A casual reading of the passage might suggest that Descartes offers a naturalistic solution to the problem, in the form of a continuity test. |
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One of its manifestations was naturalistic sweeps of winter aconite, bluebells, daffodils or anemones multiplying by the thousands in woodlands. |
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While the film looks realistic, naturalistic, it is still a film and tells a story. |
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Although box and yews can be clipped into formal shapes, most shade plants appear at home in that naturalistic setting. |
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The garden designer Gertrude Jekyll was a great fan and favoured naturalistic planting companions such as heaths Erica and rock roses Cistus. |
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For naturalistic plantings, lay bulbs out in informal masses with curved borders and asymmetrical shapes. |
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Instead, we have found that our history fits the naturalistic world of science. |
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It is this-worldly or naturalistic because ultimate authority is located in humanity, not in God or the super-empirical. |
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The Minoans produced gems of a different style, with designs of warriors, gods, and naturalistic animals. |
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An emphasis on naturalistic surface detail was in reaction against the blandness of much Neoclassical sculpture. |
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In this, we have taken a step closer towards a naturalistic world-view that is able to dispense with spirits, ghosts and gods. |
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Also, the processes involved are supposed to be naturalistic and undesigned. |
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Finally, a naturalistic worldview is one that has no supernatural or mystical element to it. |
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These are people who have a naturalistic worldview, free of supernatural and mystical elements. |
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Discourse analysis of this type involves the transcription and qualitative analysis of speech samples derived from naturalistic speech contexts. |
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By the mid-60s, his works had become more naturalistic, more ornithologically precise, and more topographically accurate. |
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Park's naturalistic depiction of brutal violence and sadistic torture often make for uncomfortable viewing. |
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In the past, many Yoruba treated the naturalistic representation of a living person with ambivalence for two main reasons. |
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The exhibition portrays cross-cultural spirituality and socio-historical references in naturalistic contemporary patterns. |
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What we need is realism, the naturalistic panorama of a cityscape unfolding. |
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The direction, too, is smart and understated and is helped by the film's clear, naturalistic cinematography. |
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Native Son is a fine example of the American novel in the naturalistic tradition. |
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Munch eschewed the naturalistic approach of Krogh, and incorporated expressionist tendencies in his work. |
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Having begun as a poet he turned to prose and resolved to follow Zola's naturalistic experiments. |
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He returned to Prague in 1920 and in his later work developed a more naturalistic style based on folk art. |
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However, if you're like me and like either fast-paced, dare-to-be different theatre or at least naturalistic theatre done well, steer clear. |
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The film benefits from pared-down, naturalistic cinematography and performances, as well as a pervasive sense of fatalism. |
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Mask theatre is not naturalistic theatre, it has a more poetic feel, and he's got that sensitivity. |
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This motif had already gained currency in the naturalistic representations of Renaissance artists. |
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His plays have a closer relationship to the pre-20th century high comedies than to the naturalistic comedies of our own time. |
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Here Taylor means that science restricts itself to naturalistic theories, and does not invoke the supernatural. |
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I'm all for pointing out the problems in naturalistic theories of evolution, but that's not what the editorial is about. |
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The Higher Criticism is naturalistic and is largely dominated by the theory of evolution. |
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But, as with pure naturalistic theories of evolution, your task is to shut up and bow to your superiors, not ask obvious questions. |
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Historically, the naturalistic fallacy is the attempt to derive normative conclusions from statements of fact. |
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When he returned to painting, it was in the soberly naturalistic style associated with the Euston Road School. |
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Loach himself subsequently moved towards a more naturalistic style, often improvised and usually referred to as social realism. |
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It was a new kind of theatre, naturalistic, exploring social realism and psychological truth, the kind of theatre we take for granted today. |
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Behavioral ecology is a naturalistic perspective somewhat similar to sociobiology. |
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It is all brazenly played with the same unflinching naturalistic conviction. |
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This is 24-carat naturalistic, understated acting of a kind one rarely sees. |
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There's absolutely no way naturalistic way explain the spontaneous origination of organic life from inorganic nonlife. |
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This phenomenon owes its existence to both phylogenetic and ontogenetic naturalistic processes. |
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These do not have openwork tracery on their hinges but have advanced to a distinctive new naturalistic style. |
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By the mid-60s, Binney's works had become more naturalistic, more ornithologically precise, and more topographically accurate. |
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This is because it remains possible that evaluative epistemic facts supervene on naturalistic ones. |
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Foundational to this claim is that religion needs to be understood in terms of naturalistic theism, or panentheism, rather than supernaturalism. |
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The acting is quite naturalistic and the incidents between the affected and unaffected people are humorously portrayed. |
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On closer inspection, the Sixth Meditation passage does not put forward a naturalistic solution, but a theistic solution. |
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This finely rendered male Ibibio marionette is relatively naturalistic in form, with rounded muscular contours. |
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At the same time his style changed, as he abandoned Cubist leanings for a more naturalistic idiom. |
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His screenplay is naturalistic, contemporary and penetrable, thus overcoming a presumed difficulty with the original language used in the text. |
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Caravaggio returns to the half-length format of his early genre scenes, but all naturalistic bravura and illusionistic detail are gone. |
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Viewing knowledge as a tool for enriching experience, pragmatism tends to be pluralistic, experimental, fallibilist, and naturalistic. |
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The infusion of supernatural elements into human societies is itself a natural phenomenon that has a naturalistic origin and history. |
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A student of his was an extraordinary planner and plantsman who promoted a naturalistic approach to landscape design. |
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Art teachers can think of this activity as a means to circumvent fixed attitudes about drawing in a naturalistic mode. |
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Overnight, the tendency of naturalistic rationalism to decay into postmodern irrationalism became a national joke. |
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This proves a wise move, as the sheer weirdness of the story is counterpointed by Jonze's naturalistic approach. |
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For a rather unfortunate meme has lately infected the minds of some leading exponents of a naturalistic worldview. |
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Familiar accounts of epistemic terms seem to be divisible into those that employ only clearly naturalistic terms and those that do not. |
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Generally they were able to provide alternative naturalistic explanations for what had seemed totally mysterious. |
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While other sculptors made use of clinging drapery, they rarely did so with naturalistic consistency. |
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Mumbling, stumbling and uncertain, he managed to combine the theatricality of a great performance with the naturalistic details of finely observed human behaviour. |
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Philosophers who advocate a naturalistic approach to epistemology sometimes intend only to reject the high apriorism mandated by the idea of epistemology as first philosophy. |
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The new works are spindlier than their predecessors and combine the pieces of rock and branch in unlikely ways, rather then following a naturalistic schema. |
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Had Darwin had the knowledge about the eye and its associated systems that man has today, he may have given up his naturalistic theory on the origin of living things. |
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Keep the documentary element straightforward and make the dramatic elements feel as real as possible, filming in a naturalistic style with good actors and no apologies. |
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Even the small selection illustrated here shows a wide range of expressions, from the rather naturalistic Yoruba twin figures to this highly abstract Metoko pair. |
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He said many of them had trouble making the transition from stage realism to the more naturalistic demands of the screen. |
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He knows audiences expect it, crave it, and gives them the bare bones, in a sometimes naturalistic, sometimes stylised mixture of English, French, Chinese and Japanese. |
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Evolutionary and naturalistic theories of the earth's creation based on uniformitarian assumptions and advocating old-earth theories emerged in the late eighteenth century. |
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First, it is suggested that successive attempts to expound a Marxian theory of nature have see-sawed between naturalistic and social constructionist positions. |
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By 1671 he was working in London and is best known for his naturalistic woodcarvings of swags of fruit and flowers, small animals, and cherubs' heads. |
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Kim Bodnia, Mikael Persbrandt and Maria Bonnevie deliver naturalistic, largely unmannered performances that give their characters a warts-and-all credulity. |
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His first works were painted in a naturalistic and tenebrist style. |
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The film suffers from naturalistic excesses, at times severely. |
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An outstanding issue in Descartes' account was his failure to incorporate the origins of living beings into this naturalistic story of creation by natural laws. |
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By having a strapping man say Katherina's words, it is not real and not naturalistic, so it gives the audience a jolt and makes the play double edged. |
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If science tells us only about 'reality' in the anti-realist, pragmatistic sense, then there's absolutely no reason one shouldn't think that 'reality' is naturalistic. |
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With its profusion of midwives and naturalistic post-natal care, it is one of the few representations we have in western art that touches on the actual process of childbirth. |
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Although many modern pagans do not consider themselves to be witches both spiritual outlooks remain largely concerned with a naturalistic approach to spirituality. |
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But toward the end of the 1500s, art began to lose its uniform stylistic character, becoming naturalistic and classicist, analytical and synthetic, all at the same time. |
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The earnestly intense and naturalistic performances, fine for Ibsen, fit poorly here and consequently come off as either dangerously self-indulgent or oddly casual. |
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Wicca is a naturalistic religion whose followers generally worship a pantheistic Godhead and practice magic. |
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Willimon cannily structures the episodes of House of Cards in a more naturalistic fashion than traditional television. |
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The first act is lively, fluent and essentially naturalistic. |
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Theistic evolution at best includes God as an unnecessary rider in an otherwise purely naturalistic account of life. As such, theistic evolution violates Occam's razor. |
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This was a clash between two perfectly naturalistic theories of astronomy. |
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Grover also claims that truth is not a substantive or naturalistic property, but this claim is compatible with truth being an insubstantial or nonnaturalistic property. |
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It was he who first realized that mundane daily life, relayed in completely naturalistic language, contained within it all the ingredients of tragedy. |
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While he alludes to abstraction and discusses it in objective terms, the notion most analysed in the book is the origin and function of naturalistic, figurative art. |
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Belief in the phenomenological paradigm is a fundamental appreciation of naturalistic inquiry, qualitative methods, inductive analysis, and holistic thinking. |
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New York's Bronx Zoo, one of the greatest and a pioneer of naturalistic wildlife habitats in zoo-keeping, helped save the bison early last century. |
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The Immigrant is far from a conventionally naturalistic historical film. |
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He or she can readily put to use what is learned, as can the child learning its first language, so lots of naturalistic practice is possible. |
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Though individual figures are less naturalistic, they are grouped in coherent grouped compositions to a much greater degree. |
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Drawings of humans were rare and are usually schematic as opposed to the more detailed and naturalistic images of animal subjects. |
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Most of the decorations around the margins are images of pure fantasy, figures of saints, and naturalistic motifs. |
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Then naturalistic metametaphysics, we hold, should be based on naturalistic metaphysics, which should in turn be based on science. |
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In geometric abstraction, for instance, one is unlikely to find references to naturalistic entities. |
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African masks were an influence on European Modernist art, which was inspired by their lack of concern for naturalistic depiction. |
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The production of naturalistic paintings was new to this time period, and thus their techniques were considered to be innovative. |
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By changing naturalistic backgrounds, the camouflage responses of different species can be measured. |
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Rousseau used the earthquake as an argument against cities as part of his desire for a more naturalistic way of life. |
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Ife was noted as a major religious and cultural centre in West Africa, and for its unique naturalistic tradition of bronze sculpture. |
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Early designs were spontaneous and fluid, with later ones becoming more stylized, and less naturalistic. |
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Seven masonry crews of five to ten men each carved boulders and cement into a naturalistic poolscape, with elaborate lighting and sound systems. |
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Thus, a naturalistic fictional language tends to be more difficult and complex. |
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A naturalistic assessment of protriptyline for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. |
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Save your leaves to make leafmould and mulch your new, naturalistic space every year, he advises. |
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The zoo strives to create naturalistic settings for the animals. |
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This potential dilemma highlights the need for such a position to face up to the naturalistic fallacy. |
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He holds science and philosophy apart though and insists on avoiding the naturalistic fallacy of equivocating what is with what ought to be. |
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Symptoms require interpretation and Holmes situates the locus in the transition from daemonic to naturalistic explanation. |
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The problem here is that Dawkins seems to assume a naturalistic and gradualistic explanation for the diversification of life on earth. |
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Equally deer-proof and, in this case, easily integrated into naturalistic plantings, are grape hyacinths, or muscari. |
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As Dominican Benedict Ashley once noted, Finnis and Grisez often appear overwhelmed philosophically by the prospect of falling victim to the purported naturalistic fallacy. |
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Kielland's novels and short stories are mostly naturalistic. |
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The jewellery, the naturalistic sow's head on the side of the head of the main figure, and the curved knife held against the mandorla rim are of extraordinary detail. |
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In contrast to the multicoloured naturalistic plant motifs, the silver conch-shells or rocailles emphasize the plant motifs' plasticity and painterly effect. |
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Some social scientists conceptualise knowledge within a naturalistic framework and emphasize the gradation of recent knowledge into knowledge acquired over many generations. |
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Pictish iconography shows books being read, and carried, and its naturalistic style gives every reason to suppose that such images were of real life. |
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He achieved some early note for his intensely naturalistic scenes of modern rural and urban life, such as The Hireling Shepherd and The Awakening Conscience. |
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As well as adapting to a range of conditions, daylilies fit in well in a wide variety of gardenscapes, from classic herbaceous borders to wild naturalistic schemes. |
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Mouldings are more spread out and the foliage becomes more naturalistic. |
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