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criterion and was
In establishing criterion measurements, it was therefore thought best to broaden the scope beyond the reading act itself.
Although the film had originally been released in 1952, due to Chaplin's political difficulties at the time, it did not play for one week in Los Angeles, and thus did not meet the criterion for nomination until it was re-released in 1972.
This criterion was invoked in the 2007 and 2011 editions with the decision to drop the entries for French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte, and Reunion.
A major change from previous versions was the inclusion of a clinical significance criterion to almost half of all the categories, which required symptoms cause " clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning ".
Aeschylus gained thirteen victories as a dramatist, Sophocles at least twenty, Euripides only four in his lifetime, and this has often been taken as an indication of the latter's unpopularity with his contemporaries, and yet a first place might not have been the main criterion for success in those times ( the system of selecting judges appears to have been flawed ) and merely being chosen to compete was in itself a mark of distinction.
Courtois was influenced by the work of Simon and Albert Ando on hierarchical nearly-decomposable systems in economic modelling as a criterion for computer systems design, and in this book he presents the mathematical theory of these nearly-decomposable systems in more detail than Simon and Ando do in their original papers.
During the conflict between Arabs and Jews in Palestine before the war, the criterion of " Purity of arms " was used to distinguish between the respective attitudes of the Irgun and Haganah towards Arabs, with the latter priding itself on its adherence to principle.
France could not meet Rousseau's criterion of an ideal state because it was too big.
The verifiability criterion of meaning did not seem verifiable ; but neither was it simply a logical tautology, since it had implications for the practice of science and the empirical truth of other statements.
The verifiability criterion was seen as being too strong.
In it he argued that the positivists ' criterion of verifiability was too strong a criterion for science, and should be replaced by a criterion of falsifiability.
Popper thought that falsifiability was a better criterion because it did not invite the philosophical problems inherent in verifying an inductive inference, and it allowed statements from the physical sciences which seemed scientific but which did not satisfy the verification criterion.
By Euler's criterion, which had been discovered earlier and was known to Legendre, these two definitions are equivalent.
Secondly, the most important criterion for promotion in this hierarchy was approval from one's supervisors, who evaluated their subordinates on the basis of political criteria and their ability to contribute to the fulfillment of the economic plan.
McVeigh's criterion for potential attack sites was that the target should house at least two of three federal law-enforcement agencies: the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives ( ATF ), the Federal Bureau of Investigation ( FBI ), or the Drug Enforcement Administration ( DEA ).
The person whose pile contained the most ostraka would be banished, provided that an additional criterion of a quorum was met, about which there are two principal sources:
T. J. Moore notes that “ seating in the temporary theaters where Plautus ’ plays were first performed was often insufficient for all those who wished to see the play, that the primary criterion for determining who was to stand and who could sit was social status ”.
The month of Ramadan is that in which was revealed the Quran ; a guidance for mankind, and clear proofs of the guidance, and the criterion ( of right and wrong ).
Jenkins was principal sponsor, in 1959, of the bill which became the liberalising Obscene Publications Act, responsible for establishing the " liable to deprave and corrupt " criterion as a basis for a prosecution of suspect material and for specifying literary merit as a possible defence.

criterion and first
Life is further characterized, in antithesis to Piepsam, as animal: the image of a dog, which appears at several places, is first given as the criterion of amiable, irrelevant interest aroused by life considered simply as a spectacle: a dog in a wagon is `` admirable '', `` a pleasure to contemplate '' ; ;
He felt certain for the first time in his teaching experience that the men in the class understood that orgasm, as a criterion, is not nearly so essential for a satisfying female sexual experience as most males might think.
According to many of Descartes ' specialists, including Étienne Gilson, the goal of Descartes in establishing this first truth is to demonstrate the capacity of his criterion — the immediate clarity and distinctiveness of self-evident propositions — to establish true and justified propositions despite having adopted a method of generalized doubt.
These first seven Carmichael numbers, from 561 to 8911, were all found by the Czech mathematician Václav Šimerka in 1885 ( thus preceding not just Carmichael but also Korselt, although Šimerka did not find anything like Korselt's criterion ).
The Rayleigh criterion specifies that two point sources can be considered to be resolvable if the separation of the two images is at least the radius of the Airy disk, i. e. if the first minimum of one coincides with the maximum of the other.
The first criterion means that a mineral has to form by a natural process, which excludes anthropogenic compounds.
In all cases, the first condition can be replaced by the following well-known criterion that ensures a nonempty subset of a group is a subgroup:
The resolvable spatial size of objects viewed through a microscope is limited according to the Rayleigh criterion, the radius to the first null of the Airy disk, to a size proportional to the wavelength of the light used, and depending on the numerical aperture:
The senses are the first criterion of truth, since they create the first impressions and testify the existence of the external world.
The first criterion is the probability of packet losses or delays in already accepted calls.
Furthermore, " The annalists of the first century BC are thus seen principally as entertainers ...." Cornell, however, cites no criterion for distinguishing what narratives of annalists or historians are to be considered mere entertainment.
The criterion first appeared in a 1748 paper by Euler.
# Imperfect procedural justice shares the first characteristic of perfect procedural justice -- there is an independent criterion for a fair outcome -- but no method that guarantees that the fair outcome will be achieved.
The first criterion of a good argument is that the premises must have bearing on the truth or falsity of the claim in question.
In software engineering, double-checked locking ( also known as " double-checked locking optimization ") is a software design pattern used to reduce the overhead of acquiring a lock by first testing the locking criterion ( the " lock hint ") without actually acquiring the lock.
The answer is in substance that Kant went wrong in putting necessity first as the criterion of those laws.
When the original rating system evolved during the first part of the 1600's, first rates were ships with a complement of at least 300 men ( it was not until after 1660 that the number of carriage-mounted guns became the deciding criterion ).
1700's it became accepted that 100 guns was the standard criterion for a first rate in wartime ( while 90 guns, later 98 guns, became the standard wartime ordnance for a second rate ).
If the test data are collected first in order to predict criterion data collected at a later point in time, then this is referred to as predictive validity evidence.
Huber was the first ( 1904, Lwów ) who proposed the criterion of shear energy ( see S. P. Timoshenko, p.

criterion and proposed
The Turing test is commonly cited in discussions of artificial intelligence as a proposed criterion for machine consciousness ; it has provoked a great deal of philosophical debate.
In 1950, Alan Turing published his famous article " Computing Machinery and Intelligence " which proposed what is now called the Turing test as a criterion of intelligence.
Some proposed changes, however, have included the completion of an alcohol education course rather than the attainment of 21 years of age as the criterion for legal alcohol possession.
In 1950, Alan Turing published his famous article " Computing Machinery and Intelligence ", which proposed what is now called the Turing test as a criterion of intelligence.
The second merit review criterion, that of the broader societal impacts of the proposed research, has been met with opposition from the scientific and policy communities since its inception in 1997.
In the seminal " On the criterion ..." paper, Pearson proposed testing the validity of hypothesized values by evaluating the chi distance between the hypothesized and the empirically observed values via the p-value, which was proposed in the same paper.
But formal definitions like these were proposed because there was, in reality, no fixed criterion distinguishing those designated Esquire: it was essentially a matter of impression as to whether a person qualified for this status.
# The proposed criteria for Sexual Interest / Arousal Disorder be adopted for men with the modification that absence or reduced genital and / or non-genital physical changes not be included as criterion
A more aggressive criterion, Breidbart Index Version 2, has been proposed.
Relating to pathogenic care for both proposed disorders, a new criterion is rearing in atypical environments such as institutions with high child / caregiver ratios that cut down on opportunities to form attachments with a caregiver.
Falsifiability is the demarcation criterion proposed by Karl Popper as opposed to verificationism: " statements or systems of statements, in order to be ranked as scientific, must be capable of conflicting with possible, or conceivable observations ".
The Law Commission for England and Wales has proposed a consultation paper ( No. 190 ) to adopt a criterion like the Daubert Standard to help reform the law of evidence in regards to the admissibility of scientific evidence.
This communication is concerned with the proposed classification of marihuana ... It is presently classed in schedule I ( C ) along with its active constituents, the tetrahydrocannibinols and other psychotropic drugs ... Some question has been raised whether the use of the plant itself produces " severe psychological or physical dependence " as required by a schedule I or even schedule II criterion.
( 1996 ) proposed the EpiSLI criterion, based on five composite scores representing performance in three domains of language ( vocabulary, grammar, and narration ) and two modalities ( comprehension and production ).
Therefore, the duration criterion of symptoms lasting at least 6 months and the severity criterion of symptoms during 75 % or more of sexual encounters have been proposed.
He accused Popper of a positivist attitude in his early works and proposed that Popper's demarcation criterion was not as important as Popper thought.
The first and foremost criterion is that the proposed total quantity is in line with a Member State's Kyoto target.

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