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Institutes and together
The Burns Monument Centre and Dick Institutes also hold local newspapers from 1834 to date ( some have been indexed ), together with a selection of maps.
The School brings together ten prestigious research Institutes, many of which have long and distinguished histories, to provide a large range of specialist research services, facilities and resources.
The University's cross-disciplinary Research Institutes and Centres bring together scholars in a programme of research projects, conferences / seminars, and knowledge exchange with industry and others:
Ten Lithuanian research institutes formed this association together with the university: the Institutes for Lithuanian History, Lithuanian Language, Lithuanian Literature and Folklore, Lithuanian Philosophy and Sociology, biochemistry, Mathematics and Informatics, Semiconductor Physics, Psychophysiology and Rehabilitation, Architecture and Civil Engineering, and Lithuanian Forestry.
The site brings together information from the United States National Library of Medicine, the National Institutes of Health ( NIH ), other U. S. government agencies, and health-related organizations.
The HfG Research Institute, based on the model of Anglo-Saxon Institutes for Advanced Studies, gathers outstanding scientists and graduate researchers together under one roof where they can concentrate on independent research project and enter into exchange between the disciplinary boundaries.
One of these, Grant Palmer, a former director of LDS Institutes of Religion who was disfellowshipped by the LDS Church in 2004 after writing An Insider's View of Mormon Origins, argued that moderns " tend to read into Witnesses ' testimonies a rationalist perspective rather than a nineteenth-century magical mindset .... They shared a common world view, and this is what drew them together in 1829.

Institutes and with
Lord Chief Justice Edward Coke, a 17th-century English jurist and Member of Parliament, wrote several legal texts that formed the basis for the modern common law, with lawyers in both England and America learning their law from his Institutes and Reports until the end of the 18th century.
In 1990, alternative health vendor Nature's Way signed an FTC consent agreement not to misrepresent in advertising any self-diagnostic test concerning yeast conditions or to make any unsubstantiated representation concerning any food or supplement's ability to control yeast conditions, with a fine of $ 30, 000 payable to the National Institutes of Health for research in genuine candidiasis.
Calvin was particularly outraged when Servetus sent him a copy of the Institutes of the Christian Religion heavily annotated with arguments pointing to errors in the book.
He taught in the Society's summer Linguistic Institute in 1938-1941, with the 1938-1940 Institutes being held in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the 1941 Institute in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Pregnancy begins with implantation according to medical authorities such as the US FDA, the National Institutes of Health < sup > 79 </ sup > and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists ( ACOG ).< sup > 80 </ sup > Ulipristal acetate ( UPA ).
In the Institutes, Quintilian organizes rhetorical study through the stages of education that an aspiring orator would undergo, beginning with the selection of a nurse.
The Code and the Institutes of Justinian were known in Western Europe, and along with the earlier code of Theodosius II, served as models for a few of the Germanic law codes ; however, the Digest portion was largely ignored for several centuries until around 1070, when a manuscript of the Digest was rediscovered in Italy.
Set up by Pope John Paul II by a motu proprio of 15 January 1993, it is presided over by the Cardinal Secretary of State and includes also the Secretary and the Undersecretary for Relations with States, and the Secretaries of the Congregations for the Eastern Churches, for the Clergy, and for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, and of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity.
In line with the recommendations of the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research ( NIDCR ) of the National Institutes of Health ( NIH ), treatments for TMJD should not permanently alter the jaw or teeth, but need to be reversible.
Over the years, several Institutes of UNU were created to help with the research initiatives of the United Nations.
UCSF is also affiliated with the San Francisco VA Hospital and the J. David Gladstone Institutes, a private biomedical research entity that has recently moved to a new building adjacent to UCSF's Mission Bay campus.
Wim Wenders: Photos, in conjunction with the publication, Wim Wenders: Photos, Munich Goethe Institute ( 1996 ), Goethe Institutes worldwide
* Publication of Sir Edward Coke's Institutes of the Lawes of England begins with A Commentary upon Littleton.
In 1997, Congress asked the Director of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development ( NICHD ) at the National Institutes of Health, in consultation with the Secretary of Education, to convene a national panel to assess the effectiveness of different approaches used to teach children to read.
Beginning in the 1990s, a focus of research has been the effects of Transcendental Meditation on cardiovascular disease, with over $ 20 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health.
The University has over 150 National Institutes of Health funded inventions, with many of them licensed to private companies.
As a designated space grant college, member of the Southeastern Universities Research Association, member of the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities, and Carnegie Research University with high research activity ( RU / H ), Louisiana Tech conducts research with ongoing projects funded by agencies such as NASA, the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Defense.
Nonetheless, the state-owned media and academics employed by organizations such as universities ' Institutes of Taiwan Studies or the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences ( CASS ) periodically release study results, academic journal articles, or editorials denouncing the movement as " the cultural arm of Taiwanese independence movement " ( Chinese: 文化台獨 ) with the government's tacit approval, showing the PRC government's opposition stance towards Taiwanization in truth.
The service mark would have allowed Mollison and his two Permaculture Institutes ( one in the US and one in Australia ) to set enforceable guidelines as to how permaculture could be taught and who could teach it, particularly with relation to the PDC.
Texas A & M's triple designation as a Land -, Sea -, and Space-Grant institution reflects the broad scope of the research endeavors it brings to the city, with ongoing projects funded by agencies such as NASA, the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the Office of Naval Research.
# a full length representing Lilburne ' pleading at the bar with Coke's ' Institutes ' in his hand ; prefixed to ' The Trial of Lieut .- col. John Lilburne, by Theodorus Varax ,' 1649.
Hale also reorganised the first of Coke's Institutes, which dealt with Thomas de Littleton's Treatise on Tenures ; Hale's edition was the most commonly used, and the first to extract Coke's broader philosophical points.

Institutes and Calvin's
The first edition of Christianae religionis institutio ( Institutes of the Christian Religion – John Calvin's great exposition of Calvinist doctrine ) was published at Basel in March 1536.
From 1550 to 1560, there were in England 77 editions of Bullinger's Latin " Decades " and 137 editions of their vernacular translation " House Book ", a treatise in pastoral theology ( in comparison, Calvin's Institutes had two editions in England during the same time ).
The Institutes of the Christian Religion ( Institutio Christianae religionis ) is John Calvin's seminal work on Protestant systematic theology.
Most often, references to the Institutes are to Calvin's final Latin edition of 1559, which was expanded and revised from earlier editions.
The French translations of Calvin's Institutes helped to shape the French language for generations, not unlike the influence of the King James Version for the English language.
A history of the Latin, French, Greek, Canadian, British, German, African, and English versions of Calvin's Institutes was done by B.
B. Warfield, " On the Literary History of Calvin's Institutes ," published in the seventh American edition of the John Allen translation ( Philadelphia, 1936 ).
In English, this work is known as The Institutes of the Christian Religion or Calvin's Institutes.
* Lectures on Calvin's Institutes, emphasizing Calvin's method, material arrangement, and biblical-theological content, by David Calhoun of Covenant Theological Seminary
The Lutheran scholastic tradition of a thematic, ordered exposition of Christian theology emerged in the 16th century, with Philipp Melanchthon's Loci Communes, and was countered by a Calvinist scholasticism, exemplified by John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion.
Norton also translated Calvin's Institutes ( 1561 ) and Alexander Nowell's Catechism ( 1570 ).
The following materials were listed in the inventory of Bronck's library: one Bible, folio ; Calvin's Institutes, folio ; Bullingeri, Schultetus Dominicalia, ( Medical ); Moleneri Praxis, ( Moral and Practical Discourses ), quarto ; one German Bible, quarto ; Mirror of the Sea ( Seespiegel ), folio ; one Luther's Psalter ; Sledani, ( History of the Reformation ), folio ; Danish chronicle, quarto ; Danish law book, quarto ; Luther's Complete Catechism ; The Praise of Christ, quarto ; Petri Apiani ; Danish child's book ; a book called Forty Pictures of Death, by Symon Golaert ; Biblical stories ; Danish calendar ; Survey ( or View ) of the Great Navigation ; a parcel of eighteen Dutch and Danish pamphlets by divers authors ; seventeen books in manuscript, which are old ; eleven pictures, large and small.
It is John Calvin's understanding of the Bible, as spelled out in his Institutes of the Christian Religion, that forms the doctrinal basis of the various reformed churches.
Moses Amyraut, originally a lawyer, but converted to the study of theology by the reading of Calvin's ' Institutes ', an able divine and voluminous writer, developed the doctrine of hypothetical or conditional universalism, for which his teacher, John Cameron ( 1580 – 1625 ), a Scot, and for two years Headmaster of Saumur Academy, had prepared the way.
Ames ' struggles are illustrated by numerous quotations from the Bible, from theologians ( especially Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion ) and from philosophers, especially the atheist Feuerbach, whom Ames greatly respects.

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