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traces and back
He traces the hostility of the two states back to a dispute about the images of the goddesses Damia and Auxesia, which the Aeginetes had carried off from Epidauros, their parent state.
Modern botany traces its roots back more than twenty three centuries, to the Father of Botany, Theophrastus ( c. 371 – 287 BC ), a student of Aristotle.
ISA Passive Backplane showing connectors and parallel signal traces on back side.
Early traces of bricks were found in a ruin site in Xi ' an in 2009 dated back about 3800 years ago.
The foundation for the operation of the common law in Ontario traces back to that reception statute.
The Global Alliance of Affirming Apostolic Pentecostals ( GAAAP ), traces its roots back to 1980, making it the oldest LGBT-affirming Apostolic Pentecostal denomination in existence.
According to Mircea Eliade, one pervasive mythical theme associates heroes with the slaying of dragons, a theme which Eliade traces back to " the very ancient cosmogonico-heroic myth " of a battle between a divine hero and a dragon.
Richard Steigmann-Gall says that the stab-in-the-back legend traces back to a sermon preached on February 3, 1918, by Protestant Court Chaplain Bruno Doehring, six months before the war had even ended.
In Finnish the name for Easter pääsiäinen, traces back to the verb pääse-meaning to be released, as does the Sámi word Beassážat.
The Orthodox Church traces its development back through the Byzantine or Roman empire, to the earliest church established by St. Paul and the Apostles.
Merriam-Webster's dictionary traces the usage of the term back as far as 1903.
First activities were linked to irrigation and flood control, as demonstrated by traces of dykes, dams, and canals dating back to at least 2000 BCE that were found in ancient Egypt, ancient Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent, as well as around the early settlements of Mohenjo Daro and Harappa in the Indus valley.
Bruce Lincoln further traces Geri back to a Proto-Indo-European stem * gher -, which is the same as that found in Garmr, a name referring to the hound closely associated with the events of Ragnarök.
He wrote for a Jewish audience: like " Q " and " M ", he stresses the continuing relevance of the Jewish law ; unlike Mark he never bothers to explain Jewish customs ; and unlike Luke, who traces Jesus's ancestry back to Adam, father of the human race, he traces it only to Abraham, father of the Jews.
Unlike Dungeons & Dragons, the other approach to fantasy role-playing which traces its roots back to the 1960s and which derives from the wargaming scene, the roots of Glorantha lie in experiments with mythology, storytelling, and recreation and blending of ancient societies.
The Marine traces its roots back to the Reichsflotte ( Empire Fleet ) of the revolutionary era of 1848 – 52.
The company responsible for this liquidation traces back to the Interogo Foundation in Liechtenstein Ingvar Kamprad has confirmed that this foundation owns Inter IKEA Holding S. A. in Luxembourg and is controlled by the Kamprad family.
Pei's ancestry traces back to the Ming Dynasty, when his family moved from Anhui province to Suzhou.
European Imperialism in Asia traces its roots back to the late 15th century with a series of voyages that sought a sea passage to India in the hope of establishing direct trade between Europe and Asia in spices.
Dairy Farm traces its origins in Hong Kong back to the 19th century when it was involved in the production of dairy products and ice.
In the seventh century, Isidore of Seville published his noted history, in which he traces the origins of most of the nations of Europe back to Japheth.
The university, located in the city of Lund in the province of Scania, Sweden, traces its roots back to 1425, when a Franciscan studium generale was founded in Lund next to the Lund Cathedral, arguably making it the oldest institution of higher education in Scandinavia followed by studium generales in Uppsala in 1477 and Copenhagen in 1479.
The history of modern Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games ( MMORPGs ) like World of Warcraft, and related virtual world genres such as the social virtual worlds exemplified by Second Life, traces directly back to the MUD genre.
* Seborga, a town in the region of Liguria, Italy, near the southern end of the border with France, which traces its history back to the Middle Ages.

traces and Socrates
While Western philosophy traces dialectics to ancient Greek thought of Socrates and Plato, the idea of tension between two opposing forces leading to synthesis is much older and present in Hindu Philosophy.
Stoic logic traces its roots back to the late 5th century BC philosopher, Euclid of Megara, a pupil of Socrates and slightly older contemporary of Plato.
In addition, the story Socrates narrates was told to Socrates by Diotima, creating one more layer between the reader and the philosophic path that Socrates traces.
Although many Kolkatans boast of the city being the birthplace of adda culture, Satyajit Ray ( in his film Agantuk ) traces back the origin of the tradition to regular intellectual dialogues prevalent in Ancient Greece at the time of Socrates or Plato.

traces and notion
This traces to Austrian-American political scientist Joseph Schumpeter's notion that a " perennial gale of creative destruction " is ever sweeping through capitalist economies, driving enterprise at the market's mercy.
The historical consciousness that becomes visible in their work is a significant rupture in our thinking about the past ... Human agency was a central element in the historical thought of Machiavelli and Guicciardini, but they did not have a modern notion of individuality ... They started to disentangle historiography from its rhetorical framework, and in Guicciardini ’ s work we can observe the first traces of a critical historical method.
In " Welt und Umwelt " and " Die Wahrheit der Dinge " the philosopher and sociologist Josef Pieper argued that reason allows the human person to live in " welt " ( world ) while plants and animals do indeed live in an Umwelt — a notion which he traces back far beyond Uexküll to Plato, Aristotle, and Thomas Aquinas.
In the book Finding a Place, author, journalist, editor, journalist and academic, Kris Rampersad challenges and rejects the notion of East Indians to describe people in Indian heritage in the Caribbean and traces their migration and adaptation from hypenated isolation inherent in the description Indo-Trinidadian or Indo-Caribbean for the unhypehnated integration into their societies as IndoTrinidadian and IndoCaribbean that embraces both their ancestral and their national identities.
Here Butler traces Wittig's thinking about lesbianism as the one recourse to the constructed notion of sex.

traces and which
Faulkner traces, in his vast and overpowering saga of Yoknapatawpha County, the gradual changes which seep into the South, building layer upon layer of minute, subtle innovation which eventually tend largely to hide the Old Way.
Actinium is found only in traces in uranium ores as the isotope < sup > 227 </ sup > Ac, which decays with a half-life of 21. 772 years, predominantly emitting beta particles.
The wealth of Amathus was derived partly from its grain partly from its sheep and copper mines, of which traces can be seen inland.
* Swearingen Jr., William Scott Environmental City: People, Place, and the Meaning of Modern Austin ( University of Texas Press ; 2010 ) 273 pages ; traces the history of environmentalism in the Texas capital, which has been part of a larger effort to preserve Austin's quality of life and sense of place.
After this came a Buddhist era which has left its traces in the gigantic sculptures at Bamian and the rock-cut topes of Haibak.
Another, more specialized route is the ' Deutsche Uhrenstraße ' (" German Clock Road "), a circular route which traces the horological history of the region.
Modern cymbals consist of several types of bronze, the most common being B20 bronze, which is roughly 20 % tin, 80 % copper, with traces of silver.
David Gordon White traces the modern popularity of the " Hindu " seven chakra system to Arthur Avalon's The Serpent Power, which was Avalon's translation of a late work, the Satcakranirupana.
An important study of this figure is James George Frazer's The Golden Bough, which traces the dying god theme through a large number of myths.
A chronicle which traces world history is called a universal chronicle.
Barth traces the first documented use to a centrist political meeting in the Munich Löwenbräu-Keller on November 2, 1918, in which Ernst Müller-Meiningen, a member of the Progressive coalition in the Reichstag, used the term to exhort his listeners to keep fighting:
Beirut and Sidon, which Fakhr-al-Din beautified, still bear traces of his benign rule.
: The science which traces the laws of such of the phenomena of society as arise from the combined operations of mankind for the production of wealth, in so far as those phenomena are not modified by the pursuit of any other object.
Accordingly, the incantations originally composed for the Ea cult were re-edited by the priests of Babylon and adapted to the worship of Marduk, and, similarly, the hymns to Marduk betray traces of the transfer to Marduk of attributes which originally belonged to Ea.
In 1996 another collection of Guattari's essays, lectures, and interviews, Soft Subversions, was published, which traces the development of his thought and activity throughout the 1980s (" the winter years ").
The name was derived from the mineral fluorite ( calcium difluoride ), some examples of which contain traces of divalent europium, which serves as the fluorescent activator to emit blue light.
The Beit Yosef is a huge commentary on the Tur in which Rabbi Karo traces the development of each law from the Talmud through later rabbinical literature ( examining thirty-two authorities, beginning with the Talmud and ending with the works of Rabbi Israel Isserlein ).
" Incunable " is the anglicised singular form of " incunabula ", Latin for " swaddling clothes " or " cradle " which can refer to " the earliest stages or first traces in the development of anything.

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