Sentences with phrase «encyclopaedia which»

In 48 Portraits realism is tempered by the black and white photo reproduction source from an encyclopaedia which makes these images seem both primitive and iconic, and perhaps closer to propaganda than portraiture.

Not exact matches

On Laplace's «demon» or «superhuman intelligence» to which «nothing would be uncertain and the future, as the past, would be present to its eyes,» cf. R. Harre, «Laplace, Simon Pierre de,» The Encyclopaedia of Philosophy, ed.
From The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, which can be taken to summarize intellectual orthodoxy at the time of its publication in 1979, one would gather that neo-Darwinian theory is as settled as Newtonian theory.
Up - to - date technical summaries on these stars can be found at: Jean Schneiders's Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia; the Astronomiches Rechen - Institut at Heidelberg's (ARICNS; the HIPPARCOS Catalogue using the VizieR Search Service mirrored from the Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg (CDS); NASA's ADS Abstract Service for the Astrophysics Data System; and the SIMBAD Astronomical Database mirrored from CDS, which may require an account to access.
As well as penning the blog equivalent of a running encyclopaedia, sorted into categories such as technique, training, recovery, racing and nutrition, Fleshman personally answers reader questions, which are archived for your reference.
In terms of other features, you'll find a casual dating advisor (which tells you how to have a fling and how to hide it from your partner), dating tips (depressing drawl about people becoming bored in relationships and how it's natural to wander off) and a «Love Encyclopaedia» which is basically a child's guide to sex.
Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc. ~ which has published their encyclopedias for more than 200 years ~ has announced that they will cease publishing their print editions ~ focusing on their digital versions of their encyclopedia ~ instead.
Times are a changin for Encyclopaedia Britannica, which is primarily known for their 32 volume set.
By incorporating content from the comprehensive Encyclopaedia of Science Fiction — which the publisher has made available in its entirety online for free — along with a forum, and a blog, Gollancz has turned an online catalogue into a go - to site for science fiction fans.
It is a mark of Nana Oforiatta - Ayim's ambition that she has created the Cultural Encyclopaedia Project, which aims to map and archive historical and contemporary culture across Africa in 54 volumes (one for every country in Africa).
References to the Book of Imaginary Beings (1957) for example, Jorge Luis Borges's and Margarita Guerrero's aniconic encyclopaedia of monster creatures, can be recognised in the works Sky Blue Licorne Horses (2014) or Peritio (2013), which depict strange and otherworldly animal figures.
If the new encyclopaedia progresses as planned, it should fill about 300 million pages, which, if lined up end to end, would be more than 52,000 miles long, able to stretch twice around the world at the equator.
Corporate sponsorship was the next stop, Noble explains, which is how a team of lawyers from White & Case and bankers from The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) spent a Saturday applying colour to an «encyclopaedia wall» of wildlife.
Jur were necessarily inspired by Halsbury's, as the earliest US legal encyclopaedia is taken to be Thornton» s University Encyclopedia of Law (1883), which of course predates Halsbury's.
Two US encyclopaedias may have been influenced by Kent's Commentaries (4 volumes 1826 - 1830), which was definitely inspired by Blackstone's Commentaries, which became the authoritative version of english common law as adopted and modified in the United States.
In short Dan is a walking encyclopaedia of digital evidence which he has masterfully crammed into a mere 330 pages.
Today's Register has a venture that builds beyond similar scepticism about the reliability of an encyclopaedia on which anyone can post.
Thursday, December 15th, 2005 One of our open - source savvy articling students, Jon Smithen, just drew my attention to a piece in this week's Nature which strongly suggests that Wikipedia's integrity in the scientific field approaches that of the conventional encyclopaedias.
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