Sentences with phrase «merely supposition»

This is merely a supposition but perhaps the acceptance of a faxed document with a signature is deemed more acceptable because there is an assumption that there exists a «hard - copy» of the document with a «penned» signature ready to be used for the purposes of verification and / or authentication.
For, actually, Peter, the «body» is merely a supposition, a working hypothesis, if you will.
This is not reason or logic it is merely supposition.
It's merely supposition at this point.»

Not exact matches

12 Even on the assumption of a Vitalism of essentially higher principles of that kind, which raise the organic, as an intrinsically higher level of reality, above merely inorganic matter, and constitute biology as an independent science, and even if we regard the entelechy factor as simple and indivisible, there would only be an eductio e potentia materiae when a new living being came into existence, if we excluded creation in this case in the way it is exemplified in the human soul, though that is not very easy to prove, and at the same time rejected the not at all absurd supposition that in the generation of new life below the human level what happens is only the extension of the entelechial function of one and the same vital principle to a new position in space and time within inorganic matter.
What I was merely doing is taking where we are at right now and actually expanding on that — supposition: it is possible that this collection of billions of galaxies may be part of billions of Big Bangs, which could be part of the «universe» which is part of billions of universes, which is part of a multiverse, which is part of billions of multiverses... on and on and on...
The superiority of the Mass over the Old Testament sacrifices is fullyestablished by the Real Presence of Jesus under the sacramental species (in contrast to his Old Testament presence merely as a sign) even without the supposition that the Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament has, in whatever sense, a quality of woundedness.
As for the last named supposition, the self - irony of the Reason, I shall attempt to delineate it merely by a stroke or two, without raising any question of its being historical.
The supposition might well be — and often is — that statutory instruments merely dot the «i's and cross the «t's that are left un-dotted and uncrossed Parliament itself.
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