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Presuming and would
Presuming that the blocks of beachrock forming the Bimini Road originally formed at some unknown depth below sea level and have been dropped by erosion by several meters, dating the age of the Bimini Road by its relation to past sea level would be a useless technique that would produce misleading results.
Presuming that the five songs as normally performed would cover requirements for the album, the Stooges were told by Elektra that they needed more material.
Presuming such editing would have taken place, Martti Nissinen comments, " Their mutual love was certainly regarded by the editors as faithful and passionate, but without unseemly allusions to forbidden practices ...

Presuming and have
* Presuming the above is true by default, the individual who has a sex life is then able to explore and deepen his or her existing sexual skills and also, when s / he desires it, is able to have the opportunity to learn new ones and to " grow " as a sexual being.
Presuming that ' creature with a heart ' and ' creature with kidneys ' have the same extension, they will be interchangeable salva veritate.

Presuming and after
Presuming that it was, he added this province to Poland only after the death of Duke Boleslav II the Pious in 999.
Presuming his blessing was given, after an agreement of the ministers, these requests became the orders of the Emperor, enforceable upon the people of Japan.

Presuming and was
Presuming they were from an unbroken male line, the seventh Lord FitWalter was the last agnate of the House of Dukes of Normandy.

Presuming and at
Presuming all birthdays are equally probable, the probability of a given birthday for a person chosen from the entire population at random is 1 / 365 ( ignoring Leap Day, February 29 ).
Presuming that authority is given at some point in the future to re-sign the entirety of 210 as interstate, then I-210 will once again connect to its parent route, but much further east in Redlands.

Presuming and about
Presuming that the architects and commissioners had come to an agreement about the placement of the altar and other problems that centrally planned churches bring up, the absolute perfection of a building could be compromised by the question of where to put the campanile.

Presuming and .
Presuming on the loyalty of the Rhineland, in the spring of 1849, the Prussian government called up a large portion of the army reserve — the Landwehr in Westphalia and the Rhineland.

Timaeus and would
Some would give Timaeus an extra 5 years, bringing the voyage down to 325 BC at earliest.
If one presumes that Pytheas would not have written prior to being 20 years old, he would have been a contemporary and competitor of Timaeus and Dicaearchus.
The elder Critias is unknown to have achieved any personal distinction, and since he died long before Plato published the Timaeus and Critias, it would have made no sense for Plato to choose a statesman to appear in these dialogues, who was practically unknown and thus uninteresting to his contemporaries.

Timaeus and have
Plato's account of Atlantis may have also inspired parodic imitation: writing only a few decades after the Timaeus and Critias, the historian Theopompus of Chios wrote of a land beyond the ocean known as Meropis.
Although Plato does not have an explicit theory of natural law ( he almost never uses the phrase natural law except in Gorgias 484 and Timaeus 83e ), his concept of nature, according to John Wild, contains some of the elements found in many natural law theories.
Assuming that Ictis, Mictis and Corbulo are the same, Diodorus appears to have read Timaeus, who must have read Pytheas, whom Polybius also read.
Although it is not certain, Posidonius may have written a commentary on Plato's Timaeus.
In its original usage the word may also have been a description of meteors, or, as Plato suggested in Timaeus, of the consequences of a close approach between two planetary cosmic bodies, though this is not currently the case.
The ancient historian Timaeus gave Timoleon high accolades in his work ; however, Polybius criticized Timaeus for bias in favor of Timoleon and many modern historians have sided with Polybius.
The work was based upon the writings of Greek historians, such as Theopompus ( whose Philippica may have suggested Trogus ' subject ), Ephorus, Timaeus, Polybius.
Plato is said to have procured a copy of his book, from which, it was later claimed, Plato composed much of his Timaeus.
The description of that land given to Solon by Sonchis, priest at Sais ; its destruction by earthquakes, and submergence, recorded by Plato in his Timaeus, have been told and retold so many times that it is useless to encumber these pages with a repetition of it ".
Plato is among the earliest philosophers to have regarded the universe as an intelligent living being ( see Timaeus ).
He is said to have written also on the De Caelo and the De Interpretatione of Aristotle and on Plato's Timaeus.
This hypothesis requires skepticism about what is usually regarded as the only fairly certain result of Platonic stylometry, Plato's marked tendency to avoid hiatus in the six dialogues widely believed to have been composed in the period to which Denyer assigns First Alcibiades ( Timaeus, Critias, Sophist, Statesman, Philebus, and Laws ).
Some scholars have argued that Plethon viewed Plato as positing ex nihilo creation in his Timaeus.
) At length, in 358 BC, Andromachus, the father of the historian Timaeus, is said to have collected together again the Naxian exiles from all parts of the island, and established them on the hill of Tauromenium, which thus rose to be a Greek city, and became the successor of the ancient Naxos.

Timaeus and written
Atlantis ( in Greek,, " island of Atlas ") is a legendary island first mentioned in Plato's dialogues Timaeus and Critias, written about 360 BC.
Plato's dialogues Timaeus and Critias, written in 360 BC, contain the earliest references to Atlantis.
The philosophical usage and the proper noun derive from Plato's Timaeus, written circa 360 BC, in which the demiurge is presented as the creator of the universe.
The Timaeus, a Socratic dialogue written by Plato, mirrors that identification with Athena, possibly as a result of the identification of both goddesses with war and weaving.
Timaeus (, ) is one of Plato's dialogues, mostly in the form of a long monologue given by the titular character, written circa 360 BC.
In his Timaeus, written in roughly 360 BC, Plato mentions, " the Sun and Moon and five other stars, which are called the planets ".
Critias is the second of a projected trilogy of dialogues, preceded by Timaeus and followed by Hermocrates, though the latter was possibly never written and Critias was left incomplete.
Location hypotheses of Atlantis are various proposed real-world settings for the legendary island of Atlantis, ( Ἀτλαντὶς νῆσος ) described as a lost civilization mentioned in Plato's dialogues Timaeus and Critias, written about 360 B. C.

Timaeus and after
The significant historians in the period after Alexander were Timaeus, Polybius, Diodorus Siculus, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Appian of Alexandria, Arrian, and Plutarch.
Centuries later, the Greek historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus in his Rhomaike Archaiologia ( Antiquitates romanae, " Roman Antiquities "), quoting Antioch of Syracuse states that Italus was an Oenotrian by birth and retells this account that Italia was named after him, alongside the other account that Italia derives its name from a word for calf, an etymology also stated by Timaeus, Varro ( Rerum Rusticarum, 2. 5 ), and Festus.
We know from Plutarch that Xenocrates, if he did not explain the Platonic construction of the world-soul as Crantor after him did, nevertheless drew heavily on the Timaeus ; and further that he was at the head of those who, regarding the universe as unoriginated and imperishable, looked upon the chronological succession in the Platonic theory as a form in which to denote the relations of conceptual succession.
It is probable that it passed under the authority of Agathocles, who drove the historian Timaeus into exile ; and some time after this it was subject to a domestic despot of the name of Tyndarion, who was contemporary with Hicetas of Syracuse and Phintias of Agrigentum.
In Plato's Timaeus, Critias tells the story of Solon's visit to Egypt shortly after Solon was elected archon in 594 B. C.
The significant historians in the period after Alexander were Timaeus, Polybius, Diodorus Siculus, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Appian of Alexandria, Arrian, and Plutarch.
In Plato's Timaeus and Critias ( around 395 B. C., 200 years after the visit by the Greek Legislator Solon ), Sais is the city in which Solon ( Solon visited Egypt in 590 B. C.
* Timaeus ( crater ), a lunar crater named after the philosopher
This figure is commonly known as the demiurge, after the figure in Plato's Timaeus.

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