Parkville is familiar
ground in a different sense for Uncle Jim Berg who worked for more than 40 years in Victoria's legal system, including as founding CEO for the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service (VALS).
Not exact matches
11 As applied to God, Tillich is correct: God is not a being, but the
ground of being.12 Since both becoming and being are actual, though
in different senses, that which is actual but not a being can act.
The
sense in which the pre - or sub-Christian religions are civil religions is somewhat
different and necessitates the application of still another concept, adapted from the language of music, of the «religious
ground base.»
So the pro side of root chakra energy, when or root chakra is balanced and we feel it, we feel communal, and we feel
grounded, and that's why we see
in different parts of the world they have this strong
sense of tribe and community that we are actually lacking
in.
I think the universe holds such a potential for great multi player Large fleets space ship battles were never ever promised and
in most previews even journalists said most space battles are very straight forward I agree with you on controls I agree with you on planets and plants I believe the game requires too big of
grind The game lacks variety The game lacks a clear vision and clear story All of the planets bases look the same Every planet you do the same thing So as you see I am not defending the game
in any
sense but I do have an issue with gamers having this imaginations of what they wanted and the developers had a
different vision http://www.geek.com/games/n... Please read this article.
Although each course has to have a starting post and ending flagpole, everything that goes between is up to you; paint your platforms
in whichever shape you want, choose from six
different themes — from
ground, to underwater, to the hellish castle themes — and let your imagination go wild, spicing it up with custom sound effects and anything else that might make
sense.
Beyond this common
ground, we fall on
different points of the spectrum between James's pragmatic approach, where he proposes giving decision makers information as our «best guess» about future outcomes nonetheless, and Lenny's highly skeptical position — namely, there's no hope
in approximating the real world
in any useful
sense.
«It has long been settled that the interpretation of a document is a matter of law for the court, save
in those cases where there is some
ground for thinking that the words were used by the writer — and understood by the reader —
in a special
sense different from their ordinary meaning.»