Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Second Punic War" ¶ 9
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Thus and with
Thus, to cite but one example, the Pax Britannica of the nineteenth century, whether with the British navy ruling the seas or with the City of London ruling world finance, was strictly national in motivation, however much other nations ( e.g., the United States ) may have incidentally benefited.
Thus, paradoxically, the beat writers resort to `` religious '' metaphors: they are in search of mana, the spiritual, the numinous, but not anything connected with formal religion.
Thus the transformation of Adam Smith's ideal entrepreneur into a mythological detective coincides closely with the decline of the real entrepreneur in economic life.
Thus, if corporations are not to run away with us, they must become quasi-governmental institutions, subject to public control and needs.
Thus with regard to the loss of tradition, in the change from order to disorder the metaphysics of change works itself out as a disruption of the individual soul, a change in which man continues as an objective ontological existent, but no longer as a man.
Thus, Margenau remarks: `` A large number of unrelated epicycles was needed to explain the observations, but otherwise the ( Ptolemaic ) system served well and with quantitative precision.
Thus he complains, with considerable justice, that the Tory writers have resorted to libel instead of answering his arguments.
Thus Burns's `` My love is like a red, red rose '' and Hopkins' `` The thunder-purple sea-beach, plumed purple of Thunder '' although clearly intelligible in content, hardly present ideas of the sort with which we are here concerned.
Thus, the Church was born and because of its intrinsic character was soon identified as a conservative institution, determined to resist the forces of change, to identify itself with the political rulers, and to maintain a kind of splendid isolation from the masses.
Before them stalked the beadle, proclaiming as he went, `` Thus the Council deals with those who break its laws -- adulterers, thieves, murderers, and lewd persons.
Thus was invented the single thread sewing machine, which Mr. Gibbs in partnership with Mr. Willcox decided to bring to Brown & Sharpe with the proposal that the small company undertake its manufacture.
Thus, when you have prepared your foundation and laid the floor, these can be trucked to the site and erected with a small crew of friends in a weekend.
Thus, direct comparisons can be drawn with free burning arcs which have been studied in detail during the past years and decades by numerous investigators ( Ref. 3 ).
Thus, the alignment of the `` dots '' and `` tips '', respectively, indicate individual variability of the 21 growth centers of each child with respect to the mean values for these boys and girls.
Thus cortico-fugal discharges induced by topical application of strychnine to a minute area in the neocortex summate with spikes present in the hypothalamus and cause increased convulsive discharges.
Thus D' and N' commute with any polynomial in T ; ;
Thus the unstressed it of it rarely snows here gets its significance from its use with snows: nothing can snow snow but `` it ''.
Thus in Mary wrote an account of the trip first strong stress on Mary marks Mary as the first in a series of people who wrote accounts of the trip, strong stress on wrote marks the writing as the first of a series of actions of Mary's concerned with an account of her trip ( about which she may later have made speeches, for example ), and strong stress on trip makes the trip the first of a series of subjects about which Mary wrote accounts.
Thus, the Commission acted with a sense of social responsibility within the area of its own convictions about the problem of government support to private education.
Thus he wired J. P. Lower and Sons of Denver: `` Have you any percussion hand grenades for throwing in a house or across a well loaded with balls or shrapnel shot??
Thus every part and plane of the picture keeps changing place in relative depth with every other part and plane ; ;
Thus, in the example cited above Fromm rests his whole case on the premise that the workers are being deprived unconsciously, unknowingly, of fulfillment, and then supports this with survey data reporting conscious, experienced frustrations.
Thus, the combined efficiency of the elements replaced by the two fiber plates ( with a combined efficiency of 0.25 ) is 0.043 or about six times less than that of the two fiber plates.

Thus and knowledge
Thus, by 1939, both Church ( 1934 ) and Turing ( 1939 ), neither having knowledge of the other's efforts, had individually proposed that their " formal systems " should be definitions of " effective calculability "; neither framed their statements as theses.
Thus, contemplation forever produces a mystified, imperfect knowledge of God.
Thus, though knowledge requires justification, truth, and belief, the word " knowledge " can't be, according to Williamson's theory, accurately regarded as simply shorthand for " justified true belief.
Thus, instead of using rules they no longer remember, as knowledge engineers suppose, the expert is forced to remember rules they no longer use.
Thus the concepts of love, knowledge and peace are jointly developed in the Epistle.
Thus, knowing the students ' level on a developmental sequence provides information on the kind and level of knowledge they can assimilate, which, in turn, can be used as a frame for organizing the subject matter to be taught at different school grades.
Thus, it would be impossible for them to later deny knowledge of the killings.
Thus, most knowledge of Roman Britain has derived from archaeological investigations, and the epigraphic evidence lauding the Britannic achievements of an Emperor of Rome, such as Hadrian ( r. 117 – 38 ) and Antoninus Pius ( r. 138 – 61 ), whose walls demarcated the northern borders of Roman Britain.
Thus when we realize the nature of knowledge, Berkeley's argument is seen to be wrong in substance as well as in form, and his grounds for supposing that ' idea '- i. e. the objects apprehended-must be mental, are found to have no validity whatever.
Thus any individual who goes into a mountainous environment should have basic knowledge of knots and knot systems to increase safety and the ability to do interesting activities such as rappelling.
Thus in theory, if law enforcement officials decline to offer a Miranda warning to an individual in their custody, they may still interrogate that person and act upon the knowledge gained, but may not use that person's statements to incriminate him or her in a criminal trial.
Thus ingot casting, foundry techniques, blast furnace extraction, and electrolytic extraction are all part of the required knowledge of a metallurgist / engineer.
Thus Kant effects his “ Copernican ” revolution of knowledge by changing our perspective on knowledge from a question of “ what can truly be known ” ( i. e. how can we actually come to know universals ), to a question of “ how does the knowing mind operate .”
Thus it provides an upper bound on what can be achieved with rational ( self-interested ) coordination or knowledge of others ' preferences.
Thus objective spiritual knowledge always entails creative inner activity.
Thus, some authors see arguments appealing to demons or the fall of man as indeed logically possible, but not very plausible given our knowledge about the world, and so see those arguments as providing defences but not good theodicies.
Thus knowledge of good is absorbed by our will and immediately applied to life ( in the case with the tree of life ).
Thus the unconscious mind can be seen as the source of dreams and automatic thoughts ( those that appear without any apparent cause ), the repository of forgotten memories ( that may still be accessible to consciousness at some later time ), and the locus of implicit knowledge ( the things that we have learned so well that we do them without thinking ).
Thus, knowledge about cultural norms is important for impressions, which is an individual's regulation of their nonverbal behavior.
Thus all knowledge, all science, necessarily involves the formation of general concepts and the invocation of their corresponding symbols in language ( cf.
Thus, " I entitle transcendental all knowledge which is occupied not so much with objects as with the mode of our knowledge of objects insofar as this mode of knowledge is to be possible a priori.

0.540 seconds.