But he is adamant that there is not a word of truth in any of these stories, and that, for the time being at least, he is here to stay. |
|
Scientists have shown that there is a degree of truth in the old adage that love is blind. |
|
The adage, that truth is often stranger than fiction, is a huge understatement. |
|
The truth is, when it comes to high school draft picks, there are many more successes than washouts. |
|
This is a book which confirms the adage that truth is stranger than fiction. |
|
The enthusiasts for revolutionary methods overlook the truth of the adage that the best is often the enemy of the good. |
|
But how much of a bearing does withholding truth have on that persons credibility, trust and integrity? |
|
I'm willing to bet that there is a kernel of truth to this story and the rest is all rot. |
|
In fact, from the above conclusions the truth is actually even more complicated. |
|
Somewhere in this mass of opinions and actual fact lies the truth about what is actually safe. |
|
Fitzgerald will let us know where he thinks the truth lies in his own good time. |
|
The truth is our patience should have been exhausted weeks and months and years ago. |
|
But the truth is people are going to go to clothing stores for clothing and to department stores that sell active wear cheaper. |
|
The essence of fabrication about someone's political position is to take a kernel of truth and apply so much distortion as to turn it into a lie. |
|
The truth is that Europeans like early retirement, high jobless benefits and long vacations. |
|
The truth of the matter is, we find racial profiling has a lot to do why African-American males are stopped in the first place. |
|
Companies must act responsibly and tell the truth to avoid their shareholders being added to the list of victims in this grim tale. |
|
That said at the bottom of everything, unless the truth is told, people, no matter how well motivated, have no motivation to act from. |
|
Many rabid political partisans are so thin-skinned that any unfavorable truth about their heroes muddles their thinking. |
|
The truth is, however, that you can only watch a movie so many times before the appeal wears thin. |
|
|
Modem science, no matter how theoretical, speculative and abstract, strives finally for empirical evidence to test and confirm the truth of its claims. |
|
But there's always at least a kernel of truth in their stories, frequently much more than that. |
|
There is a kernel of truth to the claims that recruitment is down, but that's for support units. |
|
It is not a grand theory but a simple truth that Hitler was motivated by the human emotion of hatred. |
|
The fine crafting of the words and the kernels of human truth they contain come together as sympathetic wholes. |
|
The truth of, and warrant for, the belief are secured, not by evidence, but by the satisfaction of certain very general conditions on experience. |
|
The story also is an example of how kernels of truth are often contained in jokes or humorous anecdotes. |
|
Gordon's statements about automobile steering have some kernels of truth but are also inaccurate. |
|
It is a truth universally acknowledged that American politics runs in generational cycles. |
|
He acknowledged that there was some basis in truth to the allegations made regarding the woman. |
|
In a brilliantly wry and acidly accurate mini short story he demonstrates the shocking swerving from honesty and truth by the government. |
|
The simple truth is that a number of factors are taken into account, including circulation figures. |
|
And while I am only amused at such queries, their inquisitive querists find it impossible to believe in the truth of my response. |
|
In Question Time Mark Latham wanted to focus on the question of truth in government. |
|
Only when beliefs conflict with personal experiences will most people start questing the truth of their beliefs. |
|
Benedict's experience of Nazism led him to a fear not of absolutism but of totalitarianism, in which authority and truth are divorced. |
|
When a big issue is on, do we want someone who might be prepared to fudge the realities of truth in order to meet his or her own ends? |
|
His distaste for hypotheses is the natural reaction of a man in possession of a far superior instrument for winnowing truth from error. |
|
All truth be told, despite the fact that we may quarrel about the hardships about living here in Jamaica, I know that I could be far worse off. |
|
Every month Jonson aka Thornton goes out of his way to prove the truth of that, by demanding the RBA raise rates. |
|
|
Well, OK, the truth is I made a wisecrack to him at a book signing, and he looked at me. |
|
We must realise that there is an element of truth in all the age-old traditions. |
|
It appears that ageless truth remains the same that small guns are easier to carry and the big guns shoot better. |
|
Anyone who earns money or receives income should pay taxes and the truth is, everyone does pay taxes. |
|
She maintains that it is predictive efficacy that counts, and that predictive success provides no warrant for claims about truth or existence. |
|
An example of a bad peace is keeping up appearances, pretending that everything is fine, when the truth is that it is not. |
|
The truth is that the pair once answered an ad for male escorts, mistakenly thinking they would simply have to wine and dine women. |
|
In truth the whole evening was testimony to the benefits that can be accrued from Transition Year. |
|
In time the truth will emerge but to win big contracts you have to know what you are about. |
|
The truth is that the whole system will be bankrupt if we pay for any medication for the elderly. |
|
He did, truth to be told, bet against Liverpool but it was a wager we were happy to lose. |
|
If the truth be told, many have not read it, claiming that they hardly see it as a beach read. |
|
Then again, telling the truth about this idea is not exactly going to bring the votes pouring in. |
|
The value and rightness of knowledge are not empirical absolutes, and the benefit of truth does not fit everyone the same. |
|
The Universal Community, which possessed truth in its totality, became for Royce a viable alternative to the Absolute. |
|
He told police he was too afraid for himself and his family to tell the truth at first. |
|
For example, we are afraid that if others knew the truth about us, they wouldn't like us. |
|
True leaders are not afraid of telling the truth as they see it for fear of losing favor. |
|
However, the truth is that in their heart of hearts, quite a few adults are afraid of deep water. |
|
A Bucks source with no reason to fib claims there is no truth to the report SF Glenn Robinson is on the market. |
|
|
The regularity of such cases proves that souls do exist and there is some truth to the stories of rebirth and reincarnation. |
|
But I want the human touch, the human affirmation, the human truth of real love. |
|
We must not believe that all opinion is ideology, that reason is only power, that there is no truth to prevail. |
|
There is, one might observe, truth in the aesthetic, but truth defined by the aesthetic easily descends into sickly aestheticism. |
|
The basic belief of a Rasta is to uphold the truth and defend good over evil, to do the will of God here on earth. |
|
For people living in an oppressed or corrupt society, the truth can whet demand for change. |
|
For the sake of the future, the truth must be pursued relentlessly wherever and whatever it leads to. |
|
Rachel tells her Alabaman prom date the truth about herself and his reaction makes the scales fall from her eyes. |
|
Winner-take-all electoral systems and adversary politics result in truth being irrelevant. |
|
Wheels within wheels within wheels, everybody fact-checks every one else, and the truth eventually is found. |
|
Indeed, sometimes the real essence of truth is only to be discovered in the narrative form. |
|
The defendant cannot justify one libel by proving the truth of another distinct libel. |
|
I was left in no doubt whatsoever that Mr Bradley was speaking the truth and that Mr Doshi was not. |
|
For the real, harsh truth about life is mostly that what goes around comes around. |
|
They're doing their job because their job is to find the truth in the matter, whatever the evidence is that it turns up. |
|
Even when I went on the program and I told him the truth he still decided to go with it. |
|
Like so many adoptive children he is caught up in a compulsive search to discover the truth about his real parentage. |
|
The simple truth is, most people I've come across HAVEN'T accepted me or my beliefs. |
|
We are not going to make any progress on this until we get some truth and transparency about what's going on. |
|
So, I started searching for the truth about Judaism and where I belonged in my religion. |
|
|
And the truth is that despite the ban on J-pop, Japanese music sells well in South Korea, albeit as a pirate product. |
|
They're not philosophical concepts, beliefs or descriptions of an ultimate truth or divinity. |
|
When the first atomic bomb went off as some scientists had predicted it would, another bit of truth about the empirical world was revealed. |
|
If human beings are capable of deciding the truth value of every well-formed mathematical statement, then classical logic will prevail after all. |
|
But the truth is that he is a fine person who enjoys life and lives it well. |
|
The truth is that if companies do well and grow their profits over time, their shares will increase in value. |
|
However, she started to look unwell and as people challenged her over this she admitted the truth to her parents and in-laws. |
|
The kernel of truth at the centre of an emotion is best discovered with the writerly equivalent of controlled burning, that is, a fearlessly wielded red pen. |
|
Analysts attempt to winnow a few kernels of truth from a mass of falsehood in order to construct a comprehensible mosaic from a swiftly flowing stream of uncertain data. |
|
Unfortunately the people of Tologa Bay, on New Zealand's North Island, thought he had come to close the school and gave him a hostile reception until the truth emerged. |
|
But I can say with a good conscience and an airy wave of the hand that if you have a different opinion we can all just try our best and in time the truth will emerge. |
|
Entwined within this Gordian knot is a truth so terrible as to be rarely spoken. |
|
This theory holds even more truth today because with the amount of mixed and confusing messages regarding health and fitness, most consumers are confused. |
|
Psychopharmacology has discovered the truth in Scott's wild guess, but Zelda is not the only hectored patient who might have been cured had she been born later. |
|
There are kernels of truth in even its most outrageous statements. |
|
The reality of this truth was manifested at the last election. |
|
Recognition and acceptance of truth and reality replaces false ideas. |
|
It belongs rather to that tradition of artistic realism that stakes its claim to truth on calculated departures from familiar modes of seeing and knowing. |
|
On a pitch that became increasingly difficult to bat on, East Lancs were rocked by losing a wicket to the first ball of their reply and in truth they never recovered. |
|
It's a sad truth that he was axed from the goggle-box over fifteen years ago, but that hasn't stopped the die-hard 'Whovians' from mounting a campaign for his regeneration. |
|
|
I have a strong regard for the ultimate value of truth and honour. |
|
I don't think the whole truth has come out and I don't think it ever will. |
|
He had not told me the whole truth about what the relationship was. |
|
Patrick Scott, York's director of education, said it was tempting to assume funding was being kept back, but he suspected the truth was more complicated. |
|
For it is the truth of my heart, dearest Lady, that thou hast inspired in me that which I had thought long lost, and whither it had scarpered I wot not. |
|
On the other hand, if you give two differing accounts of something, it's reasonable for folks to wonder which time you were telling the truth and which time you were fibbing. |
|
The truth of the matter is that anonymity is not all that important. |
|
A visit to WoodRocket.com is enough to convince anyone of the truth in that. |
|
An ancient belief system that lays claim to the absolute truth is ranged against modern institutions with a record of cover-ups and suppressing the truth. |
|
I wrote back with my attempt at consoling words, but the truth is that I am worried and can hardly console myself. |
|
That there is some truth in these beliefs on both sides adds to the complexities. |
|
The commoditization of the news and devaluing of the truth are just part of our way of life now. |
|
To tell the truth it's a bit weird being out here on my own. |
|
Her moment of truth arrived a year ago when she saw a picture of herself from Christmas in which her collarbone was jutting out. |
|
But the truth is, he flouted these rules to flaunt his jocosity. |
|
Ah'm radge, if the truth be telt, ever getting involved with a Doyle. |
|
The worship that holds you for a few hours a week becomes, then, the clue to that deep truth inside. |
|
My answer to that accusation is that there is nothing shabby or disgraceful in telling writers the truth and acquainting them with the painful facts of publishing life. |
|
The truth is slippery, and plumbing the past to catch hold of it is as quixotic a quest as the search for the perfect bottle of wine, but it is a noble and necessary one. |
|
And the truth is that there are no longer any weak teams at this level. |
|
|
Henceforth, during the whole rest of the nineteenth century, the acknowledgment of the truth contained in Say's Law was the distinctive mark of an economist. |
|
Suspense, of which Hitchcock remains the acknowledged master, is merely the form of cinema that focuses most self-consciously on this general truth of cinematic experience. |
|
The result was the accentuation of a fundamental conflict in the university's mission between furthering the pursuit of truth and serving the needs of established power. |
|
The problem is that he's not actually saying anything, just repeating things that he's heard on various warblogs and hoping that everyone will just see the truth therein. |
|
With the truth no longer deniable, the Youngs moved home to Chapel Hill, N.C., their long, strange journey finally over. |
|
This is far from the truth and I wonder how many of these people actually apply their abhorrence of vivisection to their own lives by refusing medical treatment? |
|
Taraji manages to bring an equal measure of truth to the mother in her character. |
|
But the truth is the Seacrests, the Bergerons, and the Deeleys are the personable, breezy diamonds in the awkward, robotic rough. |
|
The truth is that Bohemia and Buckingham Palace have never fitted together particularly well. |
|
The truth is a blood-red fog bank rolled over all of us in Iraq and Afghanistan and never lifted. |
|
But there was no way, as they stood there blindfolded in the darkened room, to know if they were being told the truth or not. |
|
Drabelle writes about all this, but only to brush it aside and insist that Bierce was some sort of morally rigorous truth teller. |
|
He bent the truth throughout his life to ensure that he was known as the man who had invented the lie detector test. |
|
The truth of the matter is that England, for all its ballyhooed history, is a minor traditional power. |
|
And I need to ask why their truth makes me so defensive, as if my truth is the only truth. |
|
The truth is that Judd is really just picking an arbitrary number since there is no script. |
|
The return of Stephen Glass, the truth about anonymous and escaping Jonestown. |
|
The simple, awful truth is that free speech has never been particularly popular in America. |
|
And the truth that language changes over time does not compel us to endorse any particular change. |
|
There is actually no truth whatsoever in this and we apologise to all. |
|
|
He could, if he chose, go deeper than Davies into his own soul and the truth of how orders were given and executed. |
|
Instead, they represent a basic truth that federal politicians, like kids, say the darnedest things. |
|
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. |
|
At a glance it seems that he is a nice guy, but upon digging deeper the truth emerges. |
|
The truth of other axiomata would have to be defined in terms of the truth of these. |
|
The truth is, this is off the scale in terms of addictiveness, quality and value for money. |
|
But deep inside he knew the truth was he longed for one last great adventure. |
|
In relating the story to Julie, he decided to bend the truth just enough to make her think he had really been in danger. |
|
Hatred unto the truth did always falsely report and calumniate all godly men's doings. |
|
The truth is, it is often hard to distinguish between the law abider and the disorderly. |
|
The condition of the Creeks and Cherokees, to which I have already alluded, sufficiently corroborates the truth of this deplorable picture. |
|
Because relativism relativizes sentence truth to contexts of assessment, it forces us to revise standard linguistic theory. |
|
And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite, One truth is clear, whatever is, is right. |
|
Such has been the perplexing ingenuity of commentators that it is difficult to extricate the truth from the web of conjectures. |
|
They made him ashamed to vouch the truth of the relation, and afterwards to credit it. |
|
The divine virtues of truth and equity are the only bands of friendship, the only supports of society. |
|
For the assured truth of things is derived from the principles of knowledg, and causes which determine their verities. |
|
The truth of life lay in the vatic messages words sent, meanings beyond what the world called meaning. |
|
It is always by this unthank that things are given to the observer that we pretend to have access to the truth of the word. |
|
Do not swallow every story that is told. There may be a grain of truth somewhere in all the myths, but chew the meat and spit out the bones. |
|
|
And how there was clearly no escape, no escape compatible with that clean-handed truth from which it was not possible for him to swerve. |
|
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. |
|
The truth depends on, or is only arrived at by, a legitimate deduction from all the facts which are truly material. |
|
The apostles find a way to testify, in talk and in walk, about a truth that is vigorously and resolutely outside the totalism of Rome. |
|
The truth is, tomorrow never comes! The minute you step into your tomorrow, it becomes your today. |
|
Theirs is an everlasting terrestrial inheritance because they rejected the truth when it was offered to them in mortality. |
|
In truth he had already attained that supermanship which he dreamt, taught and lived for. |
|
But almost at once I told myself that I ought to have Sherlocked the truth the moment this troubled, beautiful being had appeared on deck. |
|
And I am a green walnut, and you a fish, and those mountains are made of roasted sheepshit! Have it your way. Speak the truth and hear the truth. |
|
By sextating, or leaving but a sixth part of Gog, is signified the total destruction of every truth derived from good in such a church. |
|
The standing evidences of the truth of the gospel are in themselves most firm, solid, and satisfying. |
|
There is consensus among rubberists who have non-rubberist partners that it is better to tell the truth about a fetish sooner rather than later. |
|
And many shall follow their riotousnesses, through whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of. |
|
In the 1980s it was planned to excavate the site, but the plan was abandoned, so the truth behind the story is not known. |
|
He argued for representing truth in language, and honesty was of paramount importance. |
|
He died for truth as he knew it, and those who knew him felt that his death was a national loss. |
|
One thing more which the scientific man does is to accord primacy to that realm of truth which is primary in importance. |
|
Believers in radipraxy support the idea that beliefs which boost human understanding of truth should be analyzed, understood and followed. |
|
The truth of these complicated facts rests on the acceptance of the basic hypotheses. |
|
Hearsay is an out of court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. |
|
|
The common law trial lawyer has ample opportunity to uncover the truth in the courtroom. |
|
Mill argued that truth drives out falsity, therefore the free expression of ideas, true or false, should not be feared. |
|
Ernst Wilhelm Hengstenberg, though raised Reformed, became convinced of the truth of historic Lutheranism as a young man. |
|
Yet all appear to treasure the truth that liberates, and Jesus taught his followers to love one another. |
|
Rhetorical relations have truth conditional effects that contribute to meaning but lie outside the purview of compositional semantics. |
|
Idioms are also not to be confused with proverbs, which are simple sayings that express a truth based on common sense or practical experience. |
|
In classical logic, negation is normally identified with the truth function that takes truth to falsity and vice versa. |
|
It may be applied as an operation on notions, propositions, truth values, or semantic values more generally. |
|
A propositional variable is typically a letter whose truth value is contingent upon some interpretation or valuation. |
|
Prevarication became the order of the day in his government while truth was a stranger in those halls. |
|
The Commission attempted to cover more than 370 years, the longest period of time that a truth commission has ever covered. |
|
For various reasons individuals will not tell the truth on such a private matter. |
|
In truth it needed but to look at their complexion to see that they were people of another world than ours. |
|
Some 592 people were recorded killed during Hassan's rule according to the truth commission. |
|
Turner, saw art's role as the communication by artifice of an essential truth that could only be found in nature. |
|
However, the myth was revived in 1997 when author Dava Sobel presented it as an unqualified truth in her book Longitude. |
|
Priscillian placed considerable weight on apocryphal books, not as being inspired but as helpful in discerning truth and error. |
|
It's quite another to expect amateurs to figure out who is telling the truth about Iraq, or which priests have committed pedophilia. |
|
But whether he fully comprehended the great truth upon which that rock stood and stands, may be doubted. |
|
I hope you will not find he has outstepped the truth more than may be pardoned, in consideration of the motive. |
|
|
Few ever doubted that there was truth behind the account of the Trojan War in the Iliad and Odyssey. |
|
The truth is that Zola was an opsimath, who had read Stendhal, Flaubert, Balzac, the Goncourts and Taine late in life. |
|
Unfortunately, there is a nugget of truth to the notion of black and Hispanic tensions but, like politics, the friction tends to be very local. |
|
The truth of the tusk's origin developed gradually during the Age of Exploration, as explorers and naturalists began to visit regions themselves. |
|
The laws tell stories of how truth could apparently cure a person and falsehood could cause blisters. |
|
Despite extensive work to ascertain the truth of these rumors, law enforcement officials have not found any such works. |
|
According to this theory, the conditions for the truth of a sentence as well as the sentences themselves are part of a metalanguage. |
|
The theory met critical objections to truth as correspondence and thereby rehabilitated it. |
|
In his controversies he was credulous, careless about the truth of his charges, and insatiably vindictive. |
|
However, observation alone cannot account for all knowledge and truth can be garnered by reflection. |
|
In the extreme case, red top tabloids have been accused of lying or misrepresenting the truth to increase circulation. |
|
For example, he, like the Arts and Crafts artists, advocated truth to material, structure and function. |
|
The truth is I had laryngitis, which Noel was made fully aware of that morning, diagnosed by a doctor. |
|
Although Clapton's grandparents eventually told him the truth about his parentage, he only knew that his father's name was Edward Fryer. |
|
In the intervening years, he wrote to Light magazine about his faith and lectured frequently on the truth of Spiritualism. |
|
To be a theologian, one must know how to pray, and one who prays in spirit and in truth becomes a theologian by doing so. |
|
That when a thing lies still, unless somewhat else stir it, it will lie still forever, is a truth that no man doubts. |
|
The moment of truth comes when you try to start the engine you have just rebuilt. |
|
As to the duke's misregard of her offer, they did remit the truth of that to the report of the persons employed by herself. |
|
But it is the lot of goodness and truth ever to meet with misappreciation and disdain. |
|
|
John and Bernard's depiction of Ireland, rather than the truth about its reforms, became established throughout Europe. |
|
Two things, which in truth are but one, constitute this soul or spiritual principle. |
|
Blake's poem asks four questions rather than asserting the historical truth of Christ's visit. |
|
He argued that even if an opinion is false, the truth can be better understood by refuting the error. |
|
That is a destination as far, or near, as the truth itself to you or me or the given finite community. |
|
One of the main reasons for doubting the truth of the inquest concerns the reliability of Marlowe's companions as witnesses. |
|
Macbeth, disturbed, visits the three witches once more and asks them to reveal the truth of their prophecies to him. |
|
Once truth starts to shine in a person's heart, the essence of current and past holy books of all religions is understood by the person. |
|
Direct replies to someone's contribution are not permitted, with an aim of seeking truth rather than of debating. |
|
Anselm employs Aristotelian logic to affirm the existence of an absolute truth of which all other truth forms separate kinds. |
|
De Veritate is concerned not merely with the truth of statements but with correctness in will, action, and essence as well. |
|
There is at least a tinge of truth in that picture of Southern England as one enormous Brighton inhabited by lounge-lizards. |
|
A caution to U. S. parents, but a joy to radio merchandising, is the dread truth that little pitchers have big ears. |
|
The machine keeps an account of the number of pieces struck which cannot be altered from the truth by any of the persons employed. |
|
And he can convince himself of almost every truth if it is once allowed thus to start on its wild career through his rhetorical machinery. |
|
There may be a kernel of truth in the story of how George Washington confessed to his father that he chopped down the cherry tree. |
|
This statement will be unacceptable to many biographers and historians, but there seems to be a definite kernel of truth in it. |
|
In Michael Wood's view, the poem confirms the truth of William of Malmesbury's account of the ceremony. |
|
The truth is I was an emotional cripple when I met her, drunk more often than not, punishing myself for doing things that went against my nature. |
|
It was a decoction of datura that wrung the truth from the old woman, by sending her into a trance from which she never recovered. |
|
|
He is known to embroider the truth about his service in the army. |
|
Do you swear to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth? |
|
He does tend to chop and change his beliefs pretty quickly in his search for that elusive truth that lies beyond his quotidian existence. |
|
These countries talk about democracy and anti-imperialism but the truth is these are imperial powers in the garb of democracy. |
|
Are apodictic and ideology-driven minds protecting fanciful interstices of truth not saturated by enveloping change? |
|
We also found messengers who could communicate the truth of our lives. |
|
The truth should out in court and not before, though, and no-one should have to face a media kangeroo court before charges have been made. |
|
Her story contains a grain of truth but also lots of exaggeration. |
|
Maybe he could no longer bear the craven truth about himself. |
|
The truth is...eating is my drug. When I am upset, I eat...when I am sad, I eat...when I am happy, I eat. |
|
Reading and writing are symbiotic processes by which truth is relationally structured. |
|
At some point you have to face the simple truth that we failed. |
|
But the truth was that she was twice as high-spirited and gigglesome as her companion. |
|
Dr. Burton has with much ingenuity endeavoured to expiscate the truth which may be involved in them. |
|
Love of truth was inculcated by Essaism, as by Parsism and Buddhism, and was promised by an oath. |
|
We are not to intrench upon truth in any conversation, but least of all with children. |
|
It's an inescapable truth that these problems have no easy solution. |
|
He prefers traditional religions to modernistic denominations that relativize truth and make a god out of self-fulfillment. |
|
The truth will only be found by careful interpretation of the evidence. |
|
We separate the search for justice from the search for truth at our peril. |
|
|
It was monstrous of him to keep the truth from them all those years. |
|
Lastly, being thus divided from truth in themselves, they are yet farther removed by advenient deception. |
|
And the truth is, I don't ascribe to the belief that God is more successful at drawing women to him than men. |
|
The truth about Pastor Straton is that he is perhaps the country's most persistent publicity hound. He has an insatiable appetite for newspaper notice. |
|
Then you will be in trouble because it will kill you to have it taken out again but it will betray your deepest inner truth to tell them No Backsies. |
|
But when the service of truth and the public good command, there are certain scruples which are immoral and certain charitablenesses which are dangerous. |
|
Our minds are, as it were, chequered with truth and falsehood. |
|
There is a truth and falsehood in all propositions on this subject, and a truth and falsehood, which lie not beyond the compass of human understanding. |
|
For truth being in indivisibili, as is the essence of what ever is, who is most versed in the nature and properties of a thing is alwayes best able to dignosce of its value. |
|
Having thus at length enquired the truth concerning Law and dispense. |
|
Pythagoras shadowed the truth somewhat neerer, judgeing that the knowledge of this first cause and Ens entium must be undefined, without any prescription or declaration. |
|
Common sense and experience must and will evince the truth of this. |
|
Every man carries about him a touchstone, if he will make use of it, to distinguish substantial gold from superficial glitterings, truth from appearances. |
|
It's about a young man who tries to distill the true biography of his dying father by looking for the kernels of truth in the many tall tales he has told. |
|
So the truth of the matter is that a libertine in love, if indeed a libertine can be in love, becomes from that moment in less of a hurry to enjoy the pleasures of the flesh. |
|
He identifies this absolute truth with God, who therefore forms the fundamental principle both in the existence of things and the correctness of thought. |
|
Most Friends believe in continuing revelation, which is the religious belief that truth is continuously revealed directly to individuals from God. |
|
The truth of Gardner's claim is now disputed too, with different historians offering evidence for or against the religion's existence prior to Gardner. |
|
From its beginning, the RDNA revolved around the veneration of the natural world, personified as Mother Earth, holding that religious truth could be found through nature. |
|
It was only with Ruskin and the archaeological Gothic's demand for structural truth that iron, whether it was visible or not, was deemed improper for a Gothic building. |
|
|
He masqueraded as my friend until the truth finally came out. |
|
Nolan's films typically deceive spectators about the events that occur and the motivations of the characters, but they do not abandon the idea of truth altogether. |
|
We think thou mightst find in that camp some cavalier who, for the love of truth and his own augmentation of honour, will do battle with this same traitor of Montserrat. |
|
Some believe the Pope arranged this to hide truth from the common people. |
|
The truth will likely never be known as Nasser was an intensely secretive man, who managed to hide his true opinions on most issues from both contemporaries and historians. |
|
Indeed, until the 1940s no one knew how to prove, even to state properly, the kernel of truth in this proposition about perfectly competitive market. |
|
This problem arises from his position that the truth content of our theories, even the best of them, cannot be verified by scientific testing, but can only be falsified. |
|
Reconciling profound enquiry with clearness, and truth with novelty. |
|
Whatever the truth of this, work on the Old Testament did not proceed. |
|
Even in its moderate form, this argument presupposes that factual elements can be plucked out of panegyric as nuggets of truth isolated from the dross of empty verbiage. |
|
The information presented in the previous chapters gives the nuts and bolts of the most common and basic techniques used to prove the truth of mathematical results. |
|
But the truth is that plenty of artists from other countries make work that's bold, naughty or nasty, without getting more than a very occasional headline. |
|
However, as the media frenzy develops the truth has to come out. |
|
His aim, of course, is to emphasize the absolute significance of Christ, so that all that ever existed of virtue and truth may be referred to him. |
|
Though the trials took place in English, they were transcribed in Latin as a way to further remove the public from the transcription's truth and to use it as propaganda. |
|
There is evidence that there may be an element of truth to this. |
|
Gorgias argued that language could represent neither the objective experience nor human experience, and that communication and truth were therefore impossible. |
|
Many centuries later, the Venetians claimed that the treaty had recognised Venetian de facto independence, but the truth of this claim is doubted by modern scholars. |
|
However, Duyvendak thinks that there may be some truth to it. |
|
If there is a grain of truth in any of this, it would not stretch credulity to imagine that the Vivaldis got as far as Senegal, and that their adventures ended there. |
|