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Some Related Sentences

ideal and goal
Students are approximately equally divided between those who regard vocational preparation as the primary goal of an ideal education and those who chose a general liberal education.
Other sources indicate that Donald A. Wollheim was pushing for a more left-wing direction with a goal of leading fandom toward a political ideal, all of which Moskowitz resisted.
Osiris is connected with life-giving power, righteous kingship, and the rule of maat, the ideal natural order whose maintenance was a fundamental goal in ancient Egyptian culture.
The SA also posed a threat to the Nazi leadership and to Hitler's goal of co-opting the Reichswehr to his ends, as Röhm's ideal was to fold the " antiquated " German army into a new " people's army ", the SA.
* Although Aristotle says that catharsis ( purgation of emotion ) should be the goal of tragedy, this is only an ideal.
We're not going to stop everything overnight, so while we work for the ideal we certainly wish to provide the carrot-and-stick incentives to move along toward that goal .< p > " Animals are going to die by the millions today in all sorts of ugly ways for all sorts of ridiculous, insupportable reasons.
With the goal of reforming the government to be more efficient and true to the Communist ideal, Liu himself chaired the enlarged Politburo meeting that officially began the Cultural Revolution.
Instead, the Übermensch " seems to be the ideal aim of spiritual development more than a biological goal .".
McKerrow had articulated textual criticism's goal in terms of " our ideal of an author's fair copy of his work in its final state ".
The Greeks adopted the " love of humanity " as an educational ideal, whose goal was excellence ( arete )— the fullest self-development, of body, mind and spirit, which is the essence of liberal education.
Completely stopping the use of alcohol is the ideal goal of treatment.
An ideal goal should present a situation where the time between the initiation of behavior and the end state is close.
The first phase will gather the people deeply interested in the primary goal and ideal of the movement.
Its goal is to bring together everything associated with having an " ideal home ", such as the latest inventions for the modern house, and to showcase the latest housing designs.
An ideal is a principle or value that one actively pursues as a goal.
The goal of research and development is to develop the ideal restorative material.
The project's goal is to create an ideal computer architecture and network, to provide for all of society's needs.
ISSN 0743-7021 Surveys the state of the history profession in 2003 and points out that numerous career options exist for persons with a Ph. D. in history, although the traditional ideal of a university-level appointment for new Ph. D. s remains the primary goal of doctoral programs.
The same can be said of white Latin Americans who live in warm climates who primarily descend from these groups: interestingly, despite being thought of as white, their skin complexions are viewed as the ideal skin tone goal of tanning for white people who wish to get a tan.
A regulative ideal can be expressed in the form of a description, but what it describes is an ideal state of affairs, a condition of being that constitutes its aim, end, goal, intention, or objective.
Because the initial goal for the Hall's opening of selecting 10 players from the 20th century had now been met, it was further decided to delay the next election until 1942, even though observers widely believed that electing three players per year ( 12 had been elected in four regular BBWAA elections ) had turned out to be an ideal rate.
With the improved knowledge, we may choose to refine or alter the goal ( ideal state ).
The goal was to promote the Zionist ideal through education, public health initiatives, and the training of nurses in what was then the Palestine region of the Ottoman Empire.

ideal and modern
In modern mathematical language, the ideal generated by a and b is the ideal generated by g alone ( an ideal generated by a single element is called a principal ideal, and all ideals of the integers are principal ideals ).
In 1843 Kummer introduced the concept of ideal number, which was developed further by Dedekind ( 1876 ) into the modern theory of ideals, special subsets of rings.
If one takes the median of 17 of these 22 compositions for rockets ( 75 % nitrates, 9. 06 % sulfur, and 15. 94 % carbon ), it is nearly identical to the modern reported ideal gunpowder recipe of 75 % potassium nitrate, 10 % sulfur, and 15 % carbon.
A few modern scholars have argued that Herodotus exaggerated the extent of his travels and invented his sources yet his reputation continues largely intact: " The Father of History is also the father of comparative anthropology ", " the father of ethnography ", and he is " more modern than any other ancient historian in his approach to the ideal of total history ".
Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d ' Arthur (" The Death of Arthur "), written in 1485, was important in defining the ideal of chivalry which is essential to the modern concept of the knight as an elite warrior sworn to uphold the values of faith, loyalty, courage, and honour.
This five kingdom scheme is still far from the phylogenetic ideal and has largely been supplanted in modern taxonomic work by a division into three domains: Bacteria and Archaea, which contain the prokaryotes, and Eukaryota, comprising the remaining forms.
In modern times, Zion is still an ideal, though Mormons gather together in their individual congregations rather than a central geographic location.
In other words, we are urged to believe that Plato's theory of ideas is an abstraction, divorced from the so-called external world, of modern European philosophy, despite the fact Plato taught that ideas are ultimately real, and different from non-ideal things -- indeed, he argued for a distinction between the ideal and non-ideal realm.
However, the term " political science " was not always distinguished from political philosophy, and the modern discipline has a clear set of antecedents including also moral philosophy, political economy, political theology, history, and other fields concerned with normative determinations of what ought to be and with deducing the characteristics and functions of the ideal state.
" In modern times a minority of Roman Catholic theologians have argued that polygyny, though not ideal, can be a legitimate form of Christian marriage in certain regions, in particular Africa.
In contrast, the modern Québécois identity is secular and based on a social democratic ideal of an active Quebec government promoting the French language and French-speaking culture in the arts, education, and business within the Province of Quebec.
The boat needed to be stable and fast with the large crew hence making it ideal for its modern racing usage.
Plato's dialogue on the ideal state, The Republic, is misnamed by the standards of modern political theory.
Cicero's description of the ideal state, in De re publica, does not equate to a modern day " republic "; it is more like enlightened absolutism.
Beyond simply a non-monarchy, early modern thinkers conceived of an ideal republic, in which mixed government was an important element, and the notion that virtue and the common good were central to good government.
Many modern theorists have stated that this ideal cannot be achieved independently of some analysis of additional factors.
Combined with modern waterproof battery packs, electric outboards are also ideal for yacht tenders and other inshore pleasure boats.
The growth of this model is believed to have contributed to the enactment of the first modern adoption law in 1851 by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, unique in that it codified the ideal of the " best interests of the child.
Huygens was the first to derive the formula for the period of an ideal mathematical pendulum ( with massless rod or cord and length much longer than it's swing ), in modern notation:
The ideal locations for modern observatories are sites that have dark skies, a large percentage of clear nights per year, dry air, and are at high elevations.
Most sources in condemning the practice seem to be referring to a wide, slow, perceptible oscillation in pitch, usually associated with intense emotion, whereas the ideal for modern vibrato, and possibly in earlier times as well, was to imitate the natural timbre of the adult singing voice, from which a measure of vibrato ( it has since been shown ) is rarely absent.

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