Our professional mastery of aerospace power, our knowledge and doctrine create an advantage that is not easily eroded. |
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It attracted some of the most learned, and sometimes also the most arrogant scholars of doctrine and masters of ritual practice. |
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American courts in the colonial period imported many features of the English legal system, including the doctrine of precedent. |
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That is a valiant attempt to legitimize the doctrine of common origin, but the logic on which it is based is, I think, fallacious. |
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He confirmed the doctrine of saintly intercession and also saw relics as confirming the promise of future resurrection. |
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The blessedness of this doctrine is that he shall not be left to himself nor suffered to perish. |
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The doctrine of res judicata prevents the retrial of judicially settled issues and asserts the finality of judges' decisions. |
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Does this account for the stagnation in Marxism doctrine which has been noticeable for a good many years? |
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The central theme of all strains of anarchist doctrine is the illegitimacy of the state. |
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It is important for students of law to situate the legal doctrine of the EU in its historical and political context. |
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English domestic law imposes a constraint upon the applicability of the doctrine of legitimate expectation. |
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Contracting parties are given considerable latitude, consistent with the doctrine of freedom of contract. |
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Perhaps, if we are to maintain the doctrine of agency as a possession of the agent, it is more productive to let the amphiboly lie as it is. |
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Under the doctrine of breach of statutory duty some regulatory codes may give rise to civil liability when breached. |
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However, relativism is a philosophical doctrine that goes far beyond such obvious facts. |
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All scripture and religious doctrine that conflict with reason must be interpreted allegorically, so as to express moral insights. |
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That in itself is proliferation, and it is linked to the aggressive doctrine of regime change. |
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It is clearly intended to refute those who denied what is now known as the doctrine of the resurrection. |
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It's a kind of high doctrine of humanity that is the foundation of the notion of koinonia and belonging together. |
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For Barth, Jesus Christ as the enfleshed Word of God is the basis for the doctrine of the Trinity. |
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American tactical air doctrine had not changed very much, notwithstanding the progress made in both air-to-air and air-to-surface weapons. |
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Air power doctrine also describes the capabilities and roles that air power can undertake. |
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While US doctrine was still focused on armored and airmobile warfare, the missions required good old fashioned foot infantry. |
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I did not believe in God, in Jesus, in any doctrine the church holds to be true. |
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Current doctrine falls short of identifying how best to employ Air Force capability to open airbases. |
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Consciences may be salved by the doctrine that the pursuit of self-interest will in fact make everyone better off. |
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The way this process of continuous rebirth occurs is explained step by step in the doctrine of Dependent Origination. |
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He had shown mathematically that the doctrine of salvation maximized the future happiness of good men. |
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Economic Calvinism holds the doctrine that industry, thrift, and economic success is evidence of one's predestination. |
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He was the documenter of the techniques and the person who compiled the doctrine learned into a teachable format for the masses. |
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It emphasizes participation in God, employing a Thomist doctrine of analogy as a way of affirming difference as well as participation. |
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Acceptance of the doctrine of the Trinity is the first of the Thirty-nine Articles to which an Anglican was supposed to subscribe. |
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Since the 1930s, this army had developed a sound doctrine of warfare, and created powerful Panzer divisions of tanks, infantry and artillery. |
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Nationalism is the doctrine that every culture ought to be self-determining. |
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Most of them had no interest whatever in religious doctrine or theological beliefs, she writes. |
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This article is not intended to scripturally refute the false doctrine of never ending punishment. |
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What lawyers call the doctrine of parental authority grants parents wide latitude to rear their children as they choose. |
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But none of that new realism is allowed to affect the doctrine of Britain's independent nuclear deterrent. |
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Military doctrine of the time emphasized massed rifle fire, downplaying marksmanship. |
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Indeed, unity is an indispensable plank in the doctrine of scientism, the philosophical underpinning of totalitarian regimes. |
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This goal was compatible with the doctrine of manifest destiny, and Spencer's Social Darwinism. |
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The idea of American exceptionalism was expressed domestically in the doctrine of manifest destiny. |
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That worked in post-Puritan America and led to the doctrine of manifest destiny and some positive missions. |
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He believes in the doctrine of freedom, or equal personal rights for all men. |
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In the present state of juristic opinion, I would not extend the doctrine of stare decisis any further. |
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What Epicurus said is that a determinist cannot criticize the doctrine of Free Will because he admits his own criticism is itself determined. |
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Nevertheless, the prosecution can contend that the doctrine of transferred malice applies. |
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Contrary to their claims, these writers are hardly courageous Jeremiahs crying out an unwelcome doctrine to rootless and anomic individuals. |
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Similarly the doctrine of transferred malice applies to the liability of accessories. |
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This accords with his foreign policy doctrine that there should be no intervention in areas where US interests are not involved. |
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Myrc and others viewed the Augustinian doctrine of salvation by grace as a deception of the devil and a heresy. |
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The major difference in the nation's new military doctrine is that it is based on speed, rather than attrition. |
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Yet at the same time they deny the doctrine of the Trinity, of the Incarnation, of the Atonement, and of justification by faith alone. |
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We submit it is plainly wrong to apply any doctrine of functional equivalence, as their Honours plainly did. |
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In his presentation on the Baptist sects, Weber explores the similarities between Calvinist doctrine and Quakerism. |
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Church doctrine holds that Communion wafers, like the bread served at the Last Supper, must have at least some unleavened wheat. |
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His doctrine differed substantially from the formalism of Hilbert and the logicism of Russell. |
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The media always justifies its excesses by appealing to the doctrine of press freedom. |
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However, the reintroduction of true gospel doctrine into those periods of apostasy required a belief in continued divine revelation. |
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First, in arguing that atheism is unscientific I do not wish to present an apology for any theistic doctrine or any particular religious faith. |
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The doctrine likens a woman to an evil that tempts Adam to eat the apple in the Garden of Eden, which God has forbidden them even to touch. |
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If the US is right, the doctrine is now established as part of the law of nations. |
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He also reviewed the 1717 book and defended a doctrine of libertarian free will as he had in the earlier correspondence. |
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His embrace of the doctrine of zero tolerance, however, infuriates liberals. |
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Joint doctrine and literature were reviewed to assess how they should work together versus how they do work together. |
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If this doctrine be correct, it should be borne out by a retrospect of history. |
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Nevertheless, the doctrine was important in the East, as theologians such as John of Damascus made it central to the idea of Mary as Theotokos, or God-bearer. |
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In 1746, an English judge explained the ancient doctrine of revocability as based on the petty jealousy of courts fearing ouster of their jurisdiction. |
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Their doctrine of moral equivalence couldn't survive equal scrutiny. |
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Yet we often fail to articulate this doctrine clearly, even to ourselves. |
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This game of jurisdictional ping-pong is prevented by the doctrine of renvoi, which stops the game after one round if the country applies single renvoi. |
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The empty layers of denomination and doctrine that have little to do with grace. |
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The doctrine of Predestination became a major source of contention between the Puritans, for whom it was a fundamental article of faith, and the Arminians who rejected it. |
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First, if the doctrine is appropriate, there should be clarity in the chain of command from the loadmaster or boomer out flying the line to the commander in chief. |
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I suggest that these connotations, reiterated and readapted in the context of Marian doctrine and female monasticism, are the key to Andrea del Sarto's altarpiece. |
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The limits of counterinsurgency doctrine are visible even more clearly in Afghanistan. |
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This is not to be confused with utopianism, nor with a doctrine of manifest destiny, whether national or global, nor with a theocratic theory of the state. |
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Although doctrine breaks a convoy into an advance guard, close-in protective group, and rear guard, the organization within these groups is based on available assets. |
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In geopolitics, the doctrine of mutually assured destruction prevents the use of weapons of mass destruction against a foe. |
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The radical nature of Baran's reformulation of Marxist doctrine is obscured by an understandable tendency to confuse Baran's theory with Lenin's earlier theory of imperialism. |
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Some rewrote nuisance doctrine in their effort to maintain the conceptual categories set by their culture's schematic environmental understandings. |
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He who does not bring or teach apostolic doctrine ought not to be received by the Church which is built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets. |
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And he went on to give as much of a Rand Paul Middle East doctrine as a place where doctrine is the problem can take. |
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Kennan was the legendary Cold War strategist who authored the doctrine of containment. |
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I wholly accept that the doctrine admits the hearsay statements, not only where the declarant is dead or otherwise not available but when he is called as a witness. |
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My claim is that Malthusianism is a more dangerous doctrine than eugenics. |
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It was never conceived as a legal doctrine that could be argued or adjudicated by any court, so it's hardly surprising that terra nullius was such an obscure concept. |
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If it leads to real change, not just in tone, but also in doctrine and policy, it would indeed be an earthquake. |
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But Francis has also implied that his hands are tied when it comes to changing doctrine or altering church teachings. |
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In his essays this perspective is linked to the Greeks' doctrine of moderation and the demand for a balance between the Apollonian and Dionysian forces. |
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The doctrine of satori calls for the follower to annihilate self to reach the higher state so as to liberate oneself from the habitual way of life. |
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It is generally customary to consider the doctrine largely in connection with those states which have been proponents of power, autocracy, and absolutism. |
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Before World War II the Marine Corps developed a doctrine of amphibious operations that employed a quick, sharp, unexpected assault against a defended coastline. |
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His discussions of the doctrine of Scripture and angelology in Theology of the Community of God were also ground-breaking as far as Evangelical thinking was concerned. |
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Most often, the doctrine is invoked by minors seeking an abortion without parental consent. |
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That the doctrine of the filioque and its uncanonical insertion in the Latin creed present serious obstacles to the reconciliation of churches has long been clear. |
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The repeal of the Corn Law is these days commonly regarded as the ultimate victory of the classical liberal economic doctrine over wrong-headed mercantilism. |
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To accomplish this task, doctrine would clearly lay out who is responsible for accomplishment of the separate tasks involved with each of these functions. |
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In the United Kingdom, ex post facto laws are frowned upon, but are permitted by virtue of the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty. |
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That, I protest, is a doctrine psychologically impossible and ethically abhorrent. |
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The doctrine of perpetuity was excluded not because the remainder was legal but because it was barrable. |
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The doctrine that everything is God, in contradistinction to the doctrine that God is everything. |
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The doctrine of the earth's motion appeared to be contrary to the sacred Scripture. |
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Fallacious enough doctrine when wielded against one's prejudices, but in corroboration of cherished suspicions not without likelihood. |
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Elaboration of demosophy as a special doctrine assumes a new sociology of knowledge. |
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Never build a doctrine on or draw a teaching from an unclear or debated hapax. |
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The doctrine of precedent which requires similar cases to be adjudicated in a like manner, falls under the principle of stare decisis. |
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Still others acquired Aristotle's name through similarities in doctrine or content, such as the De Plantis, possibly by Nicolaus of Damascus. |
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This senseless arrogant conceit of theirs made them huff at the doctrine of repentance. |
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What did the God who hammered the universe together have to do with virtue, redemption, the strange doctrine of hypostasis? |
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The grand doctrine of the chymists, touching their three hypostatical principles. |
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While the churches originating in the Second Great Awakening have some superficial similarities, their doctrine and practices vary significantly. |
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First and foremost, they are expected to preserve the doctrine and discipline now known as Buddhism. |
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Britain was the home of Pelagius, who opposed Augustine of Hippo's doctrine of original sin. |
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Of what that involves in the way of doctrine I have no idea nor the time to inform myself. |
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The very doctrine of modern freedoms have, to some degree, their origins in these acts. |
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Although official German air doctrine did target civilian morale, it did not espouse the attacking of civilians directly. |
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The application of the doctrine of stare decisis from a superior court to an inferior court is sometimes called vertical stare decisis. |
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When a court binds itself, this application of the doctrine of precedent is sometimes called horizontal stare decisis. |
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This doctrine is similar to stare decisis insofar as it dictates that a court's decision must condone a cohesive and predictable result. |
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The doctrine of jurisprudence constante also influences how court decisions are structured. |
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The doctrine of binding precedent or stare decisis is basic to the English legal system. |
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Newton had committed himself to the doctrine that refraction without colour was impossible. |
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In 1870, the First Vatican Council affirmed the doctrine of papal infallibility when exercised in specifically defined pronouncements. |
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Baptists subscribe to a doctrine that baptism should be performed only for professing believers. |
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The central unifying doctrine of these movements is the priesthood of all believers. |
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Luther's doctrine of the priesthood of all believers upgraded the role of laymen in the church considerably. |
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A summary of Methodist doctrine is contained in the Catechism for the Use of the People Called Methodists. |
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In addition, he refined Arminianism with a strong evangelical emphasis on the Reformed doctrine of justification by faith. |
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Unitarians in previous centuries accepted the doctrine of punishment in an eternal hell, but few do today. |
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This doctrine doth abolish quite the doctrine of the law, of repentaunce,..and commaundeth a mammering doubtfulnesse. |
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Hobbes's first area of study was an interest in the physical doctrine of motion and physical momentum. |
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In Leviathan, Hobbes set out his doctrine of the foundation of states and legitimate governments and creating an objective science of morality. |
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According to Peirce's doctrine of fallibilism, the conclusions of science are always tentative. |
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The economics of research is, so far as logic is concerned, the leading doctrine with reference to the art of discovery. |
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Of the Blasphemie against the Holy Ghost from 1646 or 1647 was against Calvinists, starting from John Calvin's doctrine on blasphemy. |
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The divine right of kings, divine right, or God's mandate is a political and religious doctrine of royal and political legitimacy. |
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I observed, that though we are satisfied his doctrine is not true, it is impossible to refute it. |
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This was Edmund Burke's paternalistic doctrine that colonial government was a trust. |
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This church preached a doctrine of conformity to the established social order and class system, in contrast to Blake. |
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With his doctrine that sovereignty is conferred by divine law, Bodin predefined the scope of the divine right of kings. |
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This argument between who should hold the authority within a sovereign state is called the traditional doctrine of public sovereignty. |
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This is the origin of the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty and is usually seen as the fundamental principle of the British constitution. |
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Entities that are recognised by only a minority of the world's states usually reference the declarative doctrine to legitimise their claims. |
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It remains to be seen whether the doctrine will be accepted by other judges. |
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According to the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty, Parliament may pass any legislation that it wishes. |
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It has been the tradition of the Liberal party consistently to maintain the doctrine of individual liberty. |
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Polish military doctrine reflects the same defensive nature as that of its NATO partners. |
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In December 1934, Chief of the Luftwaffe General Staff Walther Wever sought to mould the Luftwaffe's battle doctrine into a strategic plan. |
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The Luftwaffe's Condor Legion experimented with new doctrine and aircraft during the Spanish Civil War. |
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In the UK, the constitutional doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty dictates than sovereignty is ultimately contained at the centre. |
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The doctrine of stare decisis, also known as case law or precedent by courts, is the major difference to codified civil law systems. |
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Such decisions were not binding on the courts in Hong Kong under the doctrine of precedent before 1 July 1997 and are not binding today. |
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The code includes the doctrine of ultra vires and a precedent of Hadley v Baxendale from English common law system. |
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The President approves the military doctrine and appoints the defense minister and the chief and other members of the general staff. |
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Some Shia branches label other Shia branches that do not agree with their doctrine as Ghulat. |
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Whitefield was a Calvinist, whereas Wesley was an outspoken opponent of the doctrine of predestination. |
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One popular expression of Methodist doctrine is in the hymns of Charles Wesley. |
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Orthodox doctrine regarding the Holy Trinity is summarized in the Symbol of Faith. |
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The Orthodox Church does not subscribe to the Protestant doctrine of sola scriptura. |
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Charles I inherited a settlement in Scotland based on a balanced compromise between Calvinist doctrine and episcopal practice. |
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Consequently, the church underwent a period of more radical Calvinist doctrine than occurred in England. |
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However, as time went on Morris became increasingly critical of Anglican doctrine and the idea faded. |
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In the political analysis of philosopher George Sabine, the scepticism of Hume extended to the doctrine of government by consent. |
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The doctrine of the univocity of being implies the denial of any real distinction between essence and existence. |
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My solution was that the doctrine of natural selection is a most successful metaphysical research programme. |
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I shall later argue against this important doctrine according to which the alternative to determinism is sheer chance. |
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In Hooker's model, scripture is the primary means of arriving at doctrine and things stated plainly in scripture are accepted as true. |
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The advances in operational methods, technology and tactical doctrine were implemented by these officers, Haig among them. |
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The doctrine of justification by faith alone was a direct inheritance from Luther. |
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For the most part, the Reformed tradition did not modify the medieval consensus on the doctrine of God. |
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Karl Barth reinterpreted the Reformed doctrine of predestination to apply only to Christ. |
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Martin Luther's doctrine of the two kingdoms separated state and church in principle. |
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His doctrine of the priesthood of all believers raised the laity to the same level as the clergy. |
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The dual sovereignty doctrine has been the subject of substantial scholarly criticism. |
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The usual legal doctrine under which questions of jurisdiction are decided is termed forum non conveniens. |
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This book, which influenced the thought of Charles Darwin, successfully promoted the doctrine of uniformitarianism. |
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Until that quarrel, the exceeding noxiousness of the Papal doctrine had not clearly presented itself to Mr. Moze. |
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However, the adjustments made by modern Protestants to their doctrine of scripture vary widely. |
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Oneness Pentecostalism subscribes to the common Protestant doctrine of sola scriptura. |
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Irenaeus first established the doctrine of four gospels and no more, with the synoptic gospels interpreted in the light of the Gospel of John. |
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Irenaeus' opponents also claimed that the wellsprings of divine inspiration were not dried up, which is the doctrine of continuing revelation. |
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The New Testament speaks of the importance of maintaining orthodox doctrine and refuting heresies, showing the antiquity of the concern. |
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These rubrics have been revised to reflect the doctrine and dogmas of the Orthodox Church. |
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Then understood they how that he bade them not beware of the leaven of bread, but of the doctrine of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees. |
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The majority in the High Court rejected the doctrine of terra nullius, in favour of the concept of native title. |
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The resolution of this Trinitarian dispute included the development of doctrine about angels. |
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The doctrine did not necessarily repress the use of the Ukrainian language, but it required that writers follow a certain style in their works. |
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Caesar noted the druidic doctrine of the original ancestor of the tribe, whom he referred to as Dispater, or Father Hades. |
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To a certain extent, mercantilist doctrine itself made a general theory of economics impossible. |
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Opposite to mercantilism was the doctrine of physiocracy, which predicted that mankind would outgrow its resources. |
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The written treatises within the Corpus are varied, incorporating medical doctrine from any source the Greeks came into contact with. |
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They are directly related to Circumcellions, a sect that worked on disseminating the doctrine in North Africa by the force of the sword. |
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The doctrine of Legalism that guided the Qin emphasized strict adherence to a legal code and the absolute power of the emperor. |
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The theologian Johann Eck, however, was determined to expose Luther's doctrine in a public forum. |
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That is, Luther depicted the Trinity not as a doctrine to be learned, but as persons to be known. |
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His first theological work, the Psychopannychia, attempted to refute the doctrine of soul sleep as promulgated by the Anabaptists. |
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It was developments in the doctrine of assurance that differentiated Evangelicalism from what went before. |
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The consequence of the altered form of the doctrine was a metamorphosis in the nature of popular Protestantism. |
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For example, in contrast to Calvin, the Articles did not explicitly reject the Lutheran doctrine of consubstantiation. |
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In this sense, doctrine is considered to be a dynamic, participatory enterprise rather than a static one. |
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Newman's suggestion of two criteria for the sound development of doctrine has permeated Anglican thinking. |
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Even today, there is no unanimity of doctrine or practice in the Anglican Communion as it relates to women's ordination. |
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Most Lutheran churches in Scandinavian countries are favorable to the traditional doctrine of apostolic succession. |
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Other Lutheran Churches seem indifferent as a matter of understood doctrine regarding this particular issue of ecclesiastical governance. |
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This doctrinal stance reflects the Protestant view of authority, embodied in the doctrine known as Sola Scriptura. |
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Among the original champions of Protestantism who rejected the doctrine of apostolic succession were John Calvin, and Martin Luther. |
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The confession teaches that local churches can be more or less pure depending on how faithfully they adhere to correct doctrine and worship. |
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The influence of the Articles on Anglican thought, doctrine and practice has been profound. |
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In Anglican discourse, the Articles are regularly cited and interpreted to clarify doctrine and practice. |
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These sermons were used to promulgate the doctrine of the Divine Right of Kings. |
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His doctrine was High Church, and in his life he was humble, pious, and charitable. |
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My worry is creationism can end up reducing the doctrine of creation rather than enhancing it. |
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The key doctrine, or material principle, of Lutheranism is the doctrine of justification. |
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However, they failed to reach consensus on the degree of shared doctrine necessary for church union. |
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In contrast, the REC allowed for examination in points of doctrine and discipline for validation of conformity yet without reordination. |
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Legislatures had not used the common law doctrine of mens rea in defining these crimes. |
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The doctrine arises in both English criminal law, and in civil law, where it is relevant to English contract law and English trusts law. |
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The doctrine of the rule of law dictates that government must be conducted according to law. |
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The doctrine of privity emerged alongside the doctrine of consideration, the rules of which state that consideration must move from the promisee. |
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In this way he finessed the problems caused by the doctrine of privity in a modern industrial society. |
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The common law doctrine of privity of contract provides that only those who are party to a contract may sue or be sued on it. |
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In certain cases, a person might be liable for their employee or child under the law of agency through the doctrine of respondeat superior. |
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This doctrine was applied in Court rulings on President Grant's duty to enforce the law during Reconstruction. |
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This doctrine would subvert the very foundation of all written constitutions. |
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However, several scholars, including Plucknett and Holdsworth believe that few actually followed Bracton's doctrine as defined by his writings. |
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Parliamentary sovereignty is now the accepted judicial doctrine in the legal system of England and Wales. |
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Lawsuits against the federal government itself do not receive Seventh Amendment protections due to the doctrine of sovereign immunity. |
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The doctrine of legitimate expectation in Bangladeshi law has developed through judicial precedent. |
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Roman legal doctrine was lost during the Middle Ages, but claims of universal rights could still be made based on religious doctrine. |
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He still has to prove his case in a civil action, unless the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies, as it does in most American jurisdictions. |
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Civil law has its own respect for established precedent, the doctrine of jurisprudence constante. |
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Some states, though, still use the contributory negligence doctrine to evaluate negligence in a tort. |
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Therefore, the Court felt it was time to overrule the doctrine of Swift as an unconstitutional extension of its own powers. |
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The doctrine is highly controversial and criticized by many legal scholars, but it has its supporters. |
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But after the passage of the 1976 Copyright Act, the hot news doctrine began to suffer reverses. |
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The broad misappropriation doctrine relied upon by the district court is, therefore, the equivalent of exclusive rights in copyright law. |
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By applying the doctrine of preemption of the field by congressional enactment of federal patent and copyright laws, the Supreme Court has. |
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As with all common law countries, Canadian law adheres to the doctrine of stare decisis. |
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It is arguable whether the concept of parliamentary supremacy arose from the Acts of Union 1707 or was a doctrine that evolved thereafter. |
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Most law courses are less about doctrine and more about learning how to analyze legal problems, read cases, distill facts and apply law to facts. |
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The economic doctrine prevailing from the 16th to the 18th centuries is commonly called mercantilism. |
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Soviet Marxists then developed this tendency to the state doctrine of Dialectical Materialism. |
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Some may profess the priesthood of all believers, a doctrine derived from the First Epistle of Peter. |
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This doctrine states that loving God and humanity totally, as exemplified by Christ, enables believers to rid themselves of voluntary sin. |
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She expounded the doctrine of philosophical atheism, which she thought the tendency of human belief. |
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The Romish doctrine makes their straithandedness so much more injurious, as the cause of separation is more just. |
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It was both the doctrine of the apostles, and the practice of the church, while it was symmetral, to obey the magistrate. |
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The foregoing doctrine affords us also a touchstone for the trial of spirits. |
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Augustine's insistence on its spiritual nature made it hard for him to uphold, along with Tertullian, the doctrine of physical traducianism. |
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Whatsoever, to make up the doctrine of man's salvation, is added as in supply of the Scripture's unsufficiency, we reject it. |
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The doctrine of non-violence or non-killing is taken from Hindu, Buddhist and Jainist philosophies. |
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Today they speak of freedom, democracy and anti-imperialism, whereas until recently they openly preached the doctrine of the Fascist state. |
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X and Y argue that the anticipatory assignment doctrine is a judge-made antifraud rule with no relevance to their contingent fee contracts. |
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A postmodern doctrine of God, rather, must be an apophatic theology, or a via negativa. |
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Whether or not a norm is of such a quality depends on what we call the doctrine of justiciability. |
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The problem is, for this doctrine to succeed, the world must be compliant. |
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The report said Iran has a doctrine of delaying and attriting any attacking force. |
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Halper's analysis of this megalomaniacal doctrine appears at a moment when its folly is being exposed as seldom before. |
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Mercantilists derived much of their doctrine from their strong sense of nationalism. |
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Yet, the absence of a doctrine of creation in ancient Greek philosophy makes this mimesis disappointing. |
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Because of this, the courts have developed the legal doctrine known as caveat emptor or, translated, let the buyer beware. |
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Pasteur in 1864 wrote the final obituary to the doctrine of spontaneous generation. |
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First, the essential facilities doctrine should be applied when the market at hand demonstrates tendencies of natural monopolies. |
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In 1903, Charles Renouvier wrote Le Personalisme to rename a doctrine he had previously called neocriticism. |
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Under the doctrine of federalism, each state has its own separate court system, and the ability to legislate within areas not reserved to the federal government. |
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Coming to the third proposition, von Hertling says, with justice, that the doctrine of the balance of power is a more or less antiquated doctrine. |
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Besides these groups are introduced, accessorially, all the Fathers and Doctors whose writings maintain the Roman Church's doctrine of the Real Presence. |
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It is a modification of the doctrine of contributory negligence that disallows any recovery by a plaintiff whose negligence contributed even minimally to causing the damages. |
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The implication of this line of cases is that the INS doctrine is being given very limited scope, particularly in contexts in which copyright law may dominate the field. |
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Because of this coupling to the executive branch, German legal doctrine does not treat the Bundesrat as the second chamber of a bicameral system formally. |
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Aristotle's own doctrine is far from clear. It was this lack of clarity that made possible the medieval controversy between nominalists and realists. |
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Despite the statute, the courts did not develop a comprehensive and coherent legal doctrine for patent law for more than a century after the statute came into force. |
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In criticism, poets struggled with a doctrine of decorum, of matching proper words with proper sense and of achieving a diction that matched the gravity of a subject. |
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It was inhabited by a sapient humanoid race, and some of them were civilized enough to put it in Class V, and Colonial Office doctrine on Class V planets was rigid. |
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A revised edition was issued in 1940, and the continuing central principle of Luftwaffe doctrine was that destruction of enemy armed forces was of primary importance. |
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Members of the German high command viewed this new scheme with some favour and it later became the basis of an elastic defence in depth doctrine against Entente attacks. |
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The Isle of Apples was hardly religious doctrine for Lewis the antitheist, but it was the appropriate imagery to use for a hoped-for afterlife for an Irishman. |
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This exception to the doctrine of implied repeal was something of a novelty, though the court stated that it remained open for Parliament to expressly repeal the Act. |
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As a devout Anglican and believer in scriptural authority, Jennens intended to challenge advocates of Deism, who rejected the doctrine of divine intervention in human affairs. |
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Narrowing the scope, somewhat, is the second proposal I would like to offer, based upon the doctrine of the Zaddik, as articulated in Hasidic literature. |
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He retained the doctrine of the verbal inspiration of the Scriptures. |
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The doctrine implies that any attempt to depose the king or to restrict his powers runs contrary to the will of God and may constitute a sacrilegious act. |
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There is no doctrine of separation of powers in Hobbes's discussion. |
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The manner of subscription, or the degree to which the official standards establish the actual doctrine of the church, turns out to be a practical matter. |
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Only later did he become acquainted with the doctrine of rebirth. |
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Under the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty, the UK Parliament could, in theory, therefore, abolish the Scottish Parliament, Welsh Assembly or Northern Ireland Assembly. |
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The subject of Catacoustics, or the doctrine of reflected sound, is, perhaps, the most unsatisfactory in its results of any branch of physical science. |
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However, some young Friends such as John Wilhelm Rowntree and Edward Grubb supported Darwin's theories adopting a doctrine of progressive revelation with evolutionary ideas. |
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It was argue that by asserting the historic episcopate the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers, stated in the 1932 Methodist Deed of Union, was being denied. |
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In response to the charge that utilitarianism is a doctrine fit only for swine, Mill abandons Bentham's view that pleasures differ only in quantity, not quality. |
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Urban refused but commissioned him to prepare a defence of the Western doctrine of the procession of the Holy Spirit against representatives from the Greek Church. |
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Mercantilism was an economic doctrine that flourished from the 16th to 18th century in a prolific pamphlet literature, whether of merchants or statesmen. |
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However, the original proposal to grant a general power of competence to councils was not carried through, and the doctrine of ultra vires remained. |
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The Finnish military doctrine is based on the concept of total defence. |
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Church doctrine held that no one could be certain of being in God's grace. |
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But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitans, which also I hate....So hast thou also them that hold to the doctrine of the Nicolaitans. |
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Courts may choose to obey precedent of international jurisdictions, but this is not an application of the doctrine of stare decisis, because foreign decisions are not binding. |
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Stare decisis is not usually a doctrine used in civil law systems, because it violates the legal positivist principle that only the legislature may make law. |
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Under the doctrine of stare decisis, a lower court must honor findings of law made by a higher court that is within the appeals path of cases the court hears. |
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