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Conventional and wisdom
Conventional wisdom may be applied to the questions and advice given by Job ’ s friends or family, yet it is Job ’ s responses that make this book part of the dissenting wisdom or “ anti-wisdom wisdom
Conventional wisdom holds that Hamlet is too obviously connected to legend, and the name Hamnet was quite popular at the time.
Conventional wisdom suggests that if there is no bias towards success or failure then the success probability would be one half.
Conventional wisdom holds that the tribal revolt that overthrew Amanullah grew out of opposition to his reform program, although those people most affected by his reforms were urban dwellers not universally opposed to his policies, rather than the tribes.
Conventional wisdom holds that SGI's core market has traditionally been Hollywood visual effects studios.
* Conventional wisdom
Conventional wisdom is that Daffy's lisp, and hence also Sylvester's, were based on the lisp of producer Leon Schlesinger.
Conventional wisdom is the body of ideas or explanations generally accepted as true by the public or by experts in a field.
Conventional wisdom was used in a number of other works prior to Galbraith, occasionally in a positive
Conventional wisdom is not necessarily true.
Conventional wisdom is additionally often seen as an obstacle to the acceptance of newly acquired information, to introducing new theories and explanations, and therefore operates as an obstacle that must be overcome by legitimate revisionism.
Conventional wisdom in 2011: it is.
Conventional wisdom may itself be the subject of legends.
Conventional wisdom states that baby booms signify good times and periods of general economic growth and stability.
Conventional wisdom called for the system to be kept in its own air-conditioned room.
Conventional wisdom was, actually, very wise about this, since the system cost around US $ 140, 000.
* Conventional wisdom, a description of ideas that are generally accepted as true
Conventional wisdom made Lendl the heavy favorite to win the match against the 15th-seeded 17-year-old Chang.
Conventional wisdom suggested that the longer-established WCCB should have taken the NBC affiliation from WSOC-TV.
Conventional wisdom suggested WCCB would simply take the NBC affiliation.
Conventional wisdom held that he had no chance of getting a majority, but that his candidacy would force a run-off between Ferrero-Waldner and Fischer.
Conventional wisdom suggested that it would take the ABC affiliation since it was Dayton's third commercial station.

Conventional and up
" Conventional cotton is one of the most chemically-dependent crops, sucking up 10 % of all agricultural chemicals and 25 % of insecticides on 3 % of our arable land ; that's more than any other crop per unit.
Conventional WDM systems provide up to 8 channels in the 3rd transmission window ( C-Band ) of silica fibers around 1550 nm.
Conventional coconut oil uses hexane as a solvent to extract up to 10 % more oil than just using rotary mills and expellers.
Conventional bombsights are set up pointing at a fixed angle, the range angle, which accounts for the various effects on the trajectory of the bomb.
Conventional PCI supports up to 64 bits at 66 MHz ( though anything above 32 bits at 33 MHz is seen only in high-end systems ) and additional bus standards move 32 bits at 66 MHz or 64 bits at 33 MHz.
Conventional telescope designs have the problem that hot air from the ground ( which is hotter due to solar heating ) is blown up along the tower, and this causes air with different temperatures to blow along the telescope, which degrades the image.
Conventional round brilliant or fancy cuts do not scale up satisfactorily, so the extra facets are needed to ensure there are no " dead spots ".
Conventional memory glutton programs such as MSCDEX could also be loaded into the UMA in a similar fashion, hence freeing up a large amount of conventional memory.
Conventional historical accounts portrayed the Court's majority opinion as a strategic political move to protect the Court's integrity and independence from President Franklin Roosevelt's court-reform bill ( also known as the " court-packing plan "), which would have expanded the size of the bench up to 15 justices, though it has been argued that these accounts have misconstrued the historical record.
Conventional treatment settles sludge which is then digested, and then aerates the remaining liquids which use bacteria to oxidise the potential digester fuel, and uses up energy to drive the compressors.

wisdom and lined
The book contains forty-one essays, each lined with the collected wisdom, humor, and dark observations of the founder of the Church of Satan.

wisdom and up
As this " secret wisdom " can almost always be traced to recent sources, tellers of these stories have often later admitted they made them up.
Particularly after the European Enlightenment, some works, such as Paradise Lost, were taken up by Romantics and described as presenting the biblical Satan as an allegory representing a crisis of faith, individualism, free will, wisdom and enlightenment.
The Greeks, moreover, will admit that even amongst those who are considered to be most largely endowed with wisdom, good fortune has had much to do, as in the choice of teachers of one kind rather than another, and in meeting with a better class of instructors ( there being teachers who taught the most opposite doctrines ), and in being brought up in better circumstances ; for the bringing up of many has been amid surroundings of such a kind, that they were prevented from ever receiving any idea of better things, but constantly passed their life, from their earliest youth, either as the favourites of licentious men or of tyrants, or in some other wretched condition which forbade the soul to look upwards.
It was in accordance with the wisdom and plan of God ... that God did not command us to give up and to discontinue all these manners of service.
Ananse tales are some of the best-known in West Africa The stories made up an exclusively oral tradition, and indeed Ananse himself was synonymous with skill and wisdom in speech.
He reflected on his varied experiences of the essential goodness and wisdom of the Indian people, recalling how he had grown up in Uzhavoor among adherents of several religions, how religious tolerance and harmony had prevailed, how upper-caste Hindus and well-off Christians had helped him in his early studies, and how upper-caste Hindus as well as
Later in 1990, Roe R. Adams ( who worked on the Wizardry series ) wrote in Computer Gaming World that the game was " the big shot in the arm for Sega ," stating that it is " accepted wisdom that the tremendous response to this game propped up Sega long enough for it to introduce the Genesis 16-bit machine last Christmas.
As one CIA officer put it, the Soviets " were wrapping up our cases with reckless abandon ," which was highly unusual because the " prevailing wisdom among the Agency's professional ' spy catchers '" was that suddenly eliminating all the assets known to the mole would put him in danger.
One passage describing the freshly minted Adam ’ s forehead ended up, “ The large and arched front sublime / of wisdom deep declares the seat ”.
In December 2006 Lanier followed up his critique of the collective wisdom with an article in Edge titled " Beware the Online Collective ".
" Whenever Jeffrey's wisdom is paired up against Bogg's stubbornness, Jeffrey usually wins out, to which Bogg always mutters, " Smart kids give me a pain!
Frederick wanted to even out the religious situation of the territory, but also to draw up a statement of belief that would combine the best of Lutheran and Reformed wisdom and could instruct ordinary people on the basics of the newfound Protestant version of the Christian faith.
( alternatively, " cheques " or " body " ( instead of " ass ")) is used to mean " Don't make brash boasts you can't back up ", and originates in Black English, likely from mothers ' wisdom, being attested since the 1960s, though it is today found more generally, as in the 1993 movie Dazed and Confused.
* the Period of Imamate, which stretched up to 20 years and is counted as the duration of his propagation and dissemination of Islamic knowledge and wisdom.
Other reasons wisdom teeth are removed include misalignment which rubs up against the tongue or cheek causing pain, potential crowding or malocclusion of the remaining teeth ( a result of there being not enough room on the jaw or in the mouth ), as well as orthodontics.
Notably, peasants in the Grisons tried to capture the wild man by getting him drunk and tying him up in hopes that he would give them his wisdom in exchange for freedom.
Sometimes mother and daughter ally against grandmother, sometimes mother and grandmother go against daughter, but usually grandmother and granddaughter gang up on the long-suffering Sarah, whose one haven is Bygone Books, the remarkably unsuccessful second-hand bookshop where she works for Russell, who dispenses in turn sympathy and wisdom.
Aristotle also does this himself, and though he professes to work differently from Plato by trying to start with what well-brought up men would agree with, by book VII, Aristotle eventually comes to argue that the highest of all human virtues is itself not practical, being contemplative wisdom ( theōria 1177a ).
* The Spanish had Ignatius Loyola, whose Spiritual Exercises were designed to open people to a receptive mode of consciousness in which they can experience God through careful spiritual direction and through understanding how the mind connects to the will and how to weather the experiences of spiritual consolation and desolation ; Teresa of Avila, who used the metaphors of watering a garden and walking through the rooms of a castle to explain how meditation leads to union with God ; and John of the Cross, who used a wide range of biblical and spiritual influences both to rewrite the traditional " three ways " of mysticism after the manner of bridal mysticism and to present the two " dark nights ": the dark night of the senses and the dark night of the soul, during which the individual renounces everything that might become an obstacle between the soul and God and then experiences the pain of feeling separated from God, unable to carry on normal spiritual exercises, as it encounters the enormous gap between its human nature and God's divine wisdom and light and moves up the 10-step ladder of ascent towards God.
This statement did not hold up to scrutiny, as all modern operating systems use virtual memory which allows apps to get contiguous logical memory without using contiguous physical memory, but conventional wisdom of the time was that porting Build to such an OS was unfeasible.
Writing in on The Telegraph website, Mr Hannan said: " I ’ m surprised that no one has picked up on the thing that I most admire about Enoch Powell, namely his tendency to ignore conventional wisdom and think things through from first principles.
Sophia ( sometimes translated as " theoretical wisdom ") is a combination of nous, the ability to discern reality, and epistēmē, a type of knowledge which is logically built up, and teachable, and which is sometimes equated with science.
When a soul sheds its wings, it comes to earth and takes on an earthly body which then seems to move itself. These wings lift up heavy things to where the gods dwell, and are nourished and grow in the presence of the wisdom, goodness, and beauty of the divine.

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