Sentence examples similar to deriving from both premises from inspiring English sources

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The appeal derived from both the performances and the program.

The principles of civil disobedience are derived from both Western and Eastern sources.

An explanation of a particular pattern of distribution of progeny phenotypes in a genetic cross resulted from instantiating the appropriate deductive argument schema: the variables were filled with the details from the particular case and the conclusion derived from the premises.

The uncertainty derived from the premises assumed in the study need to be reviewed through a sensitivity analysis to confirm the robustness of our results.

In short, mathematics is useful, not because it allows you to derive conclusions that you couldn't have derived from nominalistically respectable premises alone, but rather because it makes the derivation of those (nominalistically respectable) conclusions easier than it might otherwise have been.

At one level they derive from explicit religious premises.

And then the ultimate conclusion of the argument can be derived from its further premises.

This might be thought no less problematic than convenient for Hare: doesn't it break the simple if too simple rule that no imperative conclusion can be derived from premises that contain no imperative?

As in the case of the simple argument, it might be argued that the appearance of an ought here derives from added normative premises, such as instrumental norms concerning the ease of communication, or pragmatic norms regulating speech acts.

The recognition of statutory property rights over the informational content of improved plant varieties was operated through the expansion of the scope of traditional IP mechanisms' protection, as well as the enactment of need-specific protection regimes, so-called "legal hybrids" (Reichman [1994]), derived from the same premises as the traditional protection regimes (Boyle [2003]).

The expectation a/b, or probability, of a proposition P is always relative to some set of empirical data or premises D. The expectation corresponds to an a priori valid estimate of the frequency of some property mentioned in P in some reference class mentioned in P, which estimate is derived from data or premises D, given the a priori valid principles of inductive or probabilistic inference.

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