Exact(1)
In a more moderate way, one can grant objects and events an equal ontological status but maintain that either objects or events are primary in the order of thought.
Similar(59)
Some may disagree with the notion of an unconditional cash grant, or object to it going to everyone.
Prichard, who was probably the first to put Cook Wilson's views into print in 'Appearances and Reality' (Prichard 1906), ended up arguing late in life that we really see only colour expansions, which we systematically mistake for or 'take for granted' as objects (Prichard 1950 , 52 68.
A few Grant delegates objected, but the motion to adjourn was passed by a vote of 446 to 308.
At base, our ethical instincts are of two kinds, depending on whether we grant the object in question some moral status or treat it as merely something to be used -- or sold.
These thin-film electronics can then be trimmed and pasted onto any surface, granting that object electronic features.
An intermediate view is to grant reality to objects that have some spatial extension: not commonsense objects, but aggregations of atoms within the scope of a specific sense-sphere (Skt. āyatana, Tib. skye mched), such as, for the visual sense-sphere, patches of color.
While some people derive a sense of personal liberation from moments of desk- and shelf-cleaning, others grant their hoarded objects a talismanic aura by enshrining them within files meant to be reopened some day for some unforeseen purpose.
This amiable tour through changing French attitudes toward love during the past millennium begins in the twelfth century, when — according to Yalom, a former professor of French — troubadours granted the female objects of their songs an unprecedented power and status.
This amiable tour through changing French attitudes toward love during the past millennium begins in the twelfth century, when according to Yalom, a former professor of French troubadours granted the female objects of their songs an unprecedented power and status.
They were schooled with a potted history of marriage by Yvette Cooper: of how women were once mere objects, granted by fathers to their husbands; of civil non-religious marriages – once a huge, controversial innovation – being introduced in 1836; of women still legally being able to be raped by their husbands until the early 1990s.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com