This volume also includes Moloney's excursus on theories of Johannine community history. |
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After a preliminary excursus on the science of ' bibliotics',. Dr. Tanner subjects the theories of the researcher to a close analysis. |
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If this is so, far from sidelining the importance of the moral environment, the excursus through determinism will catapult it to the head of the agenda. |
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Is this book, written hectically and in the first person as though spoken by the poet himself, an autobiographical excursus or not? |
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Here the chronicler inserts an excursus on the wickedness of reviling kings and murmuring against them. |
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The most charming excursus can be found when Phaedrus and Socrates return to the chirping cicadas that surround them. |
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In fact, the digestion of the richness of the first day's session has been helped by an excursus outing day organised on the 25th. |
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The sponsor will receive, beyond a presentation of the sponsored student, a periodic and punctual updating on his scholastic excursus. |
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This reversal is the subject of Herodotus' detailed account in the long excursus he consecrates in Book 3 to the theme of the hostility between Corinth and her colony Corcyra. |
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On this last problem he supplies a long philosophical excursus, summarising contemporary Western arguments as well as notions in Nyaya philosophy. |
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The fascinating, age-old history of decoration incorporates the precious contributions of a wide variety of cultures and ages: an excursus into thought and beauty, expressed in constantly changing ways and forms. |
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The course also includes a wide excursus about product management and production management that, today more than ever, are of vital importance for the development of a company. |
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Here is what us scholars call an excursus. If you are an honest man the following page or two can be of no possible interest to you. |
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Some have tried to read Neo-Thomism as an attempt to deny the existence of the contemporary world and an excursus into the past. |
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Wilson marshals a vast number of entertaining stories of reaction and rebellion, including ready-mades from the life of Lord Byron and a fascinating excursus on audience protests of rising theatre-ticket prices. |
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