A fundamental tenet of the science of geology is the Principle of Uniformitarianism, which states that the present is a key to the past. |
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It is a tenet of impeachment law that we don't impeach judges for their decisions, but rather for conduct which makes them unfit to serve. |
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These churches professed a belief in predestination, a theological tenet that suggests the futility of the ambitious pursuit of wealth. |
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No observant Jew will question the coming of the Messianic era as a tenet of Judaism. |
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The central tenet of this sexuality is eroticizing dominance and subordination. |
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If you study Austrian economics, you will learn that a central tenet of the school is methodological individualism. |
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A generally accepted tenet of the American dream is that a high-quality education is a birthright. |
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Death goes hand in hand with another tenet of the rational faith, the knowledge of impermanence. |
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Throughout my course of investigation, I have seen this tenet come into play many times. |
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The succession from the Old Covenant to the New was an absolutely fundamental tenet of Protestantism. |
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The basic tenet of Baha'i seems to be that all religions are one and just windows on the same single God. |
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A fundamental tenet of trade theory is that trade amongst nations should be balanced evenly between imports and exports. |
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The central tenet of the plan is to replace national air spaces with new zones of control based on international air corridors. |
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The foundational tenet of existentialism is that existence precedes essence. |
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The well-supported plan to save the capercaillie has this predator control as a central tenet. |
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A central tenet of organic growing is the principle of feeding the soil, not the plant. |
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An important tenet in constructivist theory is evaluating evidence to construct a global interpretation of an event or era. |
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Once we examine tea, once we put that central tenet of British culture under the microscope, what else will we start to doubt? |
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As a central tenet of Canadian foreign policy we have always valued human rights. |
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If the central tenet of Canadian foreign policy is to be human rights, if it is to be the security of the individual, then we need to act. |
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China's desire to grow and seek a place in the world commensurate with its political and economic power is a central tenet of its policy. |
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Swing-around requires little coordination, other than that players observe the tenet of never dribbling more than three times before they pick up and pass. |
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Such is the tenet of the EU's new animal welfare legislation, as agreed by agriculture ministers meeting on 22 June. |
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Almost ten years on, it is apparent that this central tenet now forms the basis of much drug policy. |
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It was a central tenet of human rights law that rights were held by individuals, not by Governments, institutions or religions. |
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A key tenet to PREP is senior leadership support and the reduction of barriers for participants, such as time to participate. |
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This approach itself could be stated as an underlying tenet of government for a modern society. |
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A basic tenet of community policing is to increase the local control and accountability of policing. |
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Multilateralism has always been the key tenet in forging a fairer international community based on equitable global governance. |
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As a rule each individual tenet is formulated in an extremely brief way. |
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Silence has long been a tenet of mystery religions such as Wicca, as well as other fraternal organizations such as the Masons, or the Golden Dawn. |
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Pentecostalism takes its name from its central tenet of baptism in the Spirit and the associated experience of speaking in tongues or glossolalia. |
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However, a basic tenet of electronic date information systems is achieving single data entry. |
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The only problem was that tenet made those remarks two weeks before the actual polygraph test. |
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Both the IOC and FIFA have embraced and proselytised the central tenet that a belief in the positive values of sport is at the heart of their purpose and their success. |
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The view that trade was the engine of economic growth was a central tenet of mercantilism, the European economic orthodoxy in the first half of the eighteenth century. |
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His party switch had seemed ludicrous at the time, as any Georgian with a trace of political awareness knew a Democrat-run Peach State was a tenet of natural law. |
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Curiously, he never engages with the central tenet of the thesis. |
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How did we manage to sacralise this tenet in under a decade? |
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A central tenet of Shintoism is the concept of kami, spirits that abide in and are worshipped at shrines, representing human beings and things found in nature. |
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The third tenet of beach glamour is a good waterproof mascara. |
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Central tenet of his being, and the book I shouldn't wonder. |
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Charter schools, rejecting the tenet of promotion through seniority, promised to do better. |
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After all, it is a basic tenet of democracy that the expression of controversial political beliefs must remain immune from prosecution. |
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This circumscription is introduced by the tenet of Creation, i.e., by the fact that nature is viewed as a created being. |
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The paper also ignores the practical difficulties inherent in the outworking of a political settlement which has an acceptance of the unionist veto as its central tenet. |
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Human rights were a central tenet of migration management for most governments and should no longer be considered a side issue. |
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It is a basic tenet of established economic theory that an increase in supply on an already glutted market produces this effect. |
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His central tenet is that equality and prosperity are opposites. |
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Mr. Pat Martin: An article of faith, a tenet for the Liberal Party of Canada. |
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It is unsurprising then that the government would seek to cast aside a fundamental tenet of our justice system, which is this. |
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They question the wisdom of placing less emphasis on a tenet that has defined Pentecostalism for more than a century. |
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One tenet of the civil law is agnatic succession, explicitly excluding females from the inheritance of a throne or fief. |
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Infrastructure suited to the constantly growing tourist flows, designed in such a way to spread the people out in space and time, is a basic tenet of the sustainable, harmonious development equation. |
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The thinking behind this prohibition was that terrorist groups were exploiting the broadcasters, that the enemies of democracy were subverting the system by harnessing a key tenet of democracy – a free, open media. |
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The tenet of clinical equipoise provides a clear moral foundation to the requirement that the health care of subjects not be disadvantaged by research participation. |
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Totally different from Earth's solar system, they appeared to violate a basic tenet of the formation process discussed above that giant planets must form far enough from the hot central condensation to allow ice to condense. |
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It can be easy to seem trite in discussing Shakespeare, but as a basic tenet of the approach was to suggest that Macbeth was a great warrior and that he loves his wife in a profound way. |
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Yet even within Iran's theocratic governing system, Mr Ahmadinejad's decision to bring Shia Islam's most fundamental tenet into the political arena is deeply controversial. |
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An underlying principle of this strategy and this should be an underlying tenet of the industry itself: equal access to the means of achieving excellence and of expressing one's point of view to the world. |
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According to them, the current section already represents a significant deviation from the accused's right of confrontation, which is a basic tenet of criminal law. |
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But do we all know it as the same thing, right down to the last tenet? |
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Principle 33 represents a fundamental tenet of international human rights law, which is explicitly recognized in every comprehensive human rights treaty. |
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A key tenet of our strategy in our core civil aerospace and defence markets is to derive an increasing proportion of our business from the existing fleet. |
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This structure aligns the interest of executives with the interest of the company's shareholders, and is a basic tenet of good corporate governance. |
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Furthermore, some managers point out that the major tenet of effective delegation is the idea that authority must be delegated commensurate with the responsibility to be exacted. |
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It is therefore a fundamental tenet of republican government and democracy as well as nationalism. |
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Vico would reproduce this argument consistently throughout his works, and would use it as a central tenet of the Scienza Nuova. |
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The essential tenet of legal realism is that all law is made by human beings and, thus, is subject to human foibles, frailties and imperfections. |
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That is the universal tenet. But is God really hid? It is the blind or stupid eye that first pronounced this sensely word. |
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The Heisenberg uncertainty principle, a tenet of quantum mechanics, has been demonstrated at scales visible to the naked eye. |
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Peoples Temple and the Branch Davidians both approximated the 'apocalyptic sect' as an ideal type. In such sects the end of the world is taken as a central tenet. |
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Maimonides reserved one article for this tenet, oft mentioned in traditional sources, stating merely that God rewards and punishes without specification. |
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An important tenet of the modern states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania is that their incorporation into the Soviet Union from 1940 to 1991 constituted an illegal occupation. |
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Keeping long hair is a basic tenet of the Sikh religion and is one of the five Ks which the last Sikh guru Gobind Singh instructed his followers to adopt. |
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Sentencing Guidelines in 2004 were the final step in establishing waiver as a central tenet for companies to demonstrate cooperation with regulators. |
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A central tenet of deconstructionism is that maps have power. |
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It is also a central tenet in the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex. |
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Preceding the miraculous events linked with afterlife is the Advent of the Messiah, also independently listed among Maimonides' Thirteen as a tenet of faith. |
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Some 19 months later, time enough for five or six decent intervals, Tenet still holds the job and appears to have job security, too. |
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On the same day that Tenet resigned, the FBI proposed creation of a separate intelligence division inside the bureau. |
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By late Jan. 2003, Tenet had signed the first formal guidelines for interrogation and confinement. |
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Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act were insufficient as a matter of law to prevail against Tenet in this case, Seitz said. |
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Lee Pearce, the group's leader, said he was persuaded by Tenet's newly appointed independent director, Edward Kangas, that Tenet is committed to serious reform. |
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