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Page "Tao Te Ching" ¶ 73
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embodies and virtues
A virtue ethics philosopher will identify virtues, desirable characteristics, that the moral or virtuous person embodies.
Although each profession embodies a particular virtue, to become an Avatar the player must achieve enlightenment in all eight virtues.
Further to this zeitgeist argument there is J. J. Politt ’ s contention that the frieze embodies a Periclean manifesto, which favours the cultural institutions of agones ( or contests, as witnessed by the apobatai ), sacrifices and military training as well as a number of other democratic virtues.
Today, the community of Mountain Brook embodies the best virtues of this ancient civilization.

embodies and its
* A scientific field ( a branch of science ) – widely-recognized category of specialized expertise within science, and typically embodies its own terminology and nomenclature.
* Field of science – widely-recognized category of specialized expertise within science, and typically embodies its own terminology and nomenclature.
* Field of science – widely-recognized category of specialized expertise within science, and typically embodies its own terminology and nomenclature.
* A scientific field ( a branch of science ) – widely-recognized category of specialized expertise within science, and typically embodies its own terminology and nomenclature.
* Scientific field ( a branch of science ) – widely-recognized category of specialized expertise within science, and typically embodies its own terminology and nomenclature.
* Field of science – widely-recognized category of specialized expertise within science, and typically embodies its own terminology and nomenclature.
To the extent that psychiatry presents these problems as " medical diseases ," its methods as " medical treatments ," and its clients – especially involuntary – as medically ill patients, it embodies a lie and therefore constitutes a fundamental threat to freedom and dignity.
The Ceremonial Seal of the Town of Dumfries embodies elements of its heritage, from the period of 1651, when the first patents were issued to colonists, who following the Potomac recognized the value of a snug harbor in Quantico Creek.
Composed between 1872 and 1879, the cycle embodies its composer's personal belief in the greatness of the Czech nation while presenting selected episodes and ideas from Czech history.
The History is much more than the vindication of a party ; it is an attempt to insinuate a view of politics, pragmatic, reverent, essentially Burkean, informed by a high, even tumid sense of the worth of public life, yet fully conscious of its interrelations with the wider progress of society ; it embodies what Hallam had merely asserted, a sense of the privileged possession by Englishmen of their history, as well as of the epic dignity of government by discussion.
The General Assembly produced its " Church without Walls " report in 2001 which embodies an ethos of change, and a focus on the grass-roots life of the Church rather than its institutions.
According to its mission statement, " Iona College is a caring academic community, inspired by the legacy of Blessed Edmund Rice and the Christian Brothers, which embodies opportunity, justice, and the liberating power of education.
In the end, Eulenspiegel's pranks are not so much about the exposure of human weaknesses and malice, as much as the animus he embodiesthe implicit breaking up and sublimation of a given status of consciousness, by means of its negation.
Though they conceive of mimesis in quite different ways, its relation with diegesis is identical in Plato's and Aristotle's formulations ; one represents, the other reports ; one embodies, the other narrates ; one transforms, the other indicates ; one knows only a continuous present, the other looks back on a past.
The State flag and its symbols portray the historical links with states which have existed in the past within the borders of modern Uzbekistan and embodies in itself the national and cultural traditions of the republic.
In his review for the Village Voice, David Ng wrote, " Indeed, featuring a boatload of intercontinental stars who have little to do, Le Divorce uncannily embodies its privileged bilingual milieu.
It embodies a literary record of the socio-cultural development of ancient Punjab ( known as Sapta Sindhu ) and affords us a glimpse of the life of its people.
" The convention of the Rights of the Child makes particular reference to children's rights to participate in decisions affecting them and Summerhill, through its very approach to education, embodies this right in a way that surpasses expectation.
The upshot is that the film's aesthetic form, rather than its content, embodies the overall theme of Rome as a moral wasteland.
Since its inception in 1954, Sports Illustrated magazine has annually presented the " Sportsman of the Year " award to " the athlete or team whose performance that year most embodies the spirit of sportsmanship and achievement.
It was designed by Detective Alfred Karratti and embodies Hawaiian tradition and culture in its motifs.
Each of the twelve kingdoms possess their own ruler and its own kirin, a divine creature which embodies the will of heaven and is entrusted to choose a kingdom's ruler.

embodies and Chinese
Stanley Hui, Dragonair's CEO at the time, described the special livery " embodies the spirit of the Chinese dragons of old – a spirit that aspires to excellence ".
Dirk Struan embodies Clavell's concept of the Hero whose vision for a proper form of cultural integration between East and West finds Dirk throwing off much of what he disliked of both Chinese and European society, yet fusing all that he does admire into a new way of living.
Throughout the Mahāyāna world, Avalokiteśvara ( Sanskrit ; Chinese: Guan Yin ; Japanese: Kanzeon ; Tibetan: Chenrezig ) is a bodhisattva who embodies karuā.
Hongmen members worldwide continue to observe certain common traditions: they all stress their patriotic origin ; they all revere Guan Yu, a historic Chinese figure who embodies righteousness, patriotism, and loyalty ; and they all share certain rituals and traditions such as the concept of brotherhood and a secret handshake.

embodies and original
Thus while defenders argue that the three-prong test embodies the maxim that " opportunity drives interest ", critics argue that the three-prong test goes beyond Title IX original purpose of preventing discrimination, and instead amounts to an exercise in which athletic opportunities are taken away from male students and given to female students, despite the comparatively lower interest levels of those female students.
" MacWEEK described it as a " fine, inexpensive replacement for the Macintosh Plus that best embodies the original Macintosh vision six and a half years later ".
The Darkness embodies a power that stems from the original darkness that covered the universe.
* The Zerg ( 1998 ) of the Starcraft universe demonstrate such concepts when in groups and enhanced by the psychic control of taskmaster breeds ; the Zerg's original leader, the Overmind, was generally thought of not as an individual with a central intelligence to control others but instead as a being which embodies the hive mind of Zerg that are mentally linked.
The historian Ronald Hutton would later relate that it was " one of the first three books to be published on the subject " of Wicca, and that the " remarkable feature of the book is that it remains, until this date, the only one produced by a prominent modern witch that embodies actual original research into the records of the trials of people accused of the crime of witchcraft during the early modern period.
This visual evolution reflects a more profound come-back of the programme to its original inspiration: depicting Groland as a character who by the voice of its various and colourful citizens embodies the hidden face of the French society.
a wooden Gothic altarpiece is found called the Zwettl Altar ( Světelský oltář ), which embodies a preserved part of the original sculpture carved for the Zwettl Abbey in the early 16th century.
He embodies ( New York's ) tangle of cultural contradictions while making music that's both idiomatic, in the broadest sense, and utterly original.

embodies and is
The main source for the affair is a mythology à clef by Synesius of Cyrene, Aegyptus sive de providentia, ( 400 ) an Egyptianising allegory that embodies a covert account of the events, the exact interpretation of which continues to baffle scholars.
Outside of Mexican American communities, the term might assume a negative meaning if it is used in a manner that embodies the prejudices and bigotries long directed at Mexican and Mexican-American people in the United States.
Turntablism embodies the art of cutting, beat juggling, scratching, needle drops, phase shifting, back spinning, and more to perform the transitions and overdubs of samples in a more creative manner ( although turntablism is often considered a use of the turntable as a musical instrument rather than a tool for blending recorded music ).
While the double bass is nearly identical in construction to other violin family instruments, it also embodies features found in the older viol family.
Of higher literary value is the didactic and satirical Buch von der Tugend und Weisheit ( 1550 ), a collection of forty-nine fables in which Alberus embodies his views on the relations of Church and State.
In particular the flag has become a banner for pro-Europeanism outside the Union, for example in Georgia, where the flag is on most government buildings since the coming to power of Mikhail Saakashvili, who used it during his inauguration, stating: " European flag is Georgia ’ s flag as well, as far as it embodies our civilisation, our culture, the essence of our history and perspective, and our vision for the future of Georgia.
Yet it is perhaps the most violent attack, in the apparent quietness of the action, against the rules of the new economy, the new mentality, the new values, and it embodies both a conservative and a progressive view.
Often a hero in these situations has a foil, the villain, typically a charismatic evildoer who represents, leads, or himself embodies the struggle the hero is up against.
God embodies these laws and is therefore neither higher nor lower than the law.
" SingOn " is a new type of streaming service that embodies the latest trends of online karaoke, combining gaming features, social media integration and a large catalogue of high-quality songs under the same service.
This practice embodies itself in the practice of hoodoo, where green flannel is used for a money mojo, white flannel is used for a baby-blessing mojo, red flannel is used for love mojo, and so on.
It is one of the parameters specifying a Pareto distribution and embodies the Pareto principle.
The ancient Greek playwright that best embodies Old Comedy is Aristophanes.
Responsible government is a conception of a system of government that embodies the principle of parliamentary accountability which is the foundation of the Westminster system of parliamentary democracy.
Understood differently in different times and places, it is a cultural construct that embodies some shared conception of how a country's various religious communities relate to each other and to the larger nation whole.
Theogony is a part of Greek mythology which embodies the desire to articulate reality as a whole ; this universalizing impulse was fundamental for the first later projects of speculative theorizing.
Hinduism is a combination of secular and sacred beliefs, rituals, daily practices and traditions that has evolved over the course of over two thousand years and embodies complex symbolism combining the natural world with philosophy.
Venus embodies sex, beauty, enticement, seduction and persuasive female charm among the community of immortal gods ; in Latin orthography, her name is indistinguishable from the Latin noun venus (" sexual love " and " sexual desire "), from which it derives.
Capitoline Jupiter finds himself in a delicate position: he represents a continuity of royal power from the Regal period, and confers power on the magistrates who pay their respects to him ; at the same time he embodies that which is now forbidden, abhorred, and scorned.
In this sense software architecture is really the amalgamation of the multiple perspectives a system always embodies.

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