Sentences with phrase «appears in the second paragraph»

This quote appears in the second paragraph of a report prepared by Robyn Allan, apparently for the Alberta Federation of Labour, as it is included as part of their -LSB-...]

Not exact matches

This appears to be the only conclusion to be drawn from the real and underlying message of the piece, conveyed by its final one - sentence paragraph: «In short, Summorum Pontificum weakens the unity of the Church by failing to support the foundational insights of the Second Vatican Council»: the most «foundational» of all those insights, it goes without saying, being the absolute discontinuity between the preconciliar and post-conciliar Churches.
Indeed, that kind of analysis shows that the section in which it is located — the third section of the first chapter in the second part of Process and Reality (II.I.3)-- is mostly made of insertions.34 However, given its thematic continuity with materials that belong to the original version of that same section and of the previous section (II.I.2), the first full paragraph of Process 46 appears to belong to that original version.35 More precisely, Whitehead had clearly stated, in section II.I.2, his option for a «theory embracing the notions of «actual entity», «giveness», and «process»» (Process 43), a theory in which «the ontological principle is the first stage» (Process 43).
In the above article the words: cellular, hormones, brain and nervous system appear by the second paragraph with absolutely no references to explain how these biological terms or processes relate to birth or birth trauma.
It's a bit hard to get past the rather childish namecalling, but I'd start by noting that Monckton's first obvious and unequivocal error appears in only the second paragraph:
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