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Logically and argument
Logically, an argument is held in discredit if the underlying premise is found, " So severely in error that there is cause to remove the argument from the proceedings because of its prejudicial context and application ...".
Muhammad Iqbal also rejects the argument stating,Logically speaking, then, the movement from the finite to the infinite as embodied in the cosmological argument is quite illegitimate ; and the argument fails in total .” For Iqbal the concept of the first uncaused cause is absurd, he continues: " It is, however, obvious that a finite effect can give only a finite cause, or at most an infinite series of such causes.

Logically and is
Logically, then, the first principle of the plan must be that it is not rigidly oriented toward any geographical area.
Logically, this does not assure that the moon itself ( or even the camera ) existed at the time the photograph is supposed to have been taken.
* Logically, too, The Lone Ranger never wins against hopeless odds ; i. e., he is never seen escaping from a barrage of bullets merely by riding into the horizon.
Logically, a beta node at the head of a branch of beta nodes is a special case because it takes no input from any beta memory higher in the network.
Logically therefore it was in the occupation of the crown alone, that is to say in the royal demesne.
Logically, the truth value of some proposition cannot be used to infer that the same proposition is necessarily true.
She goes on to say " Logically, if sex is natural and wholesome and semen is as healthy as sweat, there is no reason to interpret ejaculation as a hostile gesture.
Logically, magnetotaxis is the ability to sense a magnetic field and coordinate movement in response.
" She goes on to say " Logically, if sex is natural and wholesome and semen is as healthy as sweat, there is no reason to interpret ejaculation as a hostile gesture.
Logically then, it is only by these localized views that one religion's adherents may see others as inferior.
Logically, however, the 8259 is only connected once at any given time.
Logically, the awareness of being a potential subject of monitoring is also crucial.
Logically, the select is evaluated before the actual insert operation is started.
Logically, the septum pellucidum is a septum in the medial plane and could therefore be termed ' medial septum ', but this is incorrect.
Logically looking at the puzzle, the only way to get rid of any I's is to have three consecutive I's in the string.

Logically and given
Logically if the test trials are so difficult that no items are recalled or if the correct answers to the non-recalled items are not given to the test subject, then minimal or no learning will occur.

Logically and often
Logically, trees are an important component of forest research, but the wide variety of other life forms and abiotic components in most forests means that other elements, such as wildlife or soil nutrients, are often the focal point.

Logically and goods
Logically, the total output should be equal to the value of all goods and services produced in a country, but in counting every good and service, one actually ends up counting the same output again and again, at multiple stages of production.

Logically and by
Logically, it was preceded by two previous human-dominated empires.
Logically forums are organized into a finite set of generic topics ( usually with one main topic ) driven and updated by a group known as members, and governed by a group known as moderators.
The translator explains in a footnote in the Foreword, " Logically, of course, Huizinga is correct ; but as English prepositions are not governed by logic I have retained the more euphonious ablative in this sub-title.
Logically, it is part of the definition of window radiation that its destination is known, namely that it is destined to go to space, and likewise, by definition the destination of non-window radiation is known to be entire absorption by the atmosphere.

Logically and .
Logically, it should be moved downtown.
Logically a younger layer cannot slip beneath a layer previously deposited.
Logically, MAC addresses are used in the Media Access Control protocol sub-layer of the OSI reference model.
Logically, the Liberals ' deputy leader, William McMahon, should have succeeded Holt.
Logically, the Prolog engine tries to find a resolution refutation of the negated query.
Logically, many theorems are of the form of an indicative conditional: if A, then B.
Logically it follows, at the same moment in which the line ahead became definitively the order for battle, there was established the distinction between the ships ' of the line ', alone destined for a place therein, and the lighter ships meant for other uses.
Logically enough, this inscribed circle was centered on the railway station.
Logically, scholars assume that the Zhui Shu yields methods of cubic equations.
Logically, students felt that they could complete similar residencies in higher-paying specialties in the same amount of time.
Logically, the number of inputs should be at least as great as the number of outputs.
Logically, there are just as many ways to get a criticism wrong as to get the criticism right.
Logically analytical propositions, for instance, are those in which all the non-logical parts can be replaced without change of truth value.
Logically such DNA would not be vestigial in the sense of being the vestige of a functional structure.

argument and is
That is why, the argument runs, the squares are so fearful of jazz and yet perversely fascinated by it.
`` The argument that is cutting most ice is that Hearst is the only candidate who is fighting the trusts fearlessly and who would use all the powers of government to disrupt them if he were elected.
My argument is that there was no Saxon Shore prior to that time even though the forts had been in existence since the time of Carausius.
What was missing in the Governor's argument, as in so many similar arguments, was a premise which would enable one to make the ethical leap from what might be militarily desirable to what is right.
Sir Robert Watson-Watt's `` rebuttal '' of Sir Charles Snow's Godkin Lectures is marred throughout by too forceful a desire to defend Lindemann and apparently himself from Sir Charles' supposed falsehoods while stating those `` falsehoods '' in an unclear incoherent argument.
The argument against this last approach is comparable to that which rejects stories about hoop snakes, about snakes that break themselves into many pieces and join up again, or even of ghosts that chase people out of graveyards ; ;
For it is clear that the total number of ordinary intersections of C and Af must be even ( otherwise, starting in the interior of C, Af could not finally return to the interior ), and the center of rotation at T is the argument of the function, not a value.
Therefore, for any value of T the number of values of f{t} is equal to the ( finite ) number of tangent points corresponding to the argument T plus an odd number.
The Mathematical Appendix presents the rigorous argument, but is best read after Part 1, in order that the assumptions underlying the equations may be explicit.
There is nonetheless considerable argument against the clause, softened though it be, on the grounds that Federal aid is so necessary to the public schools.
The first argument is thus an ideal experiment in which we use the method of difference.
I come now to a third argument, which again is very simple.
Obviously, a satisfactory answer to the third question is imperative, if the argument is to get under way at all, for if there is any possibility of doubt whether the patient's tactual sensitivity had been impaired by the occipital lesion, any findings whatsoever in regard to the first question become completely ambiguous and fail altogether, of course, as evidence to establish the desired conclusion.
If the argument is accepted as essentially sound up to this point, it remains for us to consider whether the patient's difficulties in orienting himself spatially and in locating objects in space with the sense of touch can be explained by his defective visual condition.
Yet, if the argument is turned awry, there may be found a great deal in Bryan's view, after all.
More often, though, he is so accustomed to submitting to authority on the job without argument that he lives by the same rule at home.
This is the only valid, and extenuating, argument that may be advanced in defense of the reprehensible attitude of the common wine waiter.
`` The trouble, '' explained Loy Henderson, then Deputy Undersecretary for Administration, `` is that when we get into an argument with him about this thing, it always turns out that Rooney knows more about our budget than we do ''.

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