Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Reintroduction" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

notion and viable
The Aristotelian notion of catharsis, the purging of emotion, is a persistent and viable one.
The threadbare notion that belief, unlike behaviour, is not subject to objective analysis, has placed intuitive metaphysics squarely against the sociology of knowledge, since it is precisely the job of the sociology of knowledge to treat beliefs as social facts no less viable than social behaviour.
Sir Milton's government was based on the rule of law and the notion of separation of powers, with multiparty political institutions and fairly viable representative structures.

notion and conservation
The spreads of tropical forest between the savannas could be mainly anthropogenic — a notion with dramatic implications worldwide for agriculture and conservation.

notion and strategy
The notion that the Third Reich developed a blitzkrieg strategy to achieve its total aims has been widely attacked.
C. R. Sridhar, in his article in the Economic and Political Weekly, also challenges the broken windows policing and the notion introduced in the annotated by Kelling and Bratton — that aggressive policing, such as the “ zero tolerance ” police strategy adopted by William Bratton, the appointed commissioner of the New York Police Department — is the sole cause of the decrease of crime rates in New York City.
At a meeting of the 19-member Rio group in May 2003, Toledo proposed developing a joint strategy to deal with drug trafficking, but pressure from Washington, which preferred bilateral efforts, helped kill the notion.
Despite strong evidence for the effectiveness of the jigsaw classroom, the strategy was not widely used ( arguably because of strong attitudes existing outside of the schools, which still resisted the notion that racial and ethnic minority groups are equal to Whites and, similarly, should be integrated into schools ).
It also stated that the notion of an " adults-only policy " would be a dubious, ineffective strategy which would be difficult to enforce.
This notion of strategy has been captured under the rubric of dynamic strategy, popularized by Carpenter and Sanders.
Reynaud abandoned any notion of a " long war strategy " based on attrition.
The notion contrasts with that expressed of her before the hoax was revealed and may indicate an overall strategy to disempower Toft completely.
This research strategy ultimately provided compelling evidence that it is the ti ' yˆcir caste that has disseminated the notion of the five-vowel system.
Sensible Software to create another strategy game mouse control and the notion of sending troops on missions, but with more action than had been used in Mega Lo Mania.
Faced with this apparent misnaming of a basic survival strategy, Aron and colleagues developed the notion of high sensitivity, expanding on Jung's suggestion of the trait of innate sensitiveness, which he distinguished from his own notion of introversion.
Andy Ruddock has written that Gauntlett's " ironic polemic " includes " much to value ", and acknowledges that the argument " is more strategy than creed ", but argues that audiences still exist, and experience mass media specifically as audience, and so it would be premature to dispose of the notion of ' audience ' altogether.
One of the principal uses of the notion of a subgame is in the solution concept subgame perfection, which stipulates that an equilibrium strategy profile be a Nash equilibrium in every subgame.
The last strategy that is the notion of using a designated Safe Haven on the floor.
* Strategy-oriented: allow building models representing multi-approach processes and plan different possible ways to elaborate the product based on the notion of intention and strategy.

notion and became
Yet, after Rousseau had given the social contract a new twist with his notion of the General Will, the same philosophy, it may be said, became the idea source of the French Revolution also.
During the early settlement of Australia by Europeans, the notion that the bunyip was an actual unknown animal that awaited discovery became common.
It was this notion of compactness that became the dominant one, because it was not only a stronger property, but it could be formulated in a more general setting with a minimum of additional technical machinery, as it relied only on the structure of the open sets in a space.
For example, it has been suggested that, in the early 20th century Shanghai, “ Western food, and in particular identifiably nourishing items like milk, became a symbol of a neo-traditional Chinese notion of family .”
Over the course of the Middle and New Kingdoms, the notion that the akh could also travel in the world of the living, and to some degree magically affect events there, became increasingly prevalent.
According to Arendt, the concept of freedom became associated with the Christian notion of freedom of the will, or inner freedom, around the 5th century C. E.
After the Crusades, the military orders became idealized and romanticized, resulting in the late medieval notion of chivalry, as reflected in the Arthurian romances of the time.
Halliday's notion of language functions, or " metafunctions ", became part of his general linguistic theory.
The notion later became simply known as the recapitulation theory.
The psychoses thus became the modern equivalent of the old notion of madness, and hence there was much debate on whether there was only one ( unitary ) or many forms of the new disease.
This theory became the dominant paradigm in American linguistics from the 1960s through the 1980s and the notion of linguistic relativity fell out of favor and became even the object of ridicule.
And — as in Magritte's case ( where there is no obvious recourse to either automatic techniques or collage )— the very notion of convulsive joining became a tool for revelation in and of itself.
This became the mainstream notion of Japanese religion.
Because Rousseau was the preferred philosopher of the radical Jacobins of the French Revolution, he, above all, became tarred with the accusation of promoting the notion of the " noble savage ", especially during the polemics about Imperialism and scientific racism in the last half of the 19th century.
More profoundly, Shakespeare became a source, by way of its dramatic truth, for Berlioz ' fundamental notion of expressive truth ; this was how he could call Romeo and Juliet " the supreme drama of my life.
This method, later known as Hartley's law, became an important precursor for Shannon's more sophisticated notion of channel capacity.
Those two pictures illustrate the notion that agriculture, once extremely profitable to the nobles ( szlachta ) in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, became much less profitable from the second half of seventeenth century onwards
The notion of barefoot hordes pushing heavily-loaded bicycles, driving oxcarts, or acting as human pack animals, moving hundreds of tons of supplies in this manner was quickly supplanted by trucks ( especially Soviet, Chinese, or Eastern Bloc models ), which quickly became the main method of supply transportation.
Indeed, the notion of a left-handed Billy became so entrenched that, in 1958, a film biography of " the Kid " ( starring Paul Newman ) was titled The Left Handed Gun.
Smithson became particularly interested in the notion of deformities within the spectrum of anti-aesthetic dynamic relationships which he saw present in the Picturesque landscape.
It thus became clear that the notion of mathematical truth can not be completely determined and reduced to a purely formal system as envisaged in Hilbert's program.
This peace didn't last very long and it soon became apparent that the bà role had become outdated ; the four major states had each acquired their own spheres of control and the notion of protecting Zhou territory had become less cogent as the control over ( and the resulting cultural assimilation of ) non-Zhou peoples, as well as Chu's control of some Zhou areas, further blurred an already vague distinction between Zhou and non-Zhou.
To at least one teenager in a small town ( though I ’ m sure we were a multitude ), Jean Arthur suggested strongly that the ideal woman could be – ought to be – judged by her spirit as well as her beauty … The notion of the woman as a friend and confidante, as well as someone you courted and were nuts about, someone whose true beauty was internal rather than external, became a full-blown possibility as we watched Jean Arthur.
Fortuna, the Roman goddess of fate or luck, was popular as an allegory in medieval times, and even though it was not strictly reconcilable with Christian theology, it became popular in learned circles of the High Middle Ages to portray her as a servant of God in distributing success or failure in a characteristically " fickle " or unpredictable way, thus introducing the notion of chance.

2.614 seconds.