Sentences with phrase «rules governing things»

There are rules governing things like the size of your cash value savings versus the policy death benefit and the repayment of policy loans etc..

Not exact matches

So just as it would seem to be impossible for any earthly government to exist without a standing military, without violence toward enemies, and without governing rules for order and peace which include death to traitors and some form of capital punishment, so also God had to include such things in the earthly government which He set up in Israel.
Moreover, objectivity does not rule thought; human imagination, valuation and social location govern how we identify and classify things — and thus, how we construct contexts for comparison.
One thing we know is that Kim will not solve this Kantian problem with a Kantian solution: The idea that theoretical reason deals with a merely apparent world, largely created by mind itself is ruled out by Kim's physicalist assumption that «the world is fundamentally a physical world governed by physical law» (SM xv).
The old rules that governed the ordering of power no longer guarantee the truth of things.
But I repeat, we know that it is not by human will that the Emperor rules here below, but solely by the invincible decree of our God who governs all things
Nevertheless, just as in science there are some overarching governing rules of the universe which tend to be active in all situations and events, so also in trying to understand some of the bad things that happen in life, there seem to be some overarching rules which guide and govern these actions.
Nevertheless, if we understand some of the larger variables and governing rules that are at work, we can arrive at something close to an answer for why bad things happen.
The governing bodies of the USGA and R&A are attempting to simplify the rule book to account for things like, you know, intent — but that won't take effect until 2019 at the earliest.
Because gyroscopes move in three dimensions, if you connect them with springs and spin them with motors, you can observe all kinds of things about the rules that govern how objects move together.
Tiny tree roots may seem like a small thing to be focusing on, but Susan E. Trumbore of the University of California at Irvine and Julia B. Gaudinski of the University of California at Santa Cruz note in an accompanying commentary that «unless we recognize that root behavior is as complex as that of its counterparts above ground, the rules governing allocation of carbon to roots and the role of roots in soil carbon cycling will remain well - kept secrets.»
God rules and governs all events, including the free acts of men and their external circumstances, and directs all things to their appointed ends for His glory.
As is the case with so many things, the rules and regulations that govern our industry have become so overwhelming that the concentration on administrative requirements saps our resources.
Natalie Dower (b. 1931, London, UK) works in the knowledge that the growth of every living thing is governed by mathematical rules.
No one is actually directing things, but there are sets of rules that govern behaviour (e.g., ethics, the scientific method, peer review to verify that the science described is factual and accurate).
The last thing lawyers need, O'Keefe suggests, are ethics rules governing blogs written by lawyers and judges who know nothing about them.
Read the whole thing, but his punch line (s) is: Are you interested in pursuing Justice, in making the world / your country / your state a place governed by the Rule of Law, freer from predators and safer from tyrants than it currently is?
The single thing that can be said with certainty about each of these lawyers is that they are all governed by the LSUC and are subject to the exact same Rules of Professional Conduct.
These rules govern such things as how a lawsuit is commenced, the types and content of documents that can (or must) be filed, the various deadlines that attorneys (and self - represented litigants!)
I have NO idea how things work in the UK, but here in the US, there are special (usually less formal) rules governing small claims that make them more friendly to consumers claiming an action against a business.
They'll typically govern things like what types of pets are allowed, not allowed (i.e., species, size, weight, number etc.), restricted areas on the property, and fines they may incur for violating the rules or bylaws.
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