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Page "Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language" ¶ 23
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For and what
For the President had dealt with the matter humbly, in what he conceived as the democratic way.
For what do the utopians labor??
For what we propose, however, a psychoanalyst is not necessary, even though one aim is to enable the reader to get beneath his own defenses -- his defenses of himself to himself.
For instance -- what about all those people Harold Rhodes went toward unhesitatingly, as if this were the one moment they would ever have together, their one chance of knowing each other??
For what??
For what Sam Rayburn's life in this House teaches us is that loyalty and character are not divisive and there is no such thing as being for your country and neglecting your district.
For he knows that the first and sometimes most difficult job is to know what the question is -- that when it is accurately identified it sometimes answers itself, and that the way in which it is posed frequently shapes the answer.
For what concerns all scientific disciplines is precisely that which can be captured for the rational, i.e., for the scientific determination of what in past ages was considered ultimate and irrational.
For what I express in my remark is something going on in me at the time, and that of course did not exist until I did come on the scene.
For the use of students and future restorers, a full, day-by-day record was kept of all three undertakings, complete technical reports on what we found and what we did.
For example, the unwed mothers expressed their frustration with males who did not indicate more explicitly `` what it is they really want from a girl so one can act accordingly ''.
`` For what ''!!
For every criterion which defines what something is, at the same time proclaims -- implicitly if not openly -- what that something is not.
Not altogether a successful play, `` Epitaph For George Dillon '' overcomes through sheer vitality and power what in a lesser work might be crippling.
For a moment he could make no sense at all of what he saw.
For some alternate conceptions of what constitutes an algorithm see functional programming and logic programming.
For them, what is important is that it is acquired and transferred without help or hindrance from the compulsory state.
" For what happens to the sons of men also happens to animals ; one thing befalls them: as one dies, so dies the other.
For example, in his commentary, De mineralibus, he refers to the power of stones, but does not elaborate on what these powers might be.
For me it ’ s the book that does everything right, the example of what science fiction does when it works.
For example, some Byzantine coins of the 1st century BC and later show the head of Artemis with bow and quiver, and feature a crescent with what appears to be a six-rayed star on the reverse.
For many years, early Anglo-Saxon history was essentially a retelling of the Historia, but recent scholarship has focused as much on what Bede did not write as what he did.

For and is
For one thing, this is not a subject often discussed or analyzed.
For better or for worse, we all now live in welfare states, the organizing principle of which is collective responsibility for individual well-being.
For one thing, there is a natural belt of rock across the river bed ; ;
For the family is the simplest example of just such a unit, composed of people, which gives us both some immunity from, and a way of dealing with, other people.
Even so astute a commentator as Harold Clurman of The Nation has said that `` Waiting For Godot '' is `` the concentrate of the contemporary European mood of despair ''.
For one thing, the world that Beckett sees is already shattered.
Harold Clurman is right to say that `` Waiting For Godot '' is a reflection ( he calls it a distorted reflection ) `` of the impasse and disarray of Europe's present politics, ethic, and common way of life ''.
For the beatnik, like the hipster, is in opposition to a society that is based on the repression of the sex instinct.
For this reason, too, their language is more forthright and earthy.
For the present it is enough to note that in the grotesque figure of Jacoby, at the moment of his collapse, all these elements come together in prophetic parody.
For Plato, `` imitation '' is twice removed from reality, being a poor copy of physical appearance, which in itself is a poor copy of ideal essence.
For both Plato and Aristotle artistic mimesis, in contrast to the power of dialectic, is relatively incapable of expressing the character of fundamental reality.
For Hammer, nothing is forbidden.
For example, suppose a man wearing a $200 watch, driving a 1959 Rolls Royce, stops to ask a man on the sidewalk, `` What time is it ''??
For the occasion on which everyone already knows everyone else and the host wishes them to meet one or a few honored newcomers, then the `` open house '' system is advantageous because the honored guests are fixed connective points and the drifting guests make and break connections at the door.
For this change is not a change from one positive position to another, but a change from order and truth to disorder and negation.
For paradigmatic history `` breaks '' rather than unfolds precisely when the movement is from order to disorder, and not from one order to a new order.
For this love of the boy for his mother is a hopeless and forbidden love, doomed by its nature.
For innocence, of all the graces of the spirit, is I believe the one most to be prayed for.
For this purpose a degree of intellectual and emotional involvement is necessary ; ;

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