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Page "Edmund Husserl" ¶ 12
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Yet and colleague
Yet Aristophanes borrowed rather than just satirized some of the tragedian's methods ; he was once ridiculed by a colleague, Cratinus, as " a hair-splitting master of niceties, a Euripidaristophanist ".
Yet, Caelius still wanted to make a name for himself in Rome, and in April 59 BC, he brought prosecution against Gaius Antonius Hybrida, Cicero ’ s colleague in the consulship of 63 BC, for extortion.

Yet and Heidegger
Yet for all its " dangerous closeness " to what Heidegger understands by temporality, Husserl's account of internal time-consciousness does differ fundamentally.
Yet, because of his political commitment to National Socialism in 1933, when he assumed the position of Rector of Freiburg University in south-western Germany, Heidegger continues to arouse controversy, polemic and much heated misunderstanding: How could arguably the greatest philosopher of the 20th century also have been a Nazi?

Yet and was
Yet he did drop his badinage with the ordinary country girl as much in deference to the Grafin as acknowledgement that here, indeed, was something special.
Yet implicit in each movement was the death of millions, perhaps hundreds of millions, perhaps you and me -- and the experts.
Yet when, at war's end, the ex-Tory made the first move to resume correspondence, Jay wrote him from Paris, where he was negotiating the peace settlement:
Yet General Suvorov -- who had never forgotten hearing his adored Czarina declare that all truly great men had oddities -- was mad only north, northwest.
Yet, the idea imbedded in each was identical: to surround the unknown with mystery and to isolate that class which had been given special dominion over the secrets of God.
Yet during the years when I was on the staff of The Nation, I tried to the limit the patience of the editors on almost every occasion when I was permitted to write an editorial having a bearing on a political or social question.
Yet the press was powerless to put these charges in perspective in its news columns.
Yet, he was here.
Yet no detail was too small to receive attention from this master, and as a result the playing here has humor, delicacy, and radiant humanity.
Yet Laos was now one of the most explosive headaches of statesmen around the globe.
Yet suddenly he was wide-awake.
Yet everywhere else sameness was stucco and wood in square blocks -- like fortresses perched against the slant of the hill, rising with the hill to the top where the church was and beyond that to the cemetery.
Yet when the dear baby came, he had Tillie over here in a jiffy, and was as attentive and sweet and worried and happy when it was all over as any husband could have been.
Yet the whole of Anne was something she had never learned in any college.
Yet, he told himself, this was the best way.
Yet there was some precedent for it.
Yet the public loved him, and Christie refused to kill him off, claiming that it was her duty to produce what the public liked, and what the public liked was Poirot.
Yet this quaint dandified little man who, I was sorry to see, now limped badly, had been in his time one of the most celebrated members of the Belgian police.
Yet another chronicler, John of Worcester, mentions nothing of any trouble in Rome, and when discussing the appointment of Wulfstan, says that Wulfstan was elected freely and unanimously by the clergy and people.
Yet none of this was due to a lack of leadership on Andronikos ' part and his reign could be said to end before the Byzantine Empire's position became untenable due to the ensuing civil war which consumed the empire's remaining resources on Andronikos's death.
Yet he was also very religious and a pacifist by nature.

Yet and elected
Yet, Rousseau fails to consider that the state is not a total institution within the liberal democracies, and that the freedom of the citizen in between the elections is the freedom of the citizen to live their life in pursuit of their own happiness, subject to the law made by their elected representatives, who are, in turn, subject to popular pressure, public protest, petition, recall, referendum, initiative, and ultimately, electoral defeat if they fail to heed the views of those they represent.
Yet, the newly elected French President François Hollande announced that French troops would withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of 2012 sparking speculation about whether this indicated the NATO coalition there is starting to crumble.
Yet despite early 20th century sectarian feeling, Australia elected its first Catholic prime minister, James Scullin, of the Australian Labor Party in 1929-decades before the Protestant majority of the United States would elect John F. Kennedy as its first Catholic president.
Yet, because Alexander was not elected in opposition to a generally recognized pontiff, nor by schismatic methods, his position was better than that of Clement VII and Benedict XIII, the popes of Avignon.
Yet, " top tōsen ", i. e. being elected with the highest vote, is considered a special achievement and thus noted where changed from the previous election for the same class of Councillors ( 1998 ).
Yet, Kennedy had never won an award, nor been elected to a first All-Star team.
Yet he would persist in building the United Federation of Teachers and would be elected president of the American Federation of Teachers in 1974.
Yet the residential type of administration was continued with a single British Resident at Buea, but in 1949 Edward John Gibbons was appointed Special Resident, and on 1 October 1954, when political power shifted to the elected government, succeeded himself as first of only two Commissioners.

Yet and university
Yet another example of the common pool problem involves the shared use of limited internet bandwidth, such as in a university network, when the connectivity of all users is slowed by the heavy usage of a few.
Yet, under the leadership of Dr. James W. Laurie, the university ’ s 14th president, Trinity took advantage of its new location in a rapidly growing major urban center to grow in academic stature.
Yet this is not a university rather it is a “ brain trust ” of applied experience that will help us to address the five other strategic themes.
Yet, although women account for almost half of the students at university level, only 2 % of the professors at institutions of higher learning were women in 1990.
Yet those who created the ASCM fervently believed that Christian students could be agents of change in the university, the nation and the world.

Yet and on
Yet this passion for passion, now that I look back on it with passion spent, seems somewhat overblown and operatic, though as a diva Miss Millay perfectly controlled her notes.
Yet in several chapters on Scotland in the eighteenth century, Trevelyan copes persuasively with the tangled confusion of Scottish politics against a vivid background of Scottish religion, customs, and traditions.
Yet, in summarizing a series of careful essays on the Yalta Conference, Forrest Pogue could find no basis for Yalta becoming `` a symbol for betrayal and a shibboleth for the opponents of Roosevelt and international cooperation ''.
Yet the violent immediacy of the wallpaper strips pasted to the paper, and the only lesser immediacy of block capitals that simulate window lettering, manage somehow to push the grape cluster back into place on the picture plane so that it does not `` jump ''.
Yet they thrived on it.
Yet she did not hesitate and only turned slightly, her neck tall as she looked in his direction, and continued on her way toward the end of the camp.
* ABC ( Yet Another BitTorrent Client ), a free software, open source BitTorrent client based on BitTornado
Yet archaeologists have increasingly come to incorporate many of the insights from archaeoastronomy into archaeology textbooks and, as mentioned above, some students wrote archaeology dissertations on archaeoastronomical topics.
Yet despite his opponents ' setbacks Louis XIV was desirous of peace but he wanted it on reasonable terms.
Yet, with the money still being withheld by Petty and with rent due, Buddy was forced to go back on the road.
Yet some still fought on ; and it was not until long after nightfall, when many a ship was blazing from the firebrands thrown upon them, that the work was done.
Yet he was able to work alongside the other artists on equal terms due to his youthful temperament and creativity.
Yet, most importantly, the observer has no influence on the specific element of the world that becomes reality.
Yet he also became " the most tragic of poets ", focusing on the inner lives and motives of his characters in a way previously unknown.
Yet, when a distinction is made, Epipaleolithic is used for those cultures that were not much affected by the ending of the Ice Age ( like the Natufian and Khiamian cultures of Western Asia ) and the term Mesolithic is reserved for Western Europe where the extinction of the Megafauna had a great impact on the Paleolithic populations at the end of the Ice Age ( like European post-glacial cultures: Azilian, Sauveterrian, Tardenoisian, Maglemosian, etc.
Yet it also made clear that the plot was in no way official and that any activity centred on a small group of discontented officers.
Yet in the paperback edition released in 1979, Bradbury wrote a new coda for the book containing multiple comments on censorship and its relation to the novel.
" Yet, he was married according to the rites of the Church of England in both his first marriage at the church at Wallington, and in his second marriage on his deathbed in University College Hospital, and he left instructions that he was to receive an Anglican funeral.
Yet, pest control and the products used may vary based on the specific type of plants and type of insects.

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