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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 411
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ascribes and God
Philo characterizes as a monstrous impiety the anthropomorphism of the Bible, which, according to the literal meaning, ascribes to God hands and feet, eyes and ears, tongue and windpipe.
He ascribes their success in battle to their faith in God, and exhorts his people to always be faithful, since God alone can continue to deliver them from the Lamanites.
Scripture certainly ascribes to charity and the love of God the power to take away sin: " He that loveth me shall be loved by My Father "; " Many sins are forgiven her because she hath loved much " ( Luke 7: 36-50 ).
Popular Shia belief ascribes cosmological importance to the family in various texts, wherein it is said that God would not have created Jannah ( heaven ) and earth, paradise, Adam and Eve, or anything else were it not for them.

ascribes and which
Of the numerous works ( mostly on medicine ) which Osaiba ascribes to him, one only, his graphic and detailed Account of Egypt ( in two parts ), appears to be known in Europe.
In both Universals and Scientific Realism and Universals: An Opinionated Introduction, Armstrong describes the relative merits of a number of nominalist theories which appeal either to " natural classes " ( a view he ascribes to Anthony Quinton ), concepts, resemblance relations or predicates, and also discusses non-realist " trope " accounts ( which he describes in the Universals and Scientific Realism volumes as " particularism ").
In addition to the Mahābhāṣya and Yoga Sūtras, the 11th-century commentary on Charaka by the Bengali scholar Cakrapāṇidatta, and the 16th c. text Patanjalicarita ascribes to Patañjali a medical text called the Carakapratisaṃskṛtaḥ ( now lost ) which is apparently a revision ( pratisaṃskṛtaḥ ) of the medical treatise by Caraka.
At the time, the body was observed to be extremely well preserved — a condition which the Church ascribes to embalming and the lack of air flow in his sealed triple coffin rather than to a miracle.
In his " De Viris Illustribus Casinensibus ", Peter the Deacon ascribes to him the composition of a " Cantus ad B. Maurum " and letters to King Philip I of France and to Hugh of Cluny, which no longer exist.
The configurations of background knowledge which he considers are those which are provided by a sample proposition, namely a proposition which is a conjunction of atomic propositions, each of which ascribes a single predicate to a single individual, with no two atomic propositions involving the same individual.
** Labeling theory, or social reaction theory, a theory in sociology which ascribes labelling of people to control and identification of deviant behavior
Tottel's Miscellany ( 1557 ), the Elizabethan anthology which created Wyatt's posthumous reputation, ascribes 96 poems to him, ( 33 not extant in the Egerton Manuscript ).
Gunn used a Vatican palace ms. 1964, which is a copy that ascribes the work to Mark the anchorite.
Schilling believes the reference to this rite of Ianus Quirinus to have the original prophetic interpretation, which ascribes to him the last and conclusive spoils of the history of Rome.
This attribution of the poem to Langland rests principally on the evidence of an early-fifteenth-century manuscript of the C-text ( see below ) of Piers held at Trinity College, Dublin ( MS 212 ), which ascribes the work to one man called, ' Willielmus de Langlond ':
The sociological view of postmodernity ascribes it to more rapid transportation, wider communication and the ability to abandon standardization of mass production, leading to a system which values a wider range of capital than previously and allows value to be stored in a greater variety of forms.
The Talmud ascribes the translation effort to Ptolemy II Philadelphus ( r. 285-246 BC ) who is said to have hired 72 Jewish scholars for the purpose, for which reason the translation is commonly known as the Septuagint, a name which it gained around AD 354-430, " the time of Augustine of Hippo ".
* A grammatically correct sentence may be meaningless if it ascribes properties to particulars which admit of no such class of properties.
The successor of Meletius was Euzoeus, who had fallen with Arius under the ban of Athanasius ; and Loofs explains the sub fidei mutajio which Saint Jerome ascribes to Meletius to the dogmatic opposition of the deposed bishop to his successor.
Aside from clarifying his language and understanding of what is meant by a life form, Lovelock himself ascribes most of the criticism to a lack of understanding of non-linear mathematics by his critics, and a linearizing form of greedy reductionism in which all events have to be immediately ascribed to specific causes before the fact.
The Mahavamsa ascribes a great many books to Buddhaghosa's composition, some of which are not believed to have been his work, but rather were composed later and attributed to him.
Jordanes ascribes her hatred to another cause: he says that Illus had infused jealous suspicions into Zeno's mind which had led Zenoan attempt on her life, and that her knowledge of these things stimulated her to revenge.

ascribes and personal
Eto Jun ascribes to it a " dual motivation ": a personal desire to end his years of egoistic suffering, and a public desire to demonstrate his loyalty to the emperor.
However he may also adjust the values that he ascribes to his own personal inputs.
Author Arlen Schumer ascribes the motive for suicide as being related to Raymond's personal life.
" calling it the universal solvent or universal medicine of the medieval alchemical philosophers, and him in the same place purporting these two seeming opposites as its lauded function to those said demographics, accentuating Crowley's personal psychology about the pervasive properties he ascribes it in his work and terminology / mythos as a unifier or unification of a certain extreme instance beholden to a contradict nature, so seen being unreconcilable a nature if otherwise sought apart of the philosophical ideal of Azoth.

ascribes and matter
" Because " both his manner and his matter duplicate theirs " he finds himself forced to decontaminate his own powers of fiction making or image feigning from those he ascribes to " fictional false poets " and feigners such as Archimago: Archimago " represents the text he poet in the poem might become.

ascribes and can
The instrument, memorializing ( 1 ) the power to demand payment ; and, ( 2 ) the right to be paid, can move, for example, in the instance of a ' bearer instrument ', wherein the possession of the document itself attributes and ascribes the right to payment.

ascribes and than
Genesis, however, ascribes the laughter to Isaac's parents, Abraham and Sarah, rather than El.
The author mainly expands upon details in Barrie's original play and novel, while changing a few key points-he ascribes James's strange colouring and yellow blood to a blood disorder ; James's long dark hair is natural, rather than the usual wig ; James is christened " Hook " after murdering the quartermaster of the Sea Witch, rather than in reference to his prosthetic hand ( in the original novel, Hook was known as " Hook " before he lost his hand, so this is consistent ).
Manetho ascribes the building of Memphis to Menes ' son, Athothis, and calls no pharaohs earlier than Dynasty III " Memphite ".
Such " immutable economic laws " are what Capital: Critique of Political Economy ( 1867 ) revealed about the functioning of the capitalist mode of production, how goods and services ( commodities ) are circulated among a society ; and thus explain the psychological phenomenon of commodity fetishism, which ascribes an independent, objective value and reality to a thing that has no inherent value — other than the value given to it by the producer, the seller, and the buyer of the commodity.
He ascribes his gift to the clever control of ‘ internal air ’.” David-Néel comments “ that at the house of the lama who taught him black magic there lived a trapa who was fleeter than a horse ” using the same skill.
He returns to the elemental theory, but this time posits air, rather than water, as the arche and ascribes to it divine attributes.
An additional, rabbinic prohibition, which Jewish religious tradition ascribes to the court of King Solomon, forbids carrying in any area that was shared by the occupants of more than one dwelling, even if it is surrounded by fences or walls.

ascribes and any
Yet it ascribes to the Earth, that hulking, lazy body, unfit for motion, a motion as quick as that of the aethereal torches, and a triple motion at that .” Likewise, Tycho took issue with the vast distances to the stars that Aristarchus and Copernicus had assumed in order to explain the lack of any visible parallax.
Scott's family sued Janklow for damages, but the court ruled that because Janklow was on official business at the time, he was protected from any monetary claims by the Federal Tort Claims Act, which ascribes liability to the government as opposed to the individual who is acting in a governmental capacity.
Similarly, in Celtic, PIE / p / disappeared and in regularly inherited words only reappeared in p-Celtic languages as a result of the rule that PIE * kʷ became proto-Celtic * p. All this taken together means that any word in p-in a Germanic language which is not evidently borrowed from either Latin or a p-Celtic language must be a loan from another language, and these words Kuhn ascribes to the Nordwestblock language.
The principle of legal equality is enshrined in basic laws such as the Economic Contract Law ( 1982 ), which provides that contracting parties enjoy equal rights, the General Principles of Civil Law ( 1987 ), which ascribes various rights universally to all natural persons, and the Administrative Litigation Law ( 1989 ), which allows any citizen to file suit against administrative agencies.

ascribes and individual
Instead, Gyekye argues that African thought ascribes definite value to the individual.

ascribes and history
279 ), who calls him a dramatist as well as a grammarian, ascribes to him a history of the foundation and antiquities of Alexandria ( unless this is by an Egyptian of the same name, who lived in the reign of Zeno, 474-491 ).

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