The first important school of thought to arise out of Kantian philosophy was the subjective idealism of Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. |
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Although one school of thought holds her outburst might not be such a bad thing, as it humanizes the family by demonstrating an actual emotion. |
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Those belonging to the orthodox school of thought view India as being unconditionally hostile to Pakistan. |
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There is a growing school of thought that the last common ancestor of humans and chimps was a brachiator and not a knuckle-walker. |
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One school of thought is that we should study maths because employers want it. |
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There is a growing school of thought that what is sauce for the goose may be poison for the gander. |
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There are a lot of people who are following too much a particular school of thought. |
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In print, there has been a school of thought that suggests serifs improve the readability of large texts. |
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There is a school of thought which holds that the long tail is actually worth more to output producers than is the short head. |
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One school of thought maintains that cardoons and artichokes are, and always have been, two distinct species. |
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The other school of thought is sometimes called positivism, sometimes called legal realism. |
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One of the basic underlying assumptions of Afrocentric theory emanates from the school of thought delineated in Black family literature. |
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Is one religion more valuable than another, just because its adepts adhere to one school of thought over another? |
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One school of thought puts the emphasis on the correct preconditions, the events and developments that will inspire invention. |
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According to a third school of thought, the notion of inherent powers covers all those powers deriving exclusively from powers of international courts and tribunals. |
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One school of thought is that it's designed to last long enough for a couple to rear children to the point where they are relatively self-sufficient. |
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I believe it would not be totally wide of the mark to describe his stance on this issue as belonging to the old Keynesian school of thought. |
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There may also be more than one school of thought, or there may be maverick voices arguing against the mainstream. |
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We would tend to see here the influence of that school of thought that denies that the terrorist crisis we are currently engaged in is a war. |
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One school of thought holds that any form of control is an infringement of freedom of expression. |
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The old school of thought was that the best way to run a business was by having one person at the top. |
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He became part of the modernist school of thought and undertook research into the pharmacological properties of medicinal substances. |
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In the Netherlands, they had founded a school of thought, a Gnostic Brotherhood, the Golden Rosycross. |
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Vladimir Putin, unfortunately, is a graduate with honours from this school of thought. |
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The second school of thought sees school mathematics primarily as an essential prerequisite to university courses in maths, science, engineering and technology. |
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Having been taught Modernism, a school of thought that scoffs at the decorative, materials became his primary means of expression. |
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In the early 1990s, business process reengineering replaced total quality management as the predominant school of thought regarding business process redesign. |
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It does not constitute either a sect or a school of thought, but is rather a spiritual or transcendental practice, which persists despite criticism from orthodox theologians. |
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May I start the ball rolling by saying that there is a school of thought which holds that there can be democracy only between individuals, and not between States. |
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The school of thought derived from Marx and known as Political Economy focuses on production, in contrast. |
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One school of thought on judicial tenure is that it should not be open to renewal since towards the end of their term judges tend to tailor judgements and conduct in anticipation of renewals. |
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Shaw represented the new school of thought, modernism, which was rising at the time. |
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Agriregio belongs to the school of thought that no longer recognises historic references as an exclusive basis for calculating direct aid for farmers in the medium term. |
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The problem arose when one school of thought argued that a mother of foreign nationality who was not resident in Tunisia could not be granted care of her children. |
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However, it would be impossible in this regard not to mention Neopositivism, a school of thought with which Geymonat will always be associated. |
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And this school of thought will argue that the advantage of such an organisation is that its remit is then flexible, and allows for the maximum interaction in the ways of human rights abuses are dealt with. |
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I happen to be from the school of thought that says you really would have a difficult time doing anything that would prevent the flow of information. |
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Trained in the Positivist school of thought, he turned sociology into a science with its own subject and methods, asserting the specificity of social facts in relation to organic and psychological phenomena. |
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One school of thought is to the effect that compensation must occur on or prior to the date of bankruptcy in order to be set up against the trustee since he is a third party within the meaning of this provision. |
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This opinion follows the school of thought that migration is a chance for developing countries to participate more equally in today's globalised economy. |
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Is this Council Presidency aware that there is a school of thought that says that the developing world could greatly benefit from having a financial services sector? |
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There's a school of thought that the best fish suppers are found only up and down our coastline, close to where the catch is landed. |
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What these military intellectuals may have learned, according to Linn, is dependent on to which school of thought they belonged. |
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For large countries such as Nigeria where there are over four hundred languages, those who belong to this latter school of thought argue that it will be wasteful and unrealistic to seek to promote several languages. |
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According to one school of thought, the media are in a position of power, since not only do they inform, they also suggest by the way in which they present the information how it is to be assessed. |
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One school of thought blames artistic squabbles. |
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Today, there is more than one school of thought on how this occurred in Ireland. |
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The 'Red Tory' theory of Phillip Blond is a strand of the 'One Nation' school of thought. |
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Partly in reaction to such theories, another school of thought emerged which argued that Arthur had no historical existence at all. |
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According to this school of thought, each ethnic group has a distinct worldview that is incommensurable with the worldviews of other groups. |
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Green anarchism, or ecoanarchism, is a school of thought within anarchism which puts a particular emphasis on environmental issues. |
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This led Cuvier to become an active proponent of the geological school of thought called catastrophism. |
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A similar school of thought that emerged in the early 20th century is ethical socialism, which makes the case for socialism on moral grounds. |
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He did not belong to the school of thought that believed Jackson Pollock to be much of an artist. |
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Both men had problematic literary careers, but Lévi-Strauss came to be considered a profound thinker and the founder of a particular school of thought, while Caillois now passed for an inspired if unclassifiable dabbler. |
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I come from the school of thought which has a belief in inalienable rights, balanced, as I have said before in this House, with inalienable responsibilities. |
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Unfortunately, however, we spoke little about the context and, by contrast, we allowed a school of thought to burgeon that the problem was actually in the text. |
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A third school of thought blames histamines. |
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This school of thought for the next 50 years was exclusively technically based. |
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Our leaders need to pass through that school of thought that decolonises their mind, and helps them develop generational thinking and interdependence. |
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The first school of thought, the theory of deontology or the doctrine of duty, is the basis of some of the oldest ethical systems in all cultures. |
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These oral traditions were transmitted by the Pharisee school of thought of ancient Judaism, and were later recorded in written form and expanded upon by the rabbis. |
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There is a school of thought, however, that a true zero-carbon rating on a highvolume developable scale is not even technically possible or priceable at the moment. |
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One school of thought within historical scholarship has suggested that all of these accounts are inherently unreliable, and might be entirely fictional. |
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This school of thought is still in the process of development. |
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The Rasulid sultans built numerous Madrasas to solidify the Shafi'i school of thought, which is still the dominant school of jurisprudence amongst Yemenis today. |
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During the late 19th century the marginalist school of thought emerged. |
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Monetarism is a school of thought in monetary economics that emphasizes the role of governments in controlling the amount of money in circulation. |
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