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From about 1955 he started to work on sheaf theory and homological algebra, producing the influential " Tôhoku paper " ( Sur quelques points d ' algèbre homologique, published in 1957 ) where he introduced Abelian categories and applied their theory to show that sheaf cohomology can be defined as certain derived functors in this context.
From this material context men and women develop certain ideas about their world, thereby leading to the core materialist conception that social being determines social consciousness.
From the view of Western psychoanalysis and therapy, the state of " oneness " can be either positive or negative depending on the patient, and in the context in which these feelings occur in each patient.
Works such as Marjorie Rosen ’ s Popcorn Venus: Women, Movies, and the American Dream ( 1973 ) and Molly Haskell ’ s From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in Movies ( 1974 ) analyze how the women portrayed in film related to the broader historical context, the stereotypes depicted, the extent to which the women were shown as active or passive, and the amount of screen time given to women.
From the context, it is clear that he referred to reproduction related structures of protists.
From the 1990s, interest in a relationship between the Uralic and Altaic families has been revived in the context of the Eurasiatic hypothesis.
From the outset, the University of Twente has sought to put the applied sciences in a wider social context.
* From an institutional perspective, an organization is viewed as a purposeful structure within a social context.
From a very young age he was an outstanding figure in the school of Henri Cartan, working on algebraic topology, several complex variables and then commutative algebra and algebraic geometry, in the context of sheaf theory and homological algebra techniques.
* From a psychological perspective, it is necessary to examine individual decisions in the context of a set of needs, preferences an individual has and values they seek.
From the Middle Ages and down to modern times eremitical monasticism has also been practiced within the context of religious institutes in the Christian West.
From the other side of the fence, the work of Friedrich Hayek also anticipated many of Đilas ' New Class criticisms, without placing them in a Marxist context ( see esp.
From this study, it is clear that context plays a role in the responses men and women give researchers and therefore how sex-differences are interpreted.
From a psychology point of view, context awareness is the idea that societies may be constructed, however they are still based on reality, and hence should be aware of the history and context surrounding social interactions.
From the context of the statement, a reader can almost always tell if refers to the type or if refers to the object in that corresponds to the type.
From the 1760s onward, Canadien nationalism developed within a British constitutional context.
From formation to termination, employment contracts are to be construed in the context of statutory protection of dependent workers.
From this perspective, games provide a unique context in which human activity may be explored and better understood.
From an engineering perspective, videogames have been the context for a wide variety of technological innovations and advancements in areas such as computer graphics, artificial intelligence, and networking, among others.
From the context it is probably a profanity of sorts.
" From the very beginning, the article calls the operation a ' targeted slaying ', which in any other context would be immediately and intuitively be called assassination.
From a theoretical standpoint, and in the context of generative grammar, the MP draws on the minimalist approach of the Principles and Parameters program, considered to be the ultimate standard theoretical model that generative linguistics has developed since the 1980s.
From England came the idea that philosophy had gotten into trouble by trying to understand words outside of the context of their use in ordinary language ( cf.

From and word
Harris J. Griston, in Shaking The Dust From Shakespeare ( 216 ), writes: `` There is not a word spoken by Shylock which one would expect from a real Jew ''.
From an exercise involving merely raucous, rough-and-tumble comedy, in his hands the performance turned into a revel of wit and word play, indecent at times, but always learned, pointed, and carefully aimed at some individuals present, and at the whole assembly.
From the point of view of syntactic analysis the head word in the statement is the predicator has broken, and from the point of view of meaning it would seem that the trouble centers in the breaking ; ;
From the point of view of word formation real might be expected to have two syllables.
From Thespis ' name derives the word thespian.
From this widening usage has come the more modern sense of the word.
From such references, and from others of a like nature, Quesnel gathers that by the word Breviarium was at first designated a book furnishing the rubrics, a sort of Ordo.
From these hypotheses predictions about specific events are derived ( e. g., " People who study a word list while listening to vocal music will remember fewer words on a later memory test than people who study a word list in silence .").
From the twelfth dynasty onward the word appears in a wish formula ' Great House, may it live, prosper, and be in health ', but again only with reference to the royal palace and not the person.
From the latter, English obtained the word " Pharaoh ".
" From its earliest beginnings, Christianity spread much more quickly in major urban areas ( like Antioch, Alexandria, Carthage, Corinth, Rome ) than in the countryside ( in fact, the early church was almost entirely urban ), and soon the word for " country dweller " became synonymous with someone who was " not a Christian ," giving rise to the modern meaning of " pagan.
From the Latin pax, meaning " freedom from civil disorder ," the English word came into use in various personal greetings from c. 1300 as a translation of the Hebrew shalom.
* From the Etruscan word ruma, whose root is * rum-" teat ", with possible reference either to the totem wolf that adopted and suckled the cognately named twins Romulus and Remus, or to the shape of the Palatine and Aventine Hills ;
* From the Greek word ῤώμη ( rhòme ), which means strength.
From an information-theoretical point of view, systematic transliteration is a mapping from one system of writing into another, word by word, or ideally letter by letter.
In the book From Religion to Philosophy, Francis Cornford suggests that the Orphics used the word " theory " to mean ' passionate sympathetic contemplation '.
From the 1870s onwards, the word torpedo was increasingly used only to describe self-propelled projectiles that traveled under or on water.
" From this point onward in his thought, Heidegger attempted to think beyond metaphysics to a place where the articulation of the fundamental questions of ontology were fundamentally possible: only from this point can we restore ( that is, re-give ) any possible meaning to the word " humanism ".
From a pharmacological standpoint it is not a useful term, as is evidenced by the historically varied usage of the word.
From the dialogue, it appears that the word had an origin in the Platonic and Hellenistic tradition long before the group calling themselves " Gnostics " -- or the group covered under the modern term " Gnosticism " -- ever appeared.
From Aristotle onward the definition, in philosophical contexts, of the word " essence " is very close to the definition of form ( Gr. morphe ).

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