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sense and suspended
The final task of deconstruction is not to surpass all oppositions ; because it is assumed that they are structurally necessary to produce sense, they cannot be suspended once and for all.
This was important because Pan, in addition to his other powers, had the capacity to instill the most extreme sort of fear, an irrational, blind fear that paralysed the mind and suspended all sense of judgment – panic.
He had suspended the ethical and failed to follow the universal .< ref >" Universal, Universality: Hegel's use incorporates the familiar sense of universal as non-particular, without specific location in time and space ; but he differs from platonists in denying that universals are timeless self-subsistents, and from nominalists in denying that universals are mere abstractions.
" In his remarks at the terminal's February 7, 2005, dedication, Mayor Michael Bloomberg stated that " You can walk into this spectacular terminal day or night and feel like you're part of the city ... ( the terminal ) is a continuation of what you feel on the ferry ... in a sense you are suspended over the water.
Occasionally the term suspended cymbal is still used in the original sense of one of a pair of orchestral cymbals hung by its strap, and this is the usage in older scores and may be the wish of modern conductors in playing them.
In a drum kit, nearly all the cymbals used are suspended cymbals in the broadest sense, the main exceptions being pairs of hi-hat cymbals.
Being suspended, especially in a large open space, also creates a sense of objectification, submissiveness and erotic helplessness for the subject, which can be erotically stimulating for them and for those observing them.
There is a sense of time, as Petronilla bows before Christ Jesus, however the animation is more suspended, calm, less fleeting.
She was fascinated with the subject and " its sense of permantently suspended enigma " and calls it a " haunted picture ", inhabited by the actual presence of the artist ( Morris, Jan, Pleasures of a Tangled Life, Arrow, 1990, p. 170 ).

sense and action
Of course, grave guiltiness may be imputed to the military action of any nation, or to the action of any leader or leaders, which for any supposed good `` permits '', in this sense, the termination of the human race by human action.
This poem doesn't begin with a verb but with an adverb ( Δευτέ ) but still communicates a sense of action.
Instead, the phrase appears to have originated in the early 19th century United States ( particularly in the sense " pull oneself over a fence by one's bootstraps "), to mean an absurdly impossible action, an adynaton.
The latter two don't make sense, so " looks " in this case is being used as an action verb.
This " sense of shame " is an internalisation of duty, where the punishment precedes the evil action, instead of following it in the form of laws as in Legalism.
However, this innovative jurisprudence did not help the victims of the Bhopal Gas Tragedy who were unable to fully prosecute a class action litigation ( as understood in the American sense ) against Union Carbide due to procedural rules that would make such litigation impossible to conclude and unwieldy to carry out.
It is in these areas that ethical action in Hoy's sense will apply.
And the second course of action led to my going to Pakistan a month or so after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, for the purpose of coordinating with the Pakistanis a joint response, the purpose of which would be to make the Soviets bleed for as much and as long as is possible ; and we engaged in that effort in a collaborative sense with the Saudis, the Egyptians, the British, the Chinese, and we started providing weapons to the Mujaheddin, from various sources again – for example, some Soviet arms from the Egyptians and the Chinese.
According to Richard Jeffrey, " Before the middle of the seventeenth century, the term ' probable ' ( Latin probabilis ) meant approvable, and was applied in that sense, univocally, to opinion and to action.
Because the list of types of claims eligible for consideration was capped early during the development of the English legal system, claims that might have been acceptable to the courts ' evolving sense of justice often did not match up perfectly with any of the established forms of action.
The Ratio was indeed imbued with a sense of the divine, of the incarnate logos, that is of rhetoric as an eloquent and humane means to reach further devotion and further action in the Christian city, which was absent from Ramist formalism.
Even at this early stage, Rodríguez's trademark style began to emerge: quick cuts, intense zooms, and fast camera movements deployed with a sense of humor that offsets the action.
Cosmic themes, metaphysics, sense of wonder, exotic settings, technobabble, so-called Big Dumb Objects, psychedelic imagery, and " two fisted action " have been mostly phased out in favor of human content, contemporary themes, and strong focus on character relationships.
Weber argues for making sense of religious action on its own terms.
::' In comparing the moral qualitys of actions, in order to regulate our election among various actions proposed, or to find which of them has the greatest moral excellency, we are led by our moral sense of virtue to judge thus ; that in equal degrees of happiness, expected to proceed from the action, the virtue is in proportion to the number of persons to whom the happiness shall extend ( and here the dignity, or moral importance of persons, may compensate numbers ); and in equal numbers, the virtue is as the quantity of the happiness, or natural good ; or that the virtue is in a compound ratio of the quantity of good, and number of enjoyers.
Silver Ravenwolf, for instance, believes that although acting to restrain a wrong-doer is in a sense harming them, failure to act against them could allow greater harm ; this must be carefully weighed up, and preferably a course of action can be found that minimises harm to all parties.
In this sense, " political prisoner " can be used to describe any politically active prisoner who is held in custody for a violent action which supporters deem ethically justified.
*" Few lawyers today can rival Boies ' string of major triumphs ... Boies ' strengths include an encyclopedic mastery of the facts of a case and a chess player's sense of predicting a course of action.
In a related use of this sense of a message, in object-oriented programming languages such as Smalltalk or Java, a message is sent to an object, specifying a request for action.
This view is contrasted by moral universalism, which argues that, even though people disagree, and some may even be unpersuadable ( e. g. someone who is closed-minded ), there is still a meaningful sense in which an action may be more ' moral ' than another ; that is, they believe there are objective standards of evaluation that seem worth calling ' moral facts ' - regardless of whether they are universally accepted.
And the second course of action led to my going to Pakistan a month or so after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, for the purpose of coordinating with the Pakistanis a joint response, the purpose of which would be to make the Soviets bleed for as much and as long as is possible ; and we engaged in that effort in a collaborative sense with the Saudis, the Egyptians, the British, the Chinese, and we started providing weapons to the Mujaheddin, from various sources again – for example, some Soviet arms from the Egyptians and the Chinese.
Edna appears to share a sense of complicity with Goole, inviting him closer to the house and smiling occasionally when the secrets of the family are revealed, but she makes no comment on the action.
" It is derived from the Greek words στίγμα stigma " mark, sign " and ἔργον ergon " work, action ", and captures the notion that an agent ’ s actions leave signs in the environment, signs that it and other agents sense and that determine and incite their subsequent actions.

sense and before
To you, for instance, the word innocence, in this connotation, probably retained its Biblical, or should I say technical sense, and therefore I suppose I must make myself quite clear by saying that I lost -- or rather handed over -- what you would have considered to be my innocence two weeks before I was legally entitled, and in fact by oath required, to hand it over along with what other goods and bads I had.
The uniform fiscal year ensures conformance with another common sense rule, that of having cash in the bank before checks are drawn.
but on the theory before us such a belief would not make sense.
For he seemed to sense at once that before him was no South Sea, but the solid bulk of the North American continent.
Although Amasis thus appears first as champion of the disparaged native, he had the good sense to cultivate the friendship of the Greek world, and brought Egypt into closer touch with it than ever before.
The use of the definite article before the word " Christ " and its gradual development into a proper name show the Christians identified the bearer with the promised Messiah of the Jews who fulfilled all the Messianic predictions in a fuller and a higher sense than had been given them by the Rabbis.
" makes no sense ; the concept of " before " becomes meaningless when considering a situation without time.
The species name troglodytes, Greek for " cave-dweller ", was coined by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach in his book De generis humani varietate nativa liber (" on the natural varieties of the human genus ") published in 1776, This book was based on his dissertation presented one year before ( it had a date 16 Sep 1775 printed on its title page ) to the University of Göttingen for internal use only, thus the dissertation did not meet the conditions for published work in the sense of zoological nomenclature.
Lesions should not be interpreted as an all-or-nothing condition, in the case of H. M. not all memory and recognition is lost, although the declarative memory is severely damaged he still has a sense of self and memories that were developed before the lesion occurred.
Often described as the opposite of déjà vu, jamais vu involves a sense of eeriness and the observer's impression of seeing the situation for the first time, despite rationally knowing that he or she has been in the situation before.
Husserl's review of Ernst Schröder, published before Frege's landmark 1892 article, clearly distinguishes sense from reference ; thus Husserl's notions of noema and object also arose independently.
Consequently, Frege and Husserl independently elaborated a theory of sense and reference before 1891.
Editor Scott Haring noted ( referring to the FASA edition ) that " Earthdawn had an original, inventive magic system ( no mean trick given the hundreds of fantasy RPGs that came before ), and a game world that gave you the classic " monsters and dungeons " sort of RPG experience, but made sense doing it.
While many mathematicians before Galois gave consideration to what are now known as groups, it was Galois who was the first to use the word group ( in French groupe ) in a sense close to the technical sense that is understood today, making him among the founders of the branch of algebra known as group theory.
Overlordship, for either reason, was a central feature of Anglo-Saxon politics ; it is known to have begun before Æthelberht's time, although the details are unknown, and kings were being described as overlords in this sense, as late as the ninth century.
Rarely, a dog may develop the ability to sense a seizure before it occurs.
It appears Louis had a strong sense of justice and always wanted to judge people himself before applying any sentence.
" Hapworth 16, 1924 " is the " youngest " of J. D. Salinger's Glass family stories, in the sense that the narrated events happen chronologically before those in the rest of the great " Glass series ".
The earliest use of the term " Judeo-Christian " in the historical sense dates to 1829 in the missionary journal of Joseph Wolff, and before that as " Judeo Christian " in a letter from Alexander M ' Caul dated October 17, 1821.
The term " kluge " as an overly-complicated or obscure contraption dates back at least to 1947, as evidenced by the article in the New York Folklore Quarterly, but the term must have been in use long before that for the story to have any sense.
## the Middle English loller ( akin to modern, albeit semi-archaic, verb loll ), " a lazy vagabond, an idler, a fraudulent beggar "; but this word is not recorded in this sense before 1582.
Contrary to popular belief, the maquiladora program was in place far before NAFTA, in some sense dating all the way back to 1965.
Given the scale of most commercial operations and the lack of mechanized record-keeping and recording before the industrial revolution, it made sense for most owners of enterprises in those times to carry out management functions by and for themselves.
To assume that knowledge in Plato's sense as described to be a belief that's true, it then means that before everything came into being, it was all to be conceived as total imagination by God until the set of truth.

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