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is and intimately
His religiousness is intimately, or dialectically, connected with his sinfulness ; ;
It now becomes evident that the denominational church is intimately involved with the economy of middle-class culture, for it serves to crystallize the social class identity of middle-class residential groupings.
The justification for attributing life to objects was stated by David Hume in his Natural History of Religion ( Section III ): " There is a universal tendency among mankind to conceive all beings like themselves, and to transfer to every object those qualities with which they are familiarly acquainted, and of which they are intimately conscious.
Conversely, modern biological sciences ( including even concepts such as molecular ecology ) are intimately entwined and dependent on the methods developed through biotechnology and what is commonly thought of as the life sciences industry.
Computing is intimately tied to the representation of numbers.
According to Foucault, power is intimately tied with his conception of truth.
In Byzantine and Russian art, the theme of the Miracle of the Archangel Michael at Chonae ( Τὸ ἐν Χωναῖς / Χῶναις Θαῦμα τοῦ Ἀρχαγγέλου Μιχαήλ ) is intimately linked with the site.
**" Each of us is intimately familiar with our own individual wants and needs.
Because of this time working closely and collaborating – a period that is normally far longer, and far more intimately involved, than the entire production and filming – most directors and editors form a unique artistic bond.
For many reasons scholars today believe otherwise — for example, the gospel is based on Mark, and " it seems unlikely that an eyewitness of Jesus's ministry, such as Matthew, would need to rely on others for information about it "— and believe instead that it was written between about 80 – 90 AD by a highly educated Jew ( an " Israelite ", in the language of the gospel itself ), intimately familiar with the technical aspects of Jewish law, standing on the boundary between traditional and non-traditional Jewish values.
Gothic literature is intimately associated with the Gothic Revival architecture of the same era.
To grok () is to intimately and completely share the same reality or line of thinking with another physical or conceptual entity.
The name refers to the lambda calculus, a mathematical formalism invented by Alonzo Church, with which LISP is intimately connected, and references the Knights Templar.
Model theory recognises and is intimately concerned with a duality: It examines semantical elements by means of syntactical elements of a corresponding language.
The difference is that the microprogram is usually only developed by the processor manufacturer and works intimately with the computer hardware.
In fact, the rise of rock music to popularity is intimately tied to the history of music radio.
Since neural systems are intimately related to cognitive processes and behavior, the field is closely related to cognitive and behavioral modeling.
This point is intimately connected with a variety of other themes in his later works, especially his investigations of " meaning ".
Riemann introduced revolutionary ideas into the subject, the chief of them being that the distribution of prime numbers is intimately connected with the zeros of the analytically extended Riemann zeta function of a complex variable.
Human health and ecology is intimately related.
In the historical sources Rheged is intimately associated with the king Urien Rheged and his family.
Pictorial Semiotics is intimately connected to art history and theory.
More recently, it has come to be appreciated that the epistemological issue is intimately related to metaphysical and conceptual issues.
The history of the study of soil is intimately tied to our urgent need to provide food for ourselves and forage for our animals.

is and indebted
Evidence is plentiful that early and later also he has been indebted to the Gothic romancers, who deal in extravagant horror, to the symbolists writing at the end of the preceding century, and in particular to the stream-of-consciousness novelists, Henry James and James Joyce among them.
Once more, in other words, Steele is said to be indebted to Swift for his `` wit '' ; ;
To the members of our Advisory Board, and most specially to its members who constitute our committees of selection, the Foundation is indebted for its successes of choice of Fellows.
Finally, we may also mention the several members of the self-consciously `` neoliberal '' movement that developed at the University of Chicago and is heavily indebted philosophically to the creative work of Alfred North Whitehead.
In a sense, perhaps, Thurber is indebted artistically to the surrealist painter ( was it Salvador Dali??
" Before Diderot ," Anne Louise Germaine de Staël wrote, " I had never seen anything in pictures except dull and lifeless colours ; it was his imagination that gave them relief and life, and it is almost a new sense for which I am indebted to his genius.
The design and concept of EverQuest is heavily indebted to text-based MUDs, in particular DikuMUD, and as such EverQuest is considered a 3D evolution of the text MUD genre like some of the MMOs that preceded it such as Meridian 59 and The Realm Online.
" The theory was indebted to Aristotle's pluralism and his concepts of Soul, the rational, living aspect of a living substance which cannot exist apart from the body because it is not a substance but an essence, and nous, rational thought, reflection and understanding.
Although problems with basic infrastructure and government services persist, and Lebanon is now highly indebted, much of the civil war damage has been repaired throughout the country, and many foreign investors and tourists have returned.
: for we ourselves forgive everyone who is indebted to us.
Lewis Song " from the album Albertine, which is heavily indebted to Lewis's works, including the lyric " If I find in myself desires nothing in this world can satisfy / I can only conclude that I was not made for here.
Oxfordians say this is similar to Antonio in The Merchant of Venice, who was indebted to Shylock for 3, 000 ducats against the successful return of his vessels.
The question of whether Theophylact and Theodora needed to tie Sergius to them by such means, particularly when Sergius was already deeply indebted to them for his elevation to the papacy, as well as wasting Marozia in a relationship when, as the daughter of an important house, she would have been a valuable tool to link via marriage to another noble house, is open to debate.
# To fulfil a debt: When a jiva is indebted to another jiva, it gets a human birth to fulfil its debt and receive what is owed to it.
There is considerable similarity between structural literary theory and Northrop Frye's archetypal criticism, which is also indebted to the anthropological study of myths.
When the protagonists are captured and imprisoned by a Norman baron, Scott interrupts the story to exclaim: It is grievous to think that those valiant barons, to whose stand against the crown the liberties of England were indebted for their existence, should themselves have been such dreadful oppressors, and capable of excesses contrary not only to the laws of England, but to those of nature and humanity.
Harsanyi claimed that his theory is indebted to Adam Smith, who equated the moral point of view with that of an impartial but sympathetic observer ; to Kant who insisted on the criterion of universality and which may also be described as a criterion of reciprocity ; to the classical utilitarians who made maximising social utility the basic criterion of morality ; and tothe modern theory of rational behaviour under risk and uncertainty, usually described as Bayesian decision theory ’.
He is heavily indebted throughout most of the book, not so much for his own expenses as for Becky's.
Geneva is indebted to him for the founding of a law school in which François Hotman, Jules Pacius, and Denys Godefroy, the most eminent jurists of the century, lectured in turn ( cf.
On page two among various Acknowledgments, the author writes: ' To Mr. Arnold Fraser-Campbell the author is particularly indebted for permission to use material and quotations from his manuscript in which is described his method of hand valuation by counting losing tricks, and from which the author has developed the Losing Trick Count described herein.
Moses Mendelssohn ( 6 September 1729 – 4 January 1786 ) was a German Jewish philosopher to whose ideas the Haskalah ( the ' Jewish enlightenment ' of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ) is indebted.

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