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The phrase "a foundational problem the" is not correct in written English as it is incomplete and lacks clarity.
It cannot be used effectively without additional context or completion to form a coherent thought.
Example: "A foundational problem the team faced was a lack of communication."
Alternatives: "a fundamental issue that" or "a core challenge the".
Exact(1)
These are fail-safe points in discussions of artistic freedom, and they sidestep a foundational problem: the decision to make art without regard for the lives involved, and no matter the consequences.
Similar(59)
Rather, the point is that the MacCAT-T appears to be profoundly off the mark; that there is a foundational problem with the theory.
Whereas the latter notion presents a genuine foundational problem, the former one contradicts neither common sense nor observation, and may be used to describe cellular 'decision-making' and adaptation.
The only satisfactory explicit models of this type (which are essentially variations and refinements of the one proposed in the references Ghirardi, Rimini, and Weber (1985 , 1986, and usually referred to as the GRW theory) are phenomenological attempts to solve a foundational problem.
I will acknowledge systemic racism as a foundational problem in America and devote myself to support those who are working to change the system so that people of color can someday have the same benefits that my children have received as white Americans.
A foundational problem in kernel-based learning is how to design suitable kernels.
"It will mean that this agreement has seen a foundational problem, and under those conditions, Iran will be freed to choose another set of conditions," he said.
Hill (2004, p. 627, 628) argues that the concept of superaddition "is quite out of place" in connection with cohesion, because Locke regards cohesion as a foundational problem, which thwarts our efforts to conceive of body.
In (Wallace 2006) unitarily inequivalent representations are not considered a foundational problem for QFT, while in (Ruetsche 2003) and (Kronz and Lupher 2005) unitarily inequivalent representations are considered physically significant.
The fourth foundational problem, the decision problem for predicate logic, was shown to have a negative solution in a short paper by Church in 1936 as a corollary to Gödel's incompleteness theorem.
The foundational problem pushes the question about cohesion into the corpuscles themselves.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com