Sentences with phrase «chapter iv»

In Chapter IV, Suggestion Is Power, he tells a story about false beliefs.
37 CFR Chapter IV is the set of regulations implementing the Bayh - Dole Act, the 1980 law allowing those conducting research with government funds to file for patent protection.
71 That provision is, however, subject to compliance with the conditions laid down in particular in Chapter IV of Directive 2003/86.
(a) Jurisdiction, (Chapter II)(b) Applicable Law (Chapter III)(c) Recognition and Enforcement (Chapter IV)(d) Co-operation.
Chapter IV contains six Articles — in contrast to Chapter III of BIIR which contains 31.
Respectfully to the results of long lasting researchers in Poland, supervised and directed by Ms M. Mozgawa - Saj (the author of «Extradition in Polish Criminal Proceedings; chapter IV), the average time of a classic extradition request that has been exercised is 293 days.
Subject to the exceptions provided for in Annex 1 to this Convention, Contracting Parties shall be bound to admit to their territories in international traffic motor vehicles and trailers which fulfil the conditions laid down in Chapter III of this Convention and whose drivers fulfil the conditions laid down in Chapter IV; they shall also be bound to recognize registration certificates issued in accordance with the provisions of Chapter III as prima facie evidence that the vehicles to which they refer fulfil the conditions laid down in the said Chapter III.
(v) To offer information, advice, and liaison and coordination with concerned organizations, as well as other forms of assistance concerning the use of the protection order system prescribed in Chapter IV;
To offer information, advice, and liaison and coordination with concerned organizations, as well as other forms of assistance concerning the use of the protection order system prescribed in Chapter IV;
The desire to talk about a «no - feedback» response is based on a desire to talk about «feedback» in terms of the Bode (1945) theory, which is based on the presence of a «forward or µ circuit» (Bode, Chapter IV, page 44).
Schlesinger cites Chapter III of Bode but shows no evidence of having read Chapter IV.
Chapter IV introduces additional considerations including which base year is used, the accounting of land use, land - use change and forestry and the implications of efforts and achievements by Parties to date.
Many pieces reveal affinities through their placement, as in the case of Leandro Katz's photograph Máquina de escribir, 1979 — 2011, a close - up of a typewriter whose letters have been replaced with cycles of the moon, which echoes Erica Bohm's Chapter IV / NASA, Astronaut, 2011, from her Galàctica series, a digital photo installed across from Katz's that features an astronaut, yellowed, disconnected, and floating in space.
The part I was most excited to play was the extra missions that were cut from the Xbox 360 release, which continue the story of the Brumak that rocked up at the end of Chapter IV.
Read the «Strategy Report — 2nd Cycle», chapter IV to learn more about EAG VI activities and findings for this second year of CALLISTO research.
Chapter IV: The Leak The expression has its counterparts in other languages, such as the French c'est chou vert et vert chou - «it's cabbage green and green cabbage».
5Scates, D. E. Chapter IV: The Improvement of Classroom Testing.
Eating Disorders CHAPTER IV: NUTRITION FOR LACTATION A. Incidence, Benefits and Promotion of Breastfeeding B. Physiology of Lactation C. Nutrient Needs 1.
But his advantage, the advantage namely of immediate certainty in the strict sense, we have already shown in Chapter IV to be ambiguous (anceps — dangerous), and we shall show this further in the next paragraph.
As for the third method, it can not be discussed until we have considered the idea of development as applied to early Christian history (Chapter IV).
The significance of such an aroused attention (which may also issue in taking offense) has already been evaluated in Chapter IV.
Or have you perhaps already perceived this; was it this you meant by what you said in our last conversation (Chapter IV), that you had understood me and all the consequences of my proposition, while I confess that I had not yet entirely understood myself?»
Chapter IV surveys the development of the thought about God in Whitehead, primarily through three of his books.
Such a solution has been found, and it is presented in chapter IV.
The exceedingly difficult discussions of «strains,» «strain - feelings,» and «strain - loci» are relevant (PR part IV, chapter IV), but comprehension of these notions does not seem to be crucial to the argument here.
[2] This is the opening paragraph [92] of Chapter IV: «Communion in Life and Spiritual Activity among the Baptized,» Section A: The Sacrament of Baptism,» in Directory for the Application of Principles and Norms of Ecumenism, Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity (Vatican City, March 1993), p. 57.
It is the pervasive network of inter-relationships spoken of in Chapter IV which is the ground for any efficacy that intercession may have.
What has just been said confirms what was pointed out in Chapter IV and earlier in this chapter about the relation between faith and works.
Because of the above (cf. first sentence of Chapter IV, «The Role of the Church in the Modern World», beginning at para 40) the Council wanted to foster a respectful «dialogue» with the great mass of people outside the Church «acknowledging their positive values» (57).
Among the many references, I suggest the following: SDE 137 - 82 (see, e.g., 141); Man's Vision of God (Chicago: Willett, Clark & Company, 1941), p. 225, pp. 244 - 47, and p. 315; «Chance, Love, and Incompatibility,» in RSP 85 - 109 (see especially 94 and 98f; also see [in a later chapter] 118); TDG 193 «Abstraction: The Question of Nominalism,» chapter IV of CSPM 57 - 68 (see especially 61 - 64; also see [in an earlier chapter] 22f and [in a later] 122).
The only true essences or non-emergent universals, in Hartshorne's view, are metaphysical — ones that can not fail of exemplification (see Creative chapter IV).
We will discuss groups 1 and 2 here, 3 to 6 in our next chapter, and 7 in chapter IV.
This recalls what was said in Chapter IV about grace.
A History of Ancient Sanskrit Literature (London: Williams and Norgate, 1859), chapter IV and his Chips from a German Workshop (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
Chapter IV, Part 4, pp. 551; Howard Roark
He develops this point in particular with reference to «will,» e.g. in RS chapters IV and V; see also ED 379.)
There are important modifications in Whitehead's theory in his later, more metaphysical, writings; but these modifications only serve to emphasize that the development of such a theory remains a major task in his attempts at philosophical analysis (see especially chapters IV and VII in SMW and part IV in PR).1 In general, Whitehead constructs a theory that is reactionary in its analysis when compared with the theories of space - time structure in the special theory of relativity (STR) and in the general theory of relativity (GTR), 2 and that is in opposition to the theory of absolute space and absolute time in the Newtonian cosmology (see PNK 1 - 8; and PB part II, chapters II, III, and IV).
Let us now assume that this Teacher has made his appearance, that he is dead and buried, and that some time intervenes between Chapters IV and V. Likewise it sometimes happens in a comedy that several years elapse between two successive acts.

Not exact matches

Under?this silly scenario, the Treasury uses its powers (under?Title 31, Subtitle IV, 3A Chapter 51, Subchapter II, paragraph 5112 (k)?
He reported sarcastically that «there» were some members [at the Constitutional Convention] so unfashionable as to think that a belief of the existence of a Deity, and of a state of future rewards and punishments would be some security for the good conduct of our rulers, and that in a Christian country it would be at least decent to hold out some distinction between the professors of Christianity and downright infidelity or paganism» (IV: 642) This chapter also includes excerpts from state constitutions that imposed religious tests on government officers (Delaware, for example.
(Note that the final chapter of Part IV is entitled «Measurement.»)
3Adventures of Ideas, Part IV, especially the chapter «Truth and Beauty», can be interpreted as supporting the position that humans are creatures of appearance.
Thus the essentially metaphysical section is the chapter on «Extensive Connection» (PR IV, chapter 2: PW 43/37).
This task will be undertaken in Chapter V of Part IV» (PR 103 - 104).
The sensationalist principle, like the substance - quality mode of thought, is derivative from a misapprehension of the status of presentational immediacy (PR 119 ff., 179, 240, 263 - 66, 383, 387 - 89; AI, chapter 14, section IV; see IWE, chapters 1 and 2).
, 253; AI, chapter 14 section IV and chapter 14 as a whole; see IWE 44 - 55).
Although Whitehead does not define mass in Process and Reality, he presents the philosophical background for its preprojective origins in Chapter III, «The Order of Nature,» Sections IV through VII.
In fact, Locke asserts in book IV, chapter iii that all matter, insofar as it consists of active ultimate particles, is basically active.
19 Palter, in Whitehead's Philosophy of Science, chapters VIII, IX, and appendix IV, discusses the specific scientific and mathematical differences between the Einsteinian and the Whiteheadian formulations.
There are three distinction contexts in which Whitehead uses «efficacity»: (a) A passage on Bodily Efficacity which occurs in a very late chapter on «Strains» (PR IV.4 K), but which seems to pertain to a much earlier stratum (A?).
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