They are also expected to prepare the church that they are working
for occasions such as weddings, baptisms and christenings.
They are usually employed by spas, salons and barber shops where they perform specialized treatments
for occasions such as weddings and parties.
Her paintings are populated by black and brown persons outfitted in a mix of Western and Nigerian clothes, the African fabrics made specially
for occasions such as the political campaign of the artist's mother.
Specializing in Tours
for all occasions such as: hens and bucks, birthdays, corporate functions and group rides from one to sixty plus.
In the era of Raj, many Maharajahs had their own personal carriages draped in luxury used
for occasions such as state visits, nuptial sojourns and hunting trips.
IDFC Bank personal loans are a multipurpose loan which can be taken
for any occasions such as weddings, home renovations, higher education funding, emergency health issues etc..
Often they can be the perfect date to a theater play or a Broadway show, and a good traveling companion
for occasions such as conventions and business trips.
This watch is suitable
for all occasions such as casual days / nights and formal events.
For occasions such as winter holidays, Mother's Day and birthdays, a necklace is a great idea to brighten someone's day.
Standard strollers are good
for occasions such as a casual stroll in the park and they can fit everything your child needs to stay happy throughout the walk.
Finally, be sure your child understands that she needs to consider what's appropriate dress
for occasions such as weddings, funerals, banquets, church, or other special events.
I don't typically have fresh mint around, but I keep a small bag of it in my freezer
for occasions such as these.
Don't worry — a daycare service is being introduced into the Whitehouse, complete with a naughty step
for occasions such as this.
The church - a place of worship for the Queen and her family - is often at the heart of royal events, with the Windsors gathering there each year for Easter services, and in the past
for occasions such as the service to mark the Duke of Edinburgh's 90th birthday.
For a lot of parents, a cash gift is the preferred present
for occasions such as birthdays, Christmas etc..
Fortunately (or maybe unfortunately) people are getting lazier and when a one stop shop presents
itself for occasions such as Christmas shopping, it is a very tempting proposition.
Now,
for an occasion such as this, I'm all about overdoing it with the accessories.
Not exact matches
There are a few ways to tip house cleaners,
such as waiting
for holidays and special
occasions to tip more generously.
Of course, you can always boost the holiday spirit with a special offer or discount, especially if you can tie it in to the
occasion being celebrated,
such as offering a romantic dinner, chocolates or a spa service
for Valentine's Day.
For example, through events
such as mini sailboat races in Central Park or black - tie ice skating in front of the Statue of Liberty Noto seeks to plant the idea in customers» minds that his Prosecco creates an
occasion out of the ordinary and makes life sparkle.
Now the bell is saved
for special
occasions,
such as the contests designed to pull nonsalespeople onto the sales floor.
While I do enjoy this pie, it's better suited
for other
occasions such as Easter or a random pie craving.
On the
occasion where you have to markup your products
for less this keystone amount (
such as when the competition is a little more fierce) be aware that taking this road could potentially leave you with very little at the end of the day.
Mr. Buffett will on
occasion utilize Berkshire personnel and / or have Berkshire pay
for minor items
such as postage or phone calls that are personal.
In fact, I used to give my parents and siblings stock gifts
for special
occasions such as birthdays or Christmas.
On several
occasions, the car handed control back to the driver when a situation was too complex
for the car's algorithms,
such as when a construction vehicle was parked backward in the right lane.
It provides
for the ceremonies and traditions that serve to bind a society and to make
such chaotically emotional
occasions as weddings and funerals solemn and orderly.
Other slower - acting
occasions such as those constituting human temporal consciousness will attend only to the larger movements taking place in the electromagnetic field because only these larger movements are truly important
for their self - constitution.
Let us think of process philosophy
as a method designed
for use on
such occasions, evoked by
such disputes
as an instrument of reasonable good sense and creative imagination, one that will serve to fix what had broken down and to get things running smoothly once again.
Now this is Leibnizian, and the source of the trouble is that no provision has been made
for a dimension of divine freedom directed toward concrete individuals
as such, a dimension of freedom which lies within the «weaving» itself of God's feelings
for actual
occasions.
In any case, in the following paragraphs I will first analyze Whitehead's remarks in Process and Reality on societies
as the necessary environment
for the ongoing emergence of actual
occasions and then show how this analysis throws unexpected light on Whitehead's further explanation of the hierarchy of societies within the current world order, in particular, the difference between inorganic and organic societies, and, among organic societies, those with a «soul» or «living person» and those without
such a central organ of control.
It is the society
as such which provides the context
for the concrescence of its constituent
occasions.
For some interpreters, such as John Cobb, time is in the transition; for others, time is in both the transition across occasions and in the becoming of the occasion itse
For some interpreters,
such as John Cobb, time is in the transition;
for others, time is in both the transition across occasions and in the becoming of the occasion itse
for others, time is in both the transition across
occasions and in the becoming of the
occasion itself.
A prehension likewise is «a prehensive
occasion; and a prehensive
occasion is the most concrete finite entity, conceived
as what it is in itself and
for itself, and not from its aspect, in the essence of another
such occasion» (SMW 104f).
There is a great mystery here, but The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that «God permitted
such painful upheavals
as the angels» fall and man's sin only
as occasions and means
for displaying all the power of his arm and the whole measure of the love he wanted to give the world» (CCC 760).
and that «God permitted
such painful upheavals
as the angels» fall and man's sin only
as occasions and means
for displaying all the power of his arm and the whole measure of the love he wanted to give the world.»
The Church teaches that «God permitted
such painful upheavals
as the angels» fall and man's sin only
as occasions and means
for displaying all the power of his arm and the whole measure of the love he wanted to give the world» (CCC 760).
Whitehead nowhere in Process and Reality argues explicitly
for such intermediate entities, but it is interesting that he maintains a gradation of enduring objects, from the one extreme of the atomic material body to the opposite extreme of the presiding thread: «But just
as the difference between living and non-living
occasions is not sharp, but more or less, so the distinction between an enduring object which is an atomic material body and one which is not, is again more or less.»
For most churches, it has almost doubled the festivals by adding
occasions such as Baptism of the Lord, Transfiguration and All Saints» Day.
Various promissory notes are given (PR 32 / 47),
such as the sole explicit discussion of «the «superjective» nature of God» (PR 88 / 135; but see PS 3:228 f), and the famous «fourth phase» of the last two pages of Process and Reality, which proposes a «particular providence
for particular
occasions.»
He answers with exact fidelity to these inward drawings, either by an elevation of his heart toward God, or by a meek and loving regard to Him; or by
such words
as love forms upon these
occasions,
as for instance, My God, behold me, wholly Thine: Lord, make me according to Thy heart.
It is thus not necessary
for my argument
for me to introduce more technical parts of the Whiteheadian scheme
such as the difference between a physical entity (an
occasion dominated by physical prehensions) and a material entity (a society of physical
occasions) and to distinguish correspondingly between the physical properties of individual
occasions and the material properties of societies of
occasions.
Corpuscular societies consisting of low — level
occasions,
such as rocks and billiard balls, display little originality, thereby providing ideal instances of efficient causality
for mechanistic science.
Either God's valuation is less real than the data that it unifies (if viewed
as an element of the process of concrescence) or, if fully real, it is
such only
as a datum that is available
for future
occasions or future moments of God's experience.
«Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only
such as is good
for building up,
as fits the
occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear.»
Initially, Whitehead might seem to identify actual
occasions as res vera to the exclusion of persons; however, careful thought, along with the addition of other Whiteheadian ideas,
such as organic unities, casts doubt on the suspicion that
for Whitehead only actual
occasions are res vera.
Although Whitehead's Category of the Ultimate is meant to lessen the distance, so to speak, between actual
occasions and societies of actual
occasions, the application of Whitehead's metaphysics to persons seems troublesome; the ancient metaphysical problem of appearance and reality seems to lurk in the background,
for the philosopher who wishes to identify res vera in the system soon finds herself perplexed, asking if the subjects of experience are actual
occasions, societies of
occasions, or sentient beings,
such as persons and animals.1
But to these he adds
such uniquely Japanese symbols
as the tai — a much - prized fish in Japan, regarded
as especially appropriate
for ceremonial
occasions.
Such actual
occasions are,
as Whitehead says at PR 269 / 177, «vehicles
for receiving,
for storing in a napkin, and
for restoring without loss or gain.»
The distinction arises because in some instances a group of
occasions,
such as,
for example, a particular enduring entity, could have retained the dominant features of its defining characteristic in the general environment, apart from the structured society.