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Page "Mircea Eliade" ¶ 127
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From and standpoint
From a technical standpoint, the string playing is good, but the Pro Arte people fail to enter into the spirit of things here.
) From the technical standpoint, records differ from live music to the degree that they fail to convey the true color, texture, complexity, range, intensity, pulse, and pitch of the original.
From the volume standpoint, the total market represented by the sign industry is impressive.
From the standpoint of the army of duffers, however, this was easily the most heartening exhibition they had had since Ben Hogan fell upon evil ways during his heyday and scored an 11 in the Texas open.
From a baroque standpoint it is a moment of divine intervention in the affairs of man.
From an engineering and service standpoint, the Phoenix could be said to be a notable success.
From a monetary standpoint, governments control just how much money is in circulation worldwide, which plays an immense role on how money is spent in one's own country.
From the standpoint of an observer in an inertial frame, the effects can be explained as results of inertia without invoking the centrifugal force.
From a qualitative standpoint, the path can be approximated by an arc of a circle for a limited time, and for the limited time a particular radius of curvature applies, the centrifugal and Euler forces can be analyzed on the basis of circular motion with that radius.
From a rigorous theoretical standpoint, the expected value is the integral of the random variable with respect to its probability measure.
From a psychological standpoint, the ELIZA effect is the result of a subtle cognitive dissonance between the user's awareness of programming limitations and their behavior towards the output of the program.
Eppig, Fincher, and Thornhill ( 2009 ) argue that " From an energetics standpoint, a developing human will have difficulty building a brain and fighting off infectious diseases at the same time, as both are very metabolically costly tasks " and that " the Flynn effect may be caused in part by the decrease in the intensity of infectious diseases as nations develop.
From the standpoint of group theory, isomorphic groups have the same properties and need not be distinguished.
From a political standpoint, the Whig Party had been in decline in the South because of the effectiveness with which the Democrats had hammered Whigs over slavery issues.
From the Mings ' standpoint, the Portuguese were ultimately responsible for the massacre, since it was they who provoked the Chinese through " rapaciousness ".
From a geological standpoint, the Ohio River is young.
From Stroessner's standpoint, there were ominous similarities between Somoza and himself.
From this standpoint, Pantheism is the view that everything is part of an all-encompassing, immanent God.
From the standpoint of radiation protection, radiation is often separated into two categories, ionizing and non-ionizing, to denote the level of danger posed to humans.
From a diagnostic standpoint, organic disorders were those held to be caused by physical illness affecting the brain ( that is, psychiatric disorders secondary to other conditions ), while functional disorders were considered to be disorders of the functioning of the mind in the absence of physical disorders ( that is, primary psychological or psychiatric disorders ).
From the standpoint of the doctrine of the Trinity — one Divine Being existing in three Persons — patripassianism is considered heretical because it denies the distinct personhood of the Members of the Trinity.
" From his standpoint, he could now threaten the entire Crusader coast.
From a military standpoint, historian John Keegan notes exaggerations and myths that surround Shaka, but nevertheless maintains:
For them, ' primitive ' denotes irrational use of resources and absence of the intellectual and moral standards of ' civilised ' human societies .... From the standpoint of anthropological knowledge, both these views are equally one-sided and simplistic.
From a rhetorician's standpoint, an effective scheme of omission that Poe employs is diazeugma, or using many verbs for one subject ; it omits pronouns.

From and secular
From the Carolingian epoch to the end of the Middle Ages and beyond, this was the most widely copied work of secular literature in Europe.
From these first motets arose a medieval tradition of secular motets.
From the 1790s, the term began being used also for propaganda in secular activities.
From the Renaissance era both secular and sacred music survives in quantity, and both vocal and instrumental.
From the beginning, Christian theological learning was therefore a central component in these institutions, as was the study of Church or Canon law ): universities played an important role in training people for ecclesiastical offices, in helping the church pursue the clarification and defence of its teaching, and in supporting the legal rights of the church over against secular rulers.
" It is this vision that scholars have called Paine's " secular millennialism " and it appears in all of his works — he ends the Rights of Man, for example, with the statement: " From what we now see, nothing of reform in the political world ought to be held improbable.
From the 7th Century BC when Jehoiakim, King of Judah, burned part of the prophet Jeremiah's scroll, ( Jeremiah 36 ), to the present day, the burning of books has a long history as a tool wielded by authorities both secular and religious, in efforts to suppress dissenting or heretical views that are perceived as posing a threat to the prevailing order.
From 1481 to 1485, he was employed on frescoes in the Sala dell ' Orologio of the Palazzo Vecchio ; for its Sala del Giglio he frescoed an Apotheosis of St. Zenobius ( 1482 ), an over-life-sized work with an elaborate architectural framework, figures of Roman heroes, and other secular details, striking in its perspective and structural / compositional skill.
From the Fellowship of Reconciliation many Jews, suffragists, socialists, and anarchists separated to form this more secular organization.
In the PBS documentary, From Jesus to Christ, narrated by Elaine Pagels, Ehrman, Karen King, and other secular New Testament scholars, Marcion's role in the formation of the New Testament canon is discussed as pivotal, and the first to explicitly state it.
From this region came both religious figures such as Mordechai Josef Leiner of Izbica, Chaim Israel Morgenstern of Puławy, and Motele Rokeach of Biugoraj, as well as famous secular authors Israel Joshua Singer.
From 1998 on, Struth expanded the series with images shot on sites of powerful secular significance ( including
From the same century there is Las, qu ' i non sun sparvir, astur, a secular love poem.
From his secular poems, which he wrote in the meters of various Turkish, Spanish, and modern Greek songs, it is evident that he knew well several foreign languages.
From this, the term is often used to refer to secular political organisations, meaning that they encompass a broad range of opinion.
From approximately 1610 to 1635, during the reign of Louis XIII, this was the predominant form of secular vocal composition in France, especially in the royal court.
From its roots, culture in Germany has been shaped by major intellectual and popular currents in Europe, both religious and secular.
From April to December 1842, Smith was the editor of The Wasp, a secular but pro-Mormon newspaper in Nauvoo, Illinois.
From the high Middle Ages, in works of piety, clerical critics often deemed romances to be harmful worldly distractions from more substantive or moral works, and by 1600 many secular readers would agree ; in the judgement of many learned readers in the shifting intellectual atmosphere of the seventeenth century, the romance was trite and childish literature, inspiring only broken-down ageing and provincial persons such as Don Quixote, knight of the culturally isolated province of La Mancha.
From 1507, Sigismund I the Old decided that the title of Great Crown Chancellor would be rotated between secular and ecclesiastic nobles, and at least one Chancellor ( both in the Great and Deputy pair and in the Crown and Lithuanian one after the Union of Lublin ) was required to be a secular person.
" From that day to this, the idea has been kept before our educators of registering our colleges in a secular standardizing association, thus tying them by much more than a thread to the educational policies of those who do not discern the voice of God and, who will not hearken to His commandments.
From the High Middle Ages on, the Bishopric's secular jurisdiction notably did not include the city of Worms, which was an Imperial Free City.
From the very beginning of what would become the Free Spirit Heresy its followers ran into trouble with the secular and religious authorities.

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