For to account for change we must introduce an indefinite if not infinite number of «extraneous relations» (i.e., relations other
than the fundamental relations) of the form M (p, x, t) which indicate that particle p is at point x at instant t.
Not exact matches
Social media is fuelling a
fundamental shift in labour
relations and corporate communications, and is showing it can do more
than just complicate negotiations — it can affect control of major business announcements like divestments, layoffs, mergers and acquisitions.
With a straightforward logic, he argues that insofar as mercy implies
relation to imperfect creatures, it can not possibly be one of God's essential attributes, and that therefore «divine justice must be more
fundamental than divine mercy.»
The
fundamental reason is that the role of women as relational caretakers has been exercised for the nurturing of hetero -
relations rather
than gynaffectionate
relations.
This is due to the fact that the properties of space and time are, or at least appear to us, quite similar and, furthermore, that the spatial
relations seem to us as somehow more
fundamental, more solid, and easier to grasp
than the elusive temporal
relations.
As a corollary to this I learned that identification has precedence over evaluation — that the standard of objectivity is primary and the standard of value derivative, or to put this in somewhat more general terms, the normativity involved in epistemology is more
fundamental than any normativity that arises in
relation to ethics.
Starting with the general effects of the Charter between private parties, the Advocate General emphasized that Article 51 (1) of the Charter which speaks of application of the Charter to the Union and the Member States does not e contrario exclude effects on private parties by not mentioning them (para 29); not only do declarations of
fundamental rights typically not address private parties, but Article 51 (1) also primarily addresses the completely different problem of the reach of the binding effect of the Charter for organs of the Union and the Member States rather
than its effects in the
relations between private parties (paras 30 - 31).
Smlouvyo 4, paragraph 2 of the European Union and Article 3, paragraph 1 of Council Regulation (EC) No 1408/71 (or Article 4 of the European Parliament and Council Regulation (EC) No 883/2004), the fact that the Czech authorities could zaokolností what vprojednávané things, provide preferential treatment (kdávce compensatory allowance at the age where the amount of benefits granted under Article 20 of the Treaty concluded 29th 10th 1992 between the Czech and the Slovak Republic on Social Security and Council Regulation (EC) No 1408 to 1471 (Regulation č.883 / 2004) lower
than the dose that would be received, if the pension calculated under the laws of the Czech Republic), only citizens of the Czech Republic, if ktakovému treatment creates a
fundamental right to security in old age unloaded by the Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic specifically in
relation kdobám pension acquired vzaniklé CSFR and perceived as part of the national identity, and, if such treatment is stonarušit right of free movement of workers as a
fundamental right of the Union, a situation kdybyposkytnutí reciprocal treatment accorded to nationals of EU Member States kteřítakézískali vzaniklé CSFR equivalent of pension security led kvýznamnému threat from the financial stability of the pension fund of the Czech Republic?