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Page "Chaldea" ¶ 31
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sense and is
This sense of moderation and fairness is superbly exemplified in an exchange of letters between John Jay and a Tory refugee, Peter Van Schaack.
The process stipulates that the choreographer sense the quality of the initial movement he has discovered and that he feel the rightness of the quality that is to follow it.
It is not a mess you can make sense of ''.
What is the history of criticism but the history of men attempting to make sense of the manifold elements in art that will not allow themselves to be reduced to a single philosophy or a single aesthetic theory??
In addition, they have been converted to Zen Buddhism, with its glorification of all that is `` natural '' and mysteriously alive, the sense that everything in the world is flowing.
Piepsam is not, certainly, religious in any conventional sense.
Mimesis here is not to be confused with literalism or realism in the conventional sense.
Neither is primary experience understood according to the attitude of modern empiricism in which nothing is thought to be received other than signals of sensory qualities producing their responses in the appropriate sense organs.
These desires presuppose a sense of causally efficacious powers in which one is involved, some working for one's good, others threatening ill.
he is questioning, also, every epistemology which stems from Hume's presupposition that experience is merely sense data in abstraction from causal efficacy, and that causal efficacy is something intellectually imputed to the world, not directly perceived.
As long as perception is seen as composed only of isolated sense data, most of the quality and interconnectedness of existence loses its objectivity, becomes an invention of consciousness, and the result is a philosophical scepticism.
The corporation in America is in reality our form of socialism, vying in a sense with the other socialistic form that has emerged within governmental bureaucracy.
Thus, in no ordinary sense of ' simplicity ' is the Ptolemaic theory simpler than the Copernican.
In a sense, Einstein's theory is simpler than Newton's, and there is a corresponding sense in which Copernicus' theory is simpler than Ptolemy's.
The only way to describe Paula Sandburg is to say she is beautiful in a Grecian sense.

sense and used
The trouble with this machinery is that it is not used and the reason that it is not used is the absence of a conscious sense of community among the free nations.
The dictionary is a form dictionary, at least in the sense that complete forms are used as the basis for matching text occurrences with dictionary entries.
The word distance is used here in a rather general sense ; ;
This term was also used by the cowboy in the sense of a human showin' fight, as one cowhand was heard to say, `` He arches his back like a mule in a hailstorm ''.
Sometimes such people sense that they are being used ; ;
When used in the broader sense, the term can include many different groups.
ANOVA tools could then be used to make some sense of the fitted models,
The term " alphabet " is used by linguists and paleographers in both a wide and a narrow sense.
The term android was used in a more modern sense by the French author Auguste Villiers de l ' Isle-Adam in his work Tomorrow's Eve ( 1886 ).
Its domain is the powerset of A ( with the empty set removed ), and so makes sense for any set A, whereas with the definition used elsewhere in this article, the domain of a choice function on a collection of sets is that collection, and so only makes sense for sets of sets.
The term allegiance was traditionally often used by English legal commentators in a larger sense, divided by them into natural and local, the latter applying to the deference which even a foreigner must pay to the institutions of the country in which he happens to live.
The term " ataxia " is sometimes used in a broader sense to indicate lack of coordination in some physiological process.
The term " absolute value " has been used in this sense since at least 1806 in French and 1857 in English.
Abbreviations have been used as long as phonetic scripts have existed, in some sense actually being more common in early literacy, where spelling out a whole word was often avoided, initial letters commonly being used to represent words in specific application.
The word is also used in a qualitative sense of, a person creative in, innovative in, or adept at, an artistic practice.
Throughout Latin America the word Gringo is also used for any foreigner from the United States, Canada, or Europe, however the true sense of the word is any foreigner.
" Arianism " is also often used to refer to other nontrinitarian theological systems of the 4th century, which regarded Jesus Christ — the Son of God, the Logos — as either a created being ( as in Arianism proper and Anomoeanism ), or as neither uncreated nor created in the sense other beings are created ( as in Semi-Arianism ).
Occasionally, " almost all " is used in the sense of " almost everywhere " in measure theory, or in the closely related sense of " almost surely " in probability theory.
A poignant sense of nostalgia accompanied the recordings of several gospel and blues singers in the 1940s and 1950s who used the song to remember their grandparents, traditions, and family roots.
In Germany, the term Asatru is used in the wider sense of Germanic neopaganism.
The main recent sense of the word “ art ” is roughly as an abbreviation for creative art or “ fine art .” Here we mean that skill is being used to express the artist ’ s creativity, or to engage the audience ’ s aesthetic sensibilities, or to draw the audience towards consideration of the “ finer ” things.

sense and Book
Traditional Jewish exegesis such as Midrash ( Genesis Rabbah 38 ) says that Adam spoke Hebrew because the names he gives Eve-" Isha " ( Book of Genesis 2: 23 ) and " Chava " ( Genesis 3: 20 )-only make sense in Hebrew.
Among other things, the authenticity of this passage would help make sense of the later reference in Josephus Antiquities of the Jews Book 20, Chapter 9, 1 where Josephus refers to the stoning of " James the brother of Jesus ".
Feldman states that it would make no sense for Origen to show amazement that Josephus did not acknowledge Jesus as Christ ( Book X, Chapter 17 ), if Josephus had not referred to Jesus at all.
In 1990, the Magill Book Reviews said " The author's whimsical sense of humor and his sense that the universe has many unexplored possibilities will arouse the interest of a wide readership.
Throughout the Book of Mormon the term " Nephite " in the religious sense refers to a believer in Jesus Christ, either before his coming, or after.
Although the Book of Mormon states explicitly that Nephi was the first king of the Nephites (), the word " Nephite " does not seem to be used in a clearly political sense until later.
The episode in the Book of Leinster ( Recension II ), called Imthúsa Chon Ruí meic Dáire ( header ) or Oislige Amargin ( text ), offers by and large the same story, but adds more explicit detail, notably on the point of Cú Roí's sense of honour in his encounters with Cú Chulainn and Amairgin.
Uncial itself probably comes from St. Jerome's preface to the Book of Job, where it is found in the form uncialibus, but it is possible that this is a misreading of inicialibus ( though this makes little sense in the context ), and Jerome may have been referring to the larger initial letters found at the beginning of paragraphs.
In this sense there was no ' community ' at Little Gidding, but rather a family living a Christian life in accordance with the Book of Common Prayer according to High Church principles.
The anatomical terms ( such as those mentioned in the beginning of chapter nine ) and other information that White used came mostly from American Spiders by Willis J. Gertsch and The Spider Book by John Henry Comstock, both of which combine a sense of poetry with scientific fact.
There " mashal " is used only in the Book of Ezekiel, and in an entirely different sense, namely, that of figurative speech or allegory ( Ezekiel 17: 2, 21: 5, 24: 3 ).
There is a sense of space in the design of all the pages of the Book of Durrow.
The verse makes equal sense if we read the speaker as Christ or as the Gospel Book.
For the third single from the album they released the 30-second-song Yoko Ono, which, according to the Guinness Book of Records, is the shortest single ever released ( with a videoclip )— another example of their sense of humour.
" Additional evidence suggests that the Book of Moses itself could be seen as a temple text, in the sense discussed by BYU professor John W. Welch.
The increasing presence and pressure from the West created a greater sense of urgency among reformers, and thus Choe Je-u first penned his treatise, Comprehensive Book of Eastern Learning, or < em > Dongkyeong Daejon </ em > ( 동경대전, 東經大全 ).
For instance, in the Book of Jeremiah, the word mikveh is used in the sense of " hope ," but at the same time also associated with " living water ":
But the Nicomachean Ethics only discusses the sense of shame at that point, and not righteous indignation ( which is however discussed in the Eudemian Ethics Book VIII ).
After being given the additional job of CCO, in 2010, Quesada explained to Comic Book Resources, " With my increased travel schedule over the last year plus, I've only been able to work with the publishing division in a more macro sense, or as you put it, a more, " big picture ," sense.
This is loosely supported by Jerry Oltion's Captain's Table Book 6: Where Sea Meets Sky, where the author refers to Number One as Commander Lefler in the first chapter, although this wouldn't make any sense chronologically based on the history of Morgan Primus.
The Philadelphia Inquirer appreciated " Nolan's soaring language and lilting alliterative style suffuse [...] much of the book with a sense of the miraculous " and the New York Times Book Review found it
The text of the Torah argues that the name of Gad means luck / fortunate, in Hebrew, deriving from a root meaning cut / divide, in the sense of divided out ; classical rabbinical literature argues that the name was a prophetic reference to the manna ; some Biblical scholars suspect that refers to a deity originally worshipped by the tribe, namely Gad, the semitic deity of fortune, who, according to the Book of Isaiah, was still worshipped by certain Hebrews during the 6th century BC.

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