Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Noble savage" ¶ 50
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

For and Rousseau
Feminists, beginning in the late 18th century with Mary Wollstonecraft in 1792 have criticized Rousseau for his confinement of women to the domestic sphere — unless women were domesticated and constrained by modesty and shame, he feared " men would be tyrannized by women ... For, given the ease with which women arouse men's senses ... men would finally be their victims ...." His contemporaries saw it differently because Rousseau thought that mothers should breastfeed their children.
" For the high bourgeois standard of living Rousseau would substitute the middling peasant ’ s.
In French ( and France ( Wand )), it is le Pays wallon: The Walloon country included the greatest part of to-day's Belgium, the Province of Flandre orientale, the Province of Flandre occidentale both named Flandre wallonne, the Province of Namur, the Hainaut, the Limbourg, the pays de Liège and even the Luxembourg For Félix Rousseau, Walloon country is, after le Roman pays the old name of the country of the Walloons and the nickname Romande was commonly used to describe Walloons until the late 19th century.
For one, Rousseau argued in " The Social Contract ", that in the stereotypical liberal democracy, individuals are politically " free " once every Parliamentary term, or every two to four years, when they vote for their representatives, in their General Election or on Election Day.
For his native Geneva he completed the statue of the Genevan Jean-Jacques Rousseau erected in 1838 on the tiny Île Rousseau, where Lac Léman empties to form the Rhône.
For Rousseau, civil religion was intended simply as a form of social cement, helping to unify the state by providing it with sacred authority.
For Gessner's literary influence, see Texte, J. J. Rousseau and Literary Cosmopolitanism ( New York, 1897 ).
For Rousseau, civil society is a trick perpetrated by the powerful on the weak in order to maintain their power or wealth.
For instance, Rousseau recounts an incident when, while a servant, he covered up his theft of a ribbon by framing a young girl — who was working in the house — for the crime.
For Georges Hébert, influenced by the teachings of philosopher and educationalist Jean-Jacques Rousseau, only the observation of nature could lead people to the true methods of physical development.
For example, american mutualist anarchist Benjamin Tucker argued that Cercle Proudhon purposely misrepresented Proudhon's views, " Democracy is an easy mark for this new party, and it finds its chief delight in pounding the philosopher of democracy, Rousseau.

For and remedy
For an economic model described by more than one equation, simultaneous-equation methods may be used to remedy similar problems, including two IV variants, Two-Stage Least Squares ( 2SLS ), and Three-Stage Least Squares ( 3SLS ).
For example, in some Spanish-speaking nations, the equivalent remedy for unlawful imprisonment is the amparo de libertad (' protection of freedom ').
For example, permitting either player ( perpetrator or his / her opponent ) to make a correction going back some fixed number of moves ( after which no remedy is available ) is one procedure that has been used.
For example, a court of equity recognizing a plaintiff's request for the equitable remedy of a constructive trust may decide that a constructive trust has been created and simply order the person holding the assets to deliver them to the person who rightfully should have them.
For example, pythonesa oil ( pimburu tel ), a local remedy used for healing wounds, has proven to be very successful in the treatment of fractures and deep cuts.
For this remedy, the fruit simply needs to be consumed in its raw form.
The OED credits Francis Bacon in his Essays ( 1605 ) with the first use of " Cabinet council ", where it is described as a foreign habit, of which he disapproves: " For which inconveniences, the doctrine of Italy, and practice of France, in some kings ’ times, hath introduced cabinet counsels ; a remedy worse than the disease ".
For equity, the Act provided that a party trying to have his case dismissed could not do so until he had paid the full costs, rather than the nominal costs that were previously required ; at the same time, the reforms the Act made to common-law procedure ( such as allowing claims to be brought against executors of wills ) reduced the need for parties to go to equity for a remedy.
For example, a court may require specific performance ( an equitable remedy ) as a remedy for breach of contract, instead of the more favored remedy of monetary damages.
For such surgical repairs, skin flaps are preferable to skin grafts, because skin flaps generally are the superior remedy for matching the color and the texture of nasal skin, better resist tissue contracture, and provide better vascularisation of the nasal skeleton ; thus, when there is sufficient skin to allow tissue harvesting, nasal skin is the best source of nasal skin.
For example, dangerously low blood pressure may result from the combination of an herbal remedy that lowers blood pressure together with prescription medicine that has the same effect.
For instance, King's American Dispensatory states in the entry on belladonna: " Belladonna and opium appear to exert antagonistic influences, especially as regards their action on the brain, the spinal cord, and heart ; they have consequently been recommended and employed as antidotes to each other in cases of poisoning ; this matter is now positively and satisfactorily settled ; hence in all cases of poisoning by belladonna the great remedy is morphine, and its use may be guided by the degree of pupillary contraction it occasions.
" For these reasons, we conclude that the States should retain substantial latitude in their efforts to enforce a legal remedy for defamatory falsehood injurious to the reputation of a private individual ," Powell said.
For the Icarians, the remedy for any problem would be a better social and political organization.
For instance at Pergamon the same remedy was used for the Trajaneum.
For the Puritan complaint that punishment should be enforced by Christ's own institution, James held the view that bishops should not exercise ecclesiastical discipline solely, though he did not speak of any specific method that he would use to remedy this.
For severe conditions that are impossible to anticipate, such as a power failure or a cut optical fiber cable, NOCs have procedures in place to immediately contact technicians to remedy the problem.
The name " Chicken Soup For The Soul " was chosen for this series because of the use of chicken soup as a home remedy for the sick, and therefore it was " good for the body.
::" For the reasons set forth below, I am of the opinion that federal courts do have the power to award damages for violation of ' constitutionally protected interests ' and I agree with the Court that a traditional judicial remedy such as damages is appropriate to the vindication of the personal interests protected by the Fourth Amendment.
For this reason, poor training or allowing bad habits to be learned can be very difficult to remedy at a later date.
For example, democratic systems attempt to remedy qualitative concerns ( such as racial discrimination ) with rationalized, quantitative means ( for example, civil rights legislation ).

For and was
For everyone involved knew that the whole valley was a powder keg, and Mitchell Barton the fuse which could send it into explosive violence.
For a blood-chilling ring of terror to the very sound of his name was the tool he needed for the job he'd promised to do.
For that legend was growing explosively, Rumor was insisting he received a price of $600 a man.
For Matilda, it was the first she had known in many a night.
For several weeks we eyed one another almost like sparring partners, and then one day Uncle was slightly indisposed and stayed home ; ;
For an anthropologist, loquacious old L'Turu was a mine of information.
For a while he was content to let events develop in their good time.
For lawyers, reflecting perhaps their parochial preferences, there has been a special fascination since then in the role played by the Supreme Court in that transformation -- the manner in which its decisions altered in `` the switch in time that saved nine '', President Roosevelt's ill-starred but in effect victorious `` Court-packing plan '', the imprimatur of judicial approval that was finally placed upon social legislation.
For over a hundred years Southerners have felt that the North was picking on them.
For it was neglected, not to say nascent, when the struggle began.
The second specific comment was the report of Eisenhower's Commission on National Goals, titled Goals For Americans.
For Rachel, conceded to be the prettiest of the Szold girls -- and she did make a pretty picture sitting in the grape-arbor strumming her guitar and singing in her silvery tones -- there was no particular March counterpart ; ;
For the Coolidges, it was Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Stearns of Boston, Massachusetts, owners of a large department store.
For a freshman Congressman to read political Lessons to graybeard Democrats was poor policy for one who needed to make friends.
For example, he captured some persons from York County, who with teams were taking to Philadelphia the furniture of a man who had just been released from prison through the efforts of his wife, and who apparently was helpless to prevent the theft of his household goods.
For by now the original cause of the quarrel, Philip's seizure of Gascony, was only one strand in the spider web of French interests that overlay all western Europe and that had been so well and closely spun that the lightest movement could set it trembling from one end to the other.
For a few minutes there was nothing to hear.
When Fosdick showed the letter to Baker his negative response was: `` For God's sake, Raymond, don't show this to the President or he'll stop the war ''.
For a time it appeared that a common European army might be created, but the project for a European Defense Community was rejected by the French National Assembly in 1954.
For it was the millions of buffalo and prairie chicken and the endless seas of grass that symbolized for a whole generation of Americans the abundant supply that was to take many of them westward when the Ohio and Mississippi valleys began to fill.
For a while there was such shrill girlish commotion I couldn't have made myself heard if I'd had the equivalent of the message to Garcia.
For a while his work was influenced deeply by the French impressionists, and by the patterned, mosaic-like paintings of Gustav Klimt, then the dean of Austrian art.
For years he wore hand-me-down suits and homemade paper collars, was even driven to scrounging for cigarette butts in Vienna's gutters.

0.889 seconds.