Sentence examples for distinctive concepts from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

It provides relevant elements of the historical origins of this line of inquiry, examines some of its most distinctive concepts, and signals its development in science and technology studies and in some other areas of the social sciences.

Similar(59)

While not perfect, Tokyo Jungle has a distinctive concept; entertaining, tongue-in-cheek writing; and competent controls.

"Our distinctive concept of operations," Mr. Pierce said, "comes from the chairman, introspection and reflection by the members of the profession on what its basic principles and touchstones are, and how to apply them to specific issues such as providing professional military advice and handling disagreements over policy".

Not only can we come up with concepts that apply univocally to God and creatures, we can even come up with a proper (distinctive) concept of God.

Yet this thought requires the possession of a distinctive concept of being bad whose application, on occasion, though lacking the power to determine an ethical decision, remains obstinately significant and inexpungible.

By providing an overview of the stress relations of a non-stiffened type prismatic pressure vessel, the design principle of a prismatic pressure vessel shows distinctive concept to the conventional cylindrical pressure vessel.

"We tell people to have a distinctive concept — like adding mushrooms if you're in the mountains, or oysters if you're near the sea," says Matsumoto, who has written a book on okonomiyaki and whose business card identifies him as "okonomiyaki meister".

Chisholm makes use of this distinctive "intentional" concept of entailment to explain the identity conditions of states of affairs.

From Feit's (1987) perspective, Cree hunters say that trends in the condition of harvested animal populations are signs of the quality/quantity of future harvests; however the traditional Cree are not scientists they phrase their knowledge and predictions in a culturally distinctive system of concepts and values.

What makes our industry viable and our literary output distinctive is the concept of territorial copyright, and once again it's under threat.

Even once Erpenbeck has settled into the book's distinctive form, the concept of the Brandenburg estate as the narrative's picture-frame is not consistently adhered to: a chapter covering the fate of Doris, one of the exiled Jews, shifts the action to an abandoned house in the Warsaw ghetto.

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