizing women through functional anthropology, in Chapter 6, " The Functional Freeze, The Feminine Protest, and Margaret Mead.
Chapter 1: Friedan points out that the average age of marriage was dropping and the birthrate was increasing for women throughout the 1950s, yet the widespread unhappiness of women persisted, although American culture insisted that fulfillment for women could be found in marriage and housewifery ; this chapter concludes by declaring " We can no longer ignore that voice within women that says: ' I want something more than my husband and my children and my home.
Chapter 2: Friedan shows that the editorial decisions concerning women's magazines were being made mostly by men, who insisted on stories and articles that showed women as either happy housewives or unhappy, neurotic careerists, thus creating the " feminine mystique "— the idea that women were naturally fulfilled by devoting their lives to being housewives and mothers.
Chapter 3: Friedan recalls her own decision to conform to society's expectations by giving up her promising career in psychology to raise children, and shows that other young women still struggled with the same kind of decision.
Chapter 4: Friedan discusses early American feminists and how they fought against the assumption that the proper role of a woman was to be solely a wife and mother.
Chapter 5: Friedan, who had a degree in psychology, criticizes Sigmund Freud ( whose ideas were very influential in America at the time of her book's publication ).
Chapter 6: Friedan criticizes functionalism, which attempted to make the social sciences more credible by studying the institutions of society as if they were parts of a social body, as in biology.
Chapter 8: Friedan notes that the uncertainties and fears during World War II and the Cold War made Americans long for the comfort of home, so they tried to create an idealized home life with father as the breadwinner and mother as the housewife.
Chapter 9: Friedan shows that advertisers tried to encourage housewives to think of themselves as professionals who needed many specialized products in order to do their jobs, while discouraging housewives from having actual careers, since that would mean they would not spend as much time and effort on housework and therefore would not buy as many household products, cutting into advertisers ' profits.
Chapter 10: Friedan interviews several full-time housewives, finding that although they are not fulfilled by their housework, they are all extremely busy with it.
Chapter 11: Friedan notes that many housewives have sought fulfillment in sex, unable to find it in housework and children ; Friedan notes that sex cannot fulfill all of a person's needs, and that attempts to make it do so often drive married women to have affairs or drive their husbands away as they become obsessed with sex.
Chapter 12: Friedan discusses the fact that many children have lost interest in life or emotional growth, attributing the change to the mother's own lack of fulfillment, a side effect of the feminine mystique.
Chapter 13: Friedan discusses Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs and notes that women have been trapped at the basic, physiological level, expected to find their identity through their sexual role alone.
Chapter 14: In the final chapter of The Feminine Mystique, Friedan discusses several case studies of women who have begun to go against the feminine mystique.

Chapter and discusses
Edward Gibbon, in his classic The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, discusses the topic in considerable detail in his famous Chapter Fifteen, summarizing the historical causes of the early success of Christianity as follows: "( 1 ) The inflexible, and, if we may use the expression, the intolerant zeal of the Christians, derived, it is true, from the Jewish religion, but purified from the narrow and unsocial spirit which, instead of inviting, had deterred the Gentiles from embracing the law of Moses.
Chapter XV of Paley's Natural Theology discusses at length what he called " relations " of parts of living things as an indication of their design.
In his Church History ( Book I, Chapter XI ) Eusebius discusses the Josephus reference to how Herod Antipas killed John the Baptist, and mentions the marriage to Herodias in items 1 to 6.
" He accepted a version of the inheritance of acquired characteristics ( which after Darwin's death came to be called Lamarckism ), and Chapter V discusses what he called the effects of use and disuse ; he wrote that he thought " there can be little doubt that use in our domestic animals strengthens and enlarges certain parts, and disuse diminishes them ; and that such modifications are inherited ", and that this also applied in nature.
* Leo Tolstoy in War and Peace ( Part 11, Chapter I ) discusses the race of Achilles and the tortoise when critiquing " historical science ".
Chapter 10 discusses sexual orientation.
The same correspondence ( Nov. 23-7, 1912 ) discusses the deleted Chapter 21 of the book, " The Garden of Meats.
Chapter 25 of Pritchard's The Classified Encyclopedia of Chess Variants discusses games using boards with three or more dimensions and contains some 50 such variations.
Chapter 56 discusses twelve battles fought and won by Arthur, here called dux bellorum ( war leader ) rather than king:
In addition, Chapter 21 discusses the Behrens – Fisher problem.
Chapter Five: " Hilbert to the Rescue " wherein Davis discusses Brouwer and his relationship with Hilbert and Weyl with brief biographical information of Brouwer.
Chapter V. The Rise of the Athenian State, discusses the significance and effects of Solonian Constitution.
Subtitled " Damn the driver and spare the car ," Chapter 7 discusses the way the blame for accidents and fatalities was placed on the driver.
Chapter 2, discusses the five Mahā-yajñas that every Brahmin has to do daily, most importantly the daily recitation of the Veda ( svādhyāya ).
The passage, found in Chapter Seven Volume II, discusses an interpretation of the Bible as too lewd for youth to read.
* The on-line textbook: Information Theory, Inference, and Learning Algorithms, by David J. C. MacKay, discusses LDPC codes in Chapter 47.
Chapter Three of Skinner's work Verbal Behavior discusses a functional relationship called the " mand ".
Chapter Five of Verbal Behavior discusses the tact in depth.
Chapter 3 discusses the role of International Federations ( IFs ) in the Olympic movement.
Harlow, Essex & NY: Longman 357 p. ISBN 0-582-44132-3 Chapter 4 discusses this phenomenon.
* Chapter 2: Dimension three discusses how two-dimensional beings would imagine three-dimensional objects.
* Historia Britonum: Chapter 56 discusses twelve battles fought and won by Arthur, here called dux bellorum ( war leader ) rather than king.
Gildas discusses Aurelius Conanus in Chapter 30 of his work De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, in a section in which he reproves five kings for their various sins.
* Freakonomics by Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner ; Chapter 4 discusses this effect.
* Freedomnomics by John Lott ; Chapter 4 discusses this effect.

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