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dichotomy and was
In 1978, the term Barassi Line was used to describe the dichotomy that existed in Australia's football culture, where Australian Football was most popular in all states bar New South Wales and Queensland.
The term is less common in modern texts, and was originally derived from a dichotomy with major tranquilizers, also known as neuroleptics or antipsychotics.
John Miles Foley held, specifically with reference to the Beowulf debate, that while comparative work was both necessary and valid, it must be conducted with a view to the particularities of a given tradition ; Foley argued with a view to developments of oral traditional theory that do not assume, or depend upon, finally unverifiable assumptions about composition, and that discard the oral / literate dichotomy focused on composition in favor of a more fluid continuum of traditionality and textuality.
Historically, cryptography was split into a dichotomy of codes and ciphers ; and coding had its own terminology, analogous to that for ciphers: " encoding, codetext, decoding " and so on.
The etymology connecting * alboz with albus " white " suggests an original dichotomy of " white " vs. " black " genii, corresponding to the elves vs. the dwarves which was subsequently confused.
Kraepelin is specifically credited with the classification of what was previously considered to be a unitary concept of psychosis, into two distinct forms ( known as the Kraepelinian dichotomy ):
Although Luthor would not appear until two years after Superman's debut, a central theme to his character — a dichotomy of science versus superpowers — was in place.
As an example, if someone kills someone else, such a nihilist might argue that killing is not inherently a bad thing, bad independently from our moral beliefs, only that because of the way morality is constructed as some rudimentary dichotomy, what is said to be a bad thing is given a higher negative weighting than what is called good: as a result, killing the individual was bad because it did not let the individual live, which was arbitrarily given a positive weighting.
A third means developed, arising from the methodological dichotomy present, in which the social phenomena was identified with and understood ; this was championed by figures such as Max Weber.
The dichotomy of the man was fascinating, how he was everyone's camp comedic hero but yearned to be taken seriously as an actor ; hated the Carry Ons but couldn't escape them ; had a kind of self-loathing but also found himself beautiful.
In other words, cultural ecology was good at exploring function in the nature-culture dichotomy, but the conclusions drawn from that theoretical position tended to ignore the impact of environment on political and economic factors.
Prior to this period, Mao was concerned with the dichotomy between knowledge and action.
Now, he was more concerned with the dichotomy between revolutionary ideology and counter-revolutionary objective conditions.
The possibility of a truly objective description was discounted by Pike himself in his original work ; he proposed the emic / etic dichotomy in anthropology as a way around philosophic issues about the very nature of objectivity.
Influenced by the Marxist view of history, Childe used the work to argue that the usual distinction between ( pre-literate ) prehistory and ( literate ) history was a false dichotomy and that human society has progressed through a series of technological, economic and social revolutions.
He was also the secondary Week God for the tenth week of the twenty-week cycle of the calendar, joining the sun god Tonatiuh to symbolise the dichotomy of light and darkness.
The supposition, regarding the existence of the dichotomy between Ahuras / Asuras and Daevas / Devas in Indo-Iranian times, was discussed at length by F. B. J.
Among the changes, the Golden Age Superman, Batman, Robin and Wonder Woman ceased to exist, and the Earth-One / Earth-Two dichotomy was resolved by merging the Multiverse into a single universe.
He then went on, in his seminal book The Domestication of Europe ( 1990 ), to use structuralist ideas to come up with his theory that within Neolithic Europe, there was a dichotomy between field ( agrios ) and house ( domus ), with this duality being mediated by a boundary ( foris ).
He emphasised the conflict between " industrial " and " pecuniary " values and in the hands of later writers this was interpreted as the " ceremonial / instrumental dichotomy " ( Hodgson 2004 ); Veblen saw that every culture is materially-based and dependent on tools and skills to support the " life process ", while at the same time, every culture appeared to have a stratified structure of status (" invidious distinctions ") that ran entirely contrary to the imperatives of the " instrumental " ( read: " technological ") aspects of group life.

dichotomy and one
( The " Device-Bio / Chemical " spectrum is an imperfect dichotomy, but one regulators often use, at least as a starting point.
During this decade and the one that followed, Urbina and his archrival, García Moreno, would define the dichotomy — between Liberals from Guayaquil and Conservatives from Quito — that remained the major sphere of political struggle in Ecuador in the 1980s.
" Such definitions depend upon "( cultural ) processes rather than abstract musical types ...", upon " continuity and oral transmission ... seen as characterizing one side of a cultural dichotomy, the other side of which is found not only in the lower layers of feudal, capitalist and some oriental societies but also in ' primitive ' societies and in parts of ' popular cultures '.
A false dilemma ( also called false dichotomy, the either-or fallacy, fallacy of false choice, black-and-white thinking, or the fallacy of exhaustive hypotheses ) is a type of logical fallacy that involves a situation in which only two alternatives are considered, when in fact there is at least one additional option.
Subscribers to one model claim that some misogynists think in terms of the mother / whore dichotomy, where they hold that women can only be " mothers " or " whores.
" Another variant model is the one alleging that certain men think in terms of a virgin / whore dichotomy, in which women who do not adhere to an Abrahamic standard of moral purity are considered " whores ".
They instead suggest there is a dichotomy between determinism and free will ( only one can be true ).
The Palermo Protocols frame the difference between smuggling and trafficking around the dichotomy of coercion and consent: whereas people who are trafficked are considered " victims " or " survivors ", individuals who are smuggled are seen has having engaged willingly in an enterprise that one or both of the bordering countries consider illegal.
In this dichotomy, the struggle between flesh and spirit becomes a moral one.
That is to say, Orthodox Christians do not see a dichotomy between the body and the soul but rather consider them as a united whole, and they believe that what happens to one affects the other ( this is known as the psychosomatic union between the body and the soul ).
If such a dichotomy theorem is true, then CSPs provide one of the largest known subsets of NP which avoids NP-intermediate problems, whose existence was demonstrated by Ladner's theorem under the assumption that P ≠ NP.
The first statement is logically true, but this does not exclude the possibility of questioning whether the presented dichotomy is appropriate in the given context, e. g., some kind of fuzzy logic is more applicable to the issue, or some definitions may be questioned and must be clarified, or one of the alternatives must be further subdivided for fair context.
Incompatibilism is the view that a deterministic universe is completely at odds with the notion that people have a free will ; that there is a dichotomy between determinism and free will where philosophers must choose one or the other.
The emerging church seeks a post-Christendom approach to being church and mission through: renouncing imperialistic approaches to language and cultural imposition ; making ' truth claims ' with humility and respect ; overcoming the public / private dichotomy ; moving church from the center to the margins ; moving from a place of privilege in society to one voice amongst many ; a transition from control to witness, maintenance to mission and institution to movement.
* A false dichotomy is a logical fallacy consisting of a supposed dichotomy which fails one or both of the conditions: it is not jointly exhaustive and / or not mutually exclusive.
* In biology, a dichotomy is a division of organisms into two groups, typically based on a characteristic present in one group and absent in the other.
This dichotomy is typical of the fact that a housing co-op is somewhere between a private business corporation and a social agency, and where one places it depends on one's viewpoint — and the collective viewpoint of each housing co-op.
Reflection on this apparent dichotomy was one of the principal paths that led Einstein to develop special relativity:
This dichotomy seems to be one of the main obstacles for quantizing gravity.
Upon discovering an arsenal of war machines in its underbelly, Ray struggles with the moral dichotomy of being a scientist ; of how to contribute to the world without giving into vanity, conveying his conflict towards his father, and the one brewing between Eddie and Lloyd.
Its original focus lay in Thorstein Veblen's instinct-oriented dichotomy between technology on the one side and the " ceremonial " sphere of society on the other.
Magia serves as one of the most popular female Cuban rappers who has been able to mediate this dichotomy into some success in the country.
" Mark Lutz says, " He's got such a dichotomy to him where he's all brave and noble on one hand, and so naive and brainwashed on the other.

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