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Page "The Ramsay Principle" ¶ 19
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I and wholly
' I knew this to be a nightmare fantasy wholly without substance in the real world ... One of the striking things about places heavily contaminated by radioactive nuclides is the richness of their wildlife.
Horkheimer's reaction to the manuscript was wholly positive: " If I have ever in the whole of my life felt enthusiasm about anything, then I did on this occasion ," he wrote after reading the manuscript.
Space launch vehicles such as Falcon I have been wholly developed with private finance, and the quoted costs for launch are lower.
Quoted in the New York Herald on September 2, 1876, Grant said, " I regard Custer's Massacre as a sacrifice of troops, brought on by Custer himself, that was wholly unnecessary – wholly unnecessary.
I had been connected with him for many years and from then on I had to be wholly on my own ”.
He read slowly and beautifully, and through him I began to discover a wholly new world.
If my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain, I have no reason to suppose that my beliefs are true ... and hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms.
If minds are wholly dependent on brains, and brains on biochemistry, and biochemistry ( in the long run ) on the meaningless flux of the atoms, I cannot understand how the thought of those minds should have any more significance than the sound of the wind in the trees.
Even as he claimed that " I am a bigoted Greek in the condemnation of the Roman architecture …," he did not seek to rigidly impose Greek forms, stating that " ur religion requires a church wholly different from the temple, our legislative assemblies and our courts of justice, buildings of entirely different principles from their basilicas ; and our amusements could not possibly be performed in their theatres or amphitheatres.
The thought of becoming in this way a murderer or malefactor towards the life of my fellow human beings was most terrible to me, so terrible and disturbing that I wholly gave up my practice in the first years of my married life and occupied myself solely with chemistry and writing.
Hence I have very little doubt, that if the whole genus of humble-bees became extinct or very rare in England, the heartsease and red clover would become very rare, or wholly disappear.
For the purposes of illustration I have employed only outline figures, for had either shading or colouring been introduced it might be supposed that the effect was wholly or in part due to these circumstances, whereas by leaving them out of consideration no room is left to doubt that the entire effect of relief is owing to the simultaneous perception of the two monocular projections, one on each retina.
" If the chances of life ever enable me to emerge ," he wrote to Lady Holland, " I will show you I have not been wholly occupied by small and sordid pursuits ".
A. C. Swinburne placed it with " Ode on a Grecian Urn " as " the nearest to absolute perfection " of Keats's odes ; Aileen Ward declared it " Keats's most perfect and untroubled poem "; and Douglas Bush has stated that the poem is " flawless in structure, texture, tone, and rhythm "; Walter Evert, in 1965, stated that " To Autumn " is " the only perfect poem that Keats ever wrote – and if this should seem to take from him some measure of credit for his extraordinary enrichment of the English poetic tradition, I would quickly add that I am thinking of absolute perfection in whole poems, in which every part is wholly relevant to and consistent in effect with every other part.
In spite of this fact, the original Roman Senate continued to express decrees into the late 6th century and so some historians even place the symbolic end of antiquity at the death of Justinian I in 565, because Justinian was the last emperor to speak Latin and the last to use wholly Roman ( as opposed to Greek ) customs and rules for his court and government.
Tyndall commented: " The idea of semi-fluid motion belongs entirely to Louis Rendu ; the proof of the quicker central flow belongs in part to Rendu, but almost wholly to Louis Agassiz and Forbes ; the proof of the retardation of the bed belongs to Forbes alone ; while the discovery of the locus of the point of maximum motion belongs, I suppose, to me.
: Mr Thrale's Person is manly, his Countenance agreeable, his Eyes steady and of the deepest Blue: his Look neither soft nor severe, neither sprightly nor gloomy, but thoughtful and Intelligent: his Address is neither caressive nor repulsive, but unaffectedly civil and decorous ; and his Manner more completely free from every kind of Trick or Particularity than I ever saw any person's-he is a Man wholly as I think out of the Power of Mimickry.
: Mr Thrale's Sobriety, & the Decency of his Conversation being wholly free from all Oaths Ribaldry and Profaneness make him a Man exceedingly comfortable to live with, while the easiness of his Temper and slowness to take Offence add greatly to his Value as a domestic Man: Yet I think his Servants do not much love him, and I am not sure that his Children feel much Affection for him: low People almost all indeed agree to abhorr him, as he has none of that officious & cordial Manner which is universally required by them-nor any Skill to dissemble his dislike of their Coarseness-with Regard to his Wife, tho ' little tender of her Person, he is very partial to her Understanding ,-but he is obliging to nobody ; & confers a Favour less pleasingly than many a Man refuses to confer one.

I and fail
What I am suggesting is that when we delay, or when we fail to act, we do so intentionally and not through inadvertence or through bureaucratic or procedural difficulties.
The contention needs to be formulated with much greater precision than it ever was during the campaign, but once that has been done, I fail to see how any serious student of world affairs can quarrel with it.
The pursuit of wisdom, he assured his readers of the Boethius, was the surest path to power: " Study Wisdom, then, and, when you have learned it, condemn it not, for I tell you that by its means you may without fail attain to power, yea, even though not desiring it ".
May God and my brothers in this organisation be my judges if at any time I should wittingly fail or break this oath.
" I tell you the truth ," Jesus said to them, " no one who has left home or wife or brothers or parents or children for the sake of the kingdom of God will fail to receive many times as much in this age and, in the age to come, eternal life.
He had been advised not to leave his bed, but he went anyway saying, " What will the Navy say if I fail to attend Jellicoe's funeral?
The belief in eternal life after death is expressed in stanzas five and six: ' when this flesh and heart shall fail ', ' I shall possess ' ' A life of joy and peace ', and ' God, who call'd me here below, Will be for ever mine '.
I mean, if the player is gonna die or fail, they should at least get a laugh out of it.
" I fail to see how this lot will make a positive contribution to the future of Dutch music ".
When Anne's health began to fail, Mary I allowed her to live at Chelsea Old Manor, where Henry's last wife, Catherine Parr, had lived after her remarriage.
:< sup > 12 </ sup > I will not fail to speak of his limbs, his strength and his graceful form.
*: Pope Julio ( if I fail not in the name, and sure I am that there is a game of the cards after his name ) was a great and wary player, a great vertue in a man of his profession
In February 2008, he urged McGill University students to speak out against politicians who fail to act on climate change, stating " What I would challenge you to do is to put a lot of effort into trying to see whether there's a legal way of throwing our so-called leaders into jail because what they're doing is a criminal act.
* Downward counterfactuals: We compare our situation with those even worse ( e. g., " Yes, I procrastinated and got a B-in the course, but I didn't fail like one other student did .").
Dilys Powell, while reviewing the film, confessed that " I rarely fail to get at any rate some pleasure from a film with Mr le Mesurier in the cast ".
Some of the answers obtained to these questions, seem plain and full of significance, and cannot I think, fail to interest every student of natural history.
Here is what I wanted to tell you guys: Stop ... You have a responsibility to the public discourse, and you fail miserably.
In predicting this he said, " This I mention not to assert when the time of the end shall be, but to put a stop to the rash conjectures of fanciful men who are frequently predicting the time of the end, and by doing so bring the sacred prophesies into discredit as often as their predictions fail.
I will not fail you.
The child had black hair and dark eyes and at the baptism, Tsar Paul I did not fail to remark his amazement that two blonde, blue eyed parents had had a dark-haired child.
In the end, all their plans fail, and Mordaunt executes King Charles I after d ' Artagnan and the three former Musketeers have kidnapped the real executioner in order to prevent this.
: For thence ,— a paradoxWhich comforts while it mocks ,— Shall life succeed in that it seems to fail: What I aspired to be, And was not, comforts me: brute I might have been, but would not sink i ' the scale.

I and comprehend
Inscribed around its base is a charm in Balinese, a dialect I take it you don't comprehend.
We have not the leisure, or the patience, or the skill, to comprehend what was working in the mind and heart of a then recent graduate from the Harvard Divinity School who would muster the audacity to contradict his most formidable instructor, the majesterial Andrews Norton, by saying that, while he believed Jesus `` like other religious teachers '', worked miracles, `` I see not how a miracle proves a doctrine ''.
" Philosophy physics is written in this grand book — I mean the universe — which stands continually open to our gaze, but it cannot be understood unless one first learns to comprehend the language and interpret the characters in which it is written.
Swan acknowledged that Edison had anticipated him, saying " Edison is entitled to more than I ... he has seen further into this subject, vastly than I, and foreseen and provided for details that I did not comprehend until I saw his system ".
[...] What will be your Lordships astonishment when I tell you that an act passed for the express purpose of gratifying the Canadians & which was supposed to comprehend all that they either wished or wanted is become the first object of their discontent & dislike.
" ( i. e. comprehend ; Act I Scene II Line 258 )
The resultant paradox is famously articulated by Moshe Chaim Luzzatto ( Derekh Hashem I: 1: 5 ), describing the dichotomy as arising out of our inability to comprehend the idea of absolute unity:
Canning wrote on 16 April: " Here I am immersed in papers, of which I do not yet comprehend three words in succession ; but I shall get at their meaning by degrees and at my leisure.
Philosophy physics is written in this grand book — I mean the universe — which stands continually open to our gaze, but it cannot be understood unless one first learns to comprehend the language and interpret the characters in which it is written.
The novelty of his principles, added to my youth and prejudices, made me unable to comprehend them at the time, but he urged them with so much benevolence, as well as eloquence, that they took a certain hold, which, though it did not develope itself so as to arrive at full conviction for some few years after, I can fairly say, has constituted, ever since, the happiness of my life, as well as any little consideration I may have enjoyed in it.
But as I see it, the Dharmakaya cannot expound ( or comprehend ) the Dharma.
There is in my opinion no important theoretical difference between natural languages and the artificial languages of logicians ; indeed, I consider it possible to comprehend the syntax and semantics of both kinds of language within a single natural and mathematically precise theory.
Fr Troy said of the protest: " I really found it hard to comprehend the hatred that was shown to the school girls ...
The intensity of the protest was hard to comprehend ; I don't think people can really understand that from watching it on television ".
The verb "", which literally means " I comprehend ", was chosen because « it evokes the noble root of intelligence, a discipline aimed at unravelling mysteries and holds in itself a constant tension directed to its final goal: knowledge ».
I just couldn't comprehend why anyone would ask you to predict the date of your death.
" He noted, " Upon my honor, I am not quite sure that I entirely comprehend my own meaning in some of these blasted allegories ...
I remember, as a boy, hearing segregation and racism being justified from the pulpit and I could not comprehend this glaring hypocrisy, totally contrary to what Jesus taught.

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