The intelligent design argument counters evolution by claiming some processes are irreducible and couldn't have come about piecemeal. |
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This phenomenon is, of course, ultimately intangible, irreducible to any given couplet or guitar line. |
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Cayley also put a third question, a different and deeper question about irreducible invariants of a binary quantic. |
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Exploring situations when the presidency is in extremis will allow me to consider whether there is an irreducible minimum of presidential power. |
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However, when we pump oil out of the ground, there is an irreducible saturation beyond which the oil won't move. |
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For him the truth of any matter, especially its scientific truth, was irreducible. |
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Similarly, collective identities are irreducible to the sum of the experiences of individuals. |
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I have been asking myself and I could not find any answer in scientific manner, which is irreducible, simple and general. |
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Since an intelligent designer is not restricted to incremental change, he is able to create irreducible mechanisms without any difficulty. |
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I believe in the moral integrity of human beings, and that it is innate, is irreducible, and cannot be spoken about too much or too often. |
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The explanation of a phenomenon is irreducible to a statement of the event that happens to precede it. |
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Its possible meanings are many, complex, and like all great poetry, irreducible to simple generalizations. |
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By contrast, there's always been something irreducible about Ferry, something he couldn't escape. |
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Instead, evil becomes abstract and inescapable, defiant of natural law and irreducible to a single bad person or wrong action. |
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It remains impossible to decipher the irreducible core within McConnell's administration. |
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I thought maybe irreducible complexity was a problem that biology needed to solve. |
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There is no irreducible core of 'literal' language from which 'figurative usage' diverges. |
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Downward mobility was and seems to have been accepted as an irreducible fact of life. |
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Football's violence, it is true, is contained within rules and conventions, and controlled by a punishment regime, but it is also irreducible. |
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If the dislocation is irreducible or unstable after reduction, referral to an orthopedic or hand subspecialist is advised. |
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And if there can be no proper theory, then the bit string is called algorithmically random or irreducible. |
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This tactile, sensual experience was made more poignant by the knowledge that these substances were pure, unalloyed, irreducible. |
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The various relations with God we have outlined are themselves irreducible, rooted in permanent coequal dimensions of the divine nature. |
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The irreducible mind and the body are more like parallel or independent properties that don't causally influence each other. |
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Acutely strangulated haemorrhoids occur as a result of thrombus formation resulting in gross swelling, irreducible prolapse, and severe pain. |
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What such views have in common is the conviction that the notion of something's persisting through time is ultimately primitive and irreducible. |
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Abelard draws the conclusion that intentionality is a primitive and irreducible feature of the mind, our acts of attending to things. |
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In this brief note I wish to critically discuss Searle's claim that we-intentionality is biologically primitive and irreducible. |
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Most of us think of identity as the single irreducible thing that defines character, or place, or culture. |
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Only such a functional necessity can justify the limited but irreducible existence of military justice. |
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Death, from this perspective, seems unproblematically universal, a simple, irreducible fact of our nature, unyieldingly the same across all societies and throughout time. |
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The concept of strong sustainability is often considered as irreducible to monetary approaches. |
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Individuals have irreducible dignity and importance, and may never be sacrificed to collective interests. |
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With acceptance, new constructive principles appear, supplementing pure logical deduction from fine-grained analysis as irreducible explanations of observed phenomena. |
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A third type of substantialism amounts to the theory that there is a plurality of ultimately irreducible individual souls rather than just a single divine one. |
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If they do, we may be able dispense with irreducible moral facts. |
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Each individual is, in a certain sense, absolute, irreducible to another. |
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It may be, in the end, that we must simply accept the notion of causality as being primitive and irreducible, like the notions of identity and existence. |
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But Mr Barak, ever the logician, maintains that irreducible interest and not ephemeral emotion will determine the two sides' bottom lines. |
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Geometrically the resolvent enables us to resolve the whole spread represented by any given set of algebraic equations into definite irreducible spreads. |
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When ID researchers find irreducible complexity in biological systems, they conclude that such structures were designed. |
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There follows an irreducible subjectivity of fundamental valuation that seems to describe very accurately the situation in real economies. |
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Isou and Lemaitre further introduced scriptural systems that fetishize the graphic as irreducible to vocalization. |
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That is associated with the supposition that, if the shared interest generates a group right, the right-holding group must also be understood as an irreducible moral entity. |
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It is necessary to evaluate aculeate amount of reserves in due consideration of residual oil saturation and irreducible water saturation for this reservoir under waterflooding operation. |
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If the Turks are to find their way to Europe, they will need to grow thicker skins. For European politicians, the queasiness of many citizens about embracing another large, impoverished country is a hard, irreducible fact. |
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Of the three Mr Mankiw proposes, only Steve Jobs plausibly had an irreducible, unique effect on material culture and the structure of an industry. |
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And in backing an irresponsible student demand for a referendum on educational policy, a subject irreducible to a single question, it has shown intellectual cowardice. |
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Advocates of irreducible complexity claim that it is therefore more reasonable to believe they were designed and assembled together for a purpose. |
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At that margin, there is an irreducible minimum income they must earn. |
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It shows that dignity from which the action of the richest European States' workers derives its irreducible and absolute right is by no means a singular truth in the current situation in Europe. |
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Often, the attainment of arms control treaties flounders on the insistence of each country on its maximum preferred goal as its minimum, irreducible position. |
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Respect for life should not stop a constitutional state from giving serious offenders effective and irreducible penalties of 30 years, or lifelong imprisonment for that matter. |
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Furthermore, the fact that some of these uncertainties are recognized to be irreducible heightens the need to clarify the ethical grounds of response. |
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The reversal of the statement of principle is even more welcome in that it does not get rid of the irreducible minimum which is found in the ruling out of personal coercion. |
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He therefore set out to centralize as much control in Ottawa as he could, save only the irreducible minimum which of necessity went to all the provinces. |
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Second, the recognition that poverty has an irreducible economic connotation does not necessarily imply the primacy of economic factors in the causation of poverty. |
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Innate attractions and repulsions joined size, shape, position and motion as physically irreducible primary properties of matter. |
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In this paper, we define multiprojective witness sets which will encode the multidegree information of an irreducible multiprojective variety. |
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Derrida attends to what is necessarily hidden and aporetic within a discourse, and emphasizes the secrets irreducible to public disclosure. |
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Lyotard says that after the dissolution of meta-narratives we are in a state of the immeasurability of the heterogeneousness of discourse games irreducible to each other. |
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Many personalists have argued that an adequate account of the human person must include an account of subjectivity as irreducible to anything objectively definable. |
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An arthrogram will both diagnose hinged abduction, with an increased subluxation index in abduction, and determine if it is reducible or irreducible. |
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