A degree of priority must logically be given to the funding of their primary home. |
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Since this stand-off is logically insoluble, despair is indeed understandable. |
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He did not, in particular, have evidence that made the uncontroverted medical evidence logically unsupportable. |
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For Arius, it was logically possible to talk about God without talking of him as Father. |
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The lines between majoritarianism, nationalism, and fascism have been defiantly blurred, and quite logically. |
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The Page report logically proposed that only Dolfwood and Rhodesian teak be harvested for timber. |
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The right to join an association logically must include the right not to do so. |
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So, we must logically have some control over which management tools we use. |
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Besides being a hugely unjustifiable leap logically, it is also a ridiculously broad and sweeping statement. |
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What it does is to corral the salmon into cages and then, logically, it has to feed them so that they will grow. |
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It is logically possible for me to bench-press eight hundred pounds, but I can't do it. |
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Nonetheless, more of us should know that approaching a problem systematically and logically is not a weed that chokes creativity. |
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Some have claimed that even if future events have a truth value, they are logically unknowable. |
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His arguments lead logically to the principle and practice of separation of church and state. |
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Cattle mutilations are logically explainable only as Extraterrestrial activities. |
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The naked, starving, unhoused Griffin would, logically, seem to be that way not because of any fatal flaw in his science. |
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In short it's a logically incoherent mishmash that seems to rumble along despite it's evident inconsistencies and flaws. |
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He argues, surprisingly, that the notion of enforcing God's law is logically incoherent. |
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Moreover the capital controversy revealed that important aspects of aggregate neoclassical theory were logically incoherent. |
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The thought that the process theory is logically incoherent comes from two sources. |
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A law can do much practical good even if it is logically incoherent, and the ADA certainly falls in that category. |
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At least in this case, the valid phrases are much commoner than the logically incoherent ones. |
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However, that sort of position is logically untenable and morally indefensible. |
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This is a fancy piece of software and so the company logically went for a patent. |
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When expectant mothers voice such concerns to me, I gently encourage them to examine the issue logically. |
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We assert that it is culturally ethnocentric and logically absurd to relegate a universal phenomenon to the pathological domain. |
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It's a catalogue of common mistakes people make when trying to think logically, and is of great help when double-checking your own thinking. |
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An artist who saw a square as an oblong, logically would paint that oblong as a square. |
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The logically prior science within the theorematical sciences is nomology, the object of which is the notion of law. |
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While I know logically that it's safest to play hard to get, to keep my heart locked away so that no one can hurt me, that's just not who I am. |
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Overall, this book covers graphics programming in Perl in a logically ordered and balanced manner. |
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A dangling participle is a participle or a participial phrase that does not clearly and logically modify any word or phrase in a sentence. |
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My mind works rapidly, changeably, flexibly, logically, curiously, superficially, eclectically. |
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A final reason for adopting a tolerant stance towards others was the necessity to think logically about the unreasonableness of intolerant views. |
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He thinks so logically that he is more like an Apollonian scholar than a Dionysian artist. |
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In the textbook situation, the diagnosis proceeds logically and linearly to a specific formula. |
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Hypothesis 2 predicted that the profiles would be related logically to other risk-taking variables. |
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An argument is logically valid if and only if its conclusion is a logical consequence of its premises. |
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Both the French and English announcements logically featured a narrative of their claimants' actions and intentions. |
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The results of the research confirmed my attraction toward movement and light, which led quite logically to the publications that followed. |
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The show opened logically enough with a chronological arrangement of the first three rooms, followed by two thematically ordered ones. |
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An independent chain took over in 1940 and, being the early days of the Second World War, logically renamed it the Victory. |
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To understand the character of a place, many architects logically start with the owners, who usually have a strong feel for their land. |
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You are methodical and orderly, solving problems logically, and wasting little time on superficial matters. |
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If I follow his argument correctly, then logically we shall need to metricate all other things such as time, for example. |
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The book offers few broad programmatic prescriptions, but several follow logically from the book's evidence. |
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The subject matter of the book progresses logically and with an impressive comprehensiveness given the moderate size of the treatment. |
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It is a logically valid and empirically sound conclusion as our senses and mind are nowhere near perfect. |
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This follows from the fact that logically equivalent statements always are assigned the same probability. |
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The conspiracy theory that logically follows from Darren's findings is so delicious that I find myself longing for it to be true. |
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The chosen shape was a genuine free-form structure impossible to analyze logically. |
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Despite numerous red herrings, there's no way to logically deduce the culprit's identity. |
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A proposition's being true is therefore logically connected with the fulfillment of those conditions. |
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It seems the Gemara does not reject that certain Mitzvot are logically correct. |
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They need no gamesplaying skill other than pointing a mouse, clicking a button and the ability to think logically. |
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The book is lucidly and logically written and presented, and is therefore a very easy read. |
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Though it's hard work to think precisely, lucidly, logically, it's also enormously invigorating. |
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But at some point, you must reach what one might call a moral axiom that you can't logically demonstrate. |
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Such musical notions as octaves, chords, scales, and keys can all be demystified and understood logically using simple mathematics. |
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To say that a given sentence is logically possible is to say that there is a model that satisfies it. |
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Finally, science moves forward because scientists seek to develop logically consistent theories. |
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The company supports these bands all year round and logically they aren't backward in coming forward on the day they can return the favour. |
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The action is unexplainable, because it is unconnected to any logically or temporally prior event. |
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Contributory negligence could reduce the monetary quantification of the defendant's liability, but it cannot legally or logically nullify it. |
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We can rationally assess the cause and effects from behavior to emotion and logically adjust. |
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Eminent mathematicians once claimed to prove logically that short-wave radio was impossible. |
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Crews is correct in pointing out that a materialist view of the world is logically incompatible with each and every brand of theism. |
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The 'middle-of-the-road' statist cannot logically say that there are 'many forms' of unjustified coercion. |
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Determined to keep my head and not let my customary timidness send me into a panic, I took a deep breath and tried to think logically. |
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In a modern society, such knowledge logically ought to be valued most by the upwardly mobile middle class, who can use it to get ahead. |
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It appears that, even though it is logically possible for space to be curved, as a matter of fact it is flat. |
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As long as the extended number system is logically consistent, which it is, there is no harm in using it as a model. |
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We should rely only on those properties of a figure that either are explicitly assumed or follow logically from the assumptions and axioms. |
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What seemed at first to be a paradox is in fact a logically sound proof about contexts. |
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Euclid made repeated use of axioms that he had not stated, without which his arguments are not logically valid. |
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This is a problem of government finance that is logically separate from the definition of the monetary unit. |
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The concept can be fixed logically only by its relations to other concepts. |
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As he pointed out in the late 19th century, many of those arguments are logically incorrect. |
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Someone could logically argue that a person who spends their days watching independent gangsta would be starved for a real live Hollywood movie. |
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Being practical, she looks at the situation logically and thinks that Jane should guard her feelings. |
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I have never found it necessary to hide that I am able to think logically, that I distinguish sharply between right and wrong terms. |
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They could not, if they reasoned logically from such false premises, come to any other conclusion. |
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It is clear that he has thought long and logically about the history and present problems of tap dance, and he knows how to express his thoughts. |
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He experienced instant success and fame without ever having been claimed by the artistic family to which he ought logically to have belonged. |
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Shown in anamorphic widescreen, this vampire flick logically takes place mostly at night. |
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It is the piece on the show from which many of the lesser works logically grow. |
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As he explained quite logically, he was a nothing for so many years on his way to the top, that all he has to do is think back to those days for a shot of instant humility. |
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I'm under the impression that contrafactual definiteness and locality then are logical contradictions so thus not logically possible as well as physically impossible. |
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Make sure that each article organically and logically flows to the next. |
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This activity requires students to logically think through the steps necessary to install a landscape and use multiple resources to research materials. |
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Now he is collected and thinks logically about all that has happened. |
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Why does war in the Middle East today arouse feelings that war in the Balkans did not, if logically there is little or nothing to choose between them? |
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Hence, God is a logically contingent being and so could have not-existed. |
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He emphasized that criteria for judging qualitative research should flow logically from the theoretical underpinnings and purposes of that research. |
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Hence, complete hereditarianism about within-group differences is logically compatible with complete environmentalism about between-group differences. |
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I explore the consequences of the logically heterogeneous character of exception phrase NPs for proof-theoretic accounts of quantifiers in natural language. |
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Every now and then, he writes these hysterical, factually insupportable, logically inconsistent screeds against some looming threat to civil liberties in the United States. |
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This is a barley variety that is inferior in grain, hull, and straw nutritive qualities that would logically have a negative impact on animal performance. |
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The therapist also coaches spouses to logically analyze their cognitions. |
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Thus his doubts are unreal, not simply because they are logically irresoluble doubts, but because they amount to the rejection of the whole conceptual scheme. |
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One might logically anticipate that golfers will get more out of the film than those who shun the sport, but I don't think that's an accurate assumption. |
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The exclusion of political views from public debate logically extends into the openly violent suppression of public actions based upon those views. |
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The only other place the treasure may logically be is in northern New Mexico, not far from where Fenn lives today. |
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Alternatively, the premises logically entail the conclusion. |
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That's an important issue and one that strikes to the heart of why we train college students to think logically, research carefully and write incisively. |
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In reality, plasticity and innateness are almost logically separate. |
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It's a compromise between two logically irreconcilable positions. |
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Given the facts in this case, the jury's verdict is logically incoherent. |
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As a result, the dollar must decline. The result of a declining dollar is logically a move towards other currencies which in itself is a form of Gresham's law. |
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Meditating could help you pause and think logically before your next big purchase or investment. |
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The authors offer some propositions which I take to be logically flawed. |
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But the story is presented in a disjointed series of confusing flashbacks that work too hard to logically explain an ultimately illogical premise. |
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Indeed, strictly speaking, no such information will ever logically entail that there is an external world, in anything like the way we normally imagine. |
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The result is safe seats that lead to apathy and voter impotence, leading logically to ever-declining voter turnout. |
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Defendants would surely not insist that a newspaper must base its report of committee meetings solely on the official minutes, yet that mode of practice would follow logically from defendants' asservation. |
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Transcending the nugacity end of the continuum, we would enter into the area of necessarily, analytically, logically, notationally, demonstratively, absolutely-true propositions or tautologies. |
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Having edited two notable collections on kingship and queenship, Anne Duggan has now logically turned her attention towards the next rank down in the hierarchy. |
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It's interesting that everyone, prescriptivists and anti-prescriptivists alike, seems to think that hypercorrection is wrong, morally as well as logically. |
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I suppose that this shows up how physical, Newtonian stuff can lead you quite logically to the Alice-in-Wonderland world of relativity and quantum physics. |
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If two conjunctions are logically equivalent, it does not follow that the conjuncts of one are logically equivalent to the conjuncts of the other. |
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On the other hand, two sentences have the same intension if they are logically equivalent, i.e., their equivalence is due to the semantic rules of the language. |
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One can have rigorous, logically sound formal systems based on diagrams. |
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The mathematical concepts of set theory or even probability theory are useful tools for logically and thoroughly analyzing the outcome of an election. |
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The story drives the game from mission to mission and moves logically through the arrival of government shock troops right up to the helicopter climax. |
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It is very difficult to make a monkey out of policy makers who can read and write and can argue a case logically. |
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He argued that Jesus made several implicit claims to divinity, which would logically exclude that claim. |
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They logically extend earlier Scottish lists such as the Munros, Corbetts, Grahams and Donalds. |
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Some adjectives, the absolute or ungradable adjectives do not appear to logically allow degrees. |
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Both the concepts and operational definition flow logically from the hypothesis area in research method area. |
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In both senses, an axiom is any mathematical statement that serves as a starting point from which other statements are logically derived. |
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Participants who reappraised the scenarios logically were less likely to make intuition-based moral judgments. |
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Opponents at the time saw evidence that women were too emotional and could not think as logically as men. |
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If we build logically upwards from a few indubitables, the whole system must remain correct. |
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An alliance with these two counties was then logically sealed by this wedding and the concessions of manors. |
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Does this figure not translate much more logically into an eighth note preceding a quarter note? |
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Read aloud, the Jamesian sentences have a logically organized yet fluid and discursive elegance. |
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And so, logically enough, they screwed it up, and tragically. |
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The Dark should logically offer the perfect anatomization of the stable relations between men in Ireland at the mid-century. |
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The combination of characters contributing to the supercharacter need not be logically or genetically related. |
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The investigation into the murder unfolds believably, and the strands of the story are logically drawn together as the pace increases. |
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Market economies do not logically presuppose the existence of private ownership of the means of production. |
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That is, we do not see space directly or deduce its form logically using the laws of optics. |
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Hume, I felt, was perfectly right in pointing out that induction cannot be logically justified. |
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The law of reason and consequent he considered not as different, but merely as expressing metaphysically what these express logically. |
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In one sense it is irrefutable and logically true, in the second sense it is factually true and falsifiable. |
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Thus, in Best Laid Plans readers would logically conclude that the marshaler was to some extent responsible for the mishap. |
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Winning the Man of the Match in the final is logically noteworthy, as this indicates the player deemed to have played the biggest part in the World Cup final. |
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This leads logically to the Woody Allen syndrome, in which 33 years of psychoanalysis only produce rationalizations for having an affair with one's de facto stepdaughter. |
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Though argued from scripture, and hence logically consequent to sola scriptura, this is the guiding principle of the work of Luther and the later reformers. |
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A hideous fatalism, which ought, logically, to petrify your volition. |
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Initially the routes, although physically connected at Ingleton, were not logically connected, as the LNWR and Midland could not agree on sharing the use of Ingleton station. |
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This application of their philosophizings is perfectly legitimate, and the conclusions drawn from these premises are logically and even morally just. |
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A penguin or a clucking hen logically might satisfy the ascertainable criteria of birdness but remain somehow inapt for excavating focal meanings. |
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The left, and collectivists, are most logically the offspring of the plodders while innovative early mankind's likely descendants are the maritime adventurers and strivers. |
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Multiple bits moving in macroprocess join triplet macrounits which logically organize information networks encoding units in structures enclosing triplet code. |
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Expanding that definition, each XML document contains a unique instance of logically structured data, plus additional instructions for the parser and the application. |
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We also wanted to determine whether the absorbance of individual layers could be added to obtain the total system absorbance as logically inferred from Beer's law. |
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The eutaxiological argument so popular with Newton and his disciples, on the other hand, is logically simpler than the teleological one and hides no linguistic subtleties. |
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Plato believed that deduction would simply follow from premises, hence he focused on maintaining solid premises so that the conclusion would logically follow. |
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