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In its search for perfection, man's intellect tends to imitate the model of this intellect, since it is that which makes man substantial in so far as he is man.
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Eliot, Austen, and Brontë were all writing against a climate in which female intellect tended to be either denied or ridiculed, and the "happy" endings, the good marriages, that we see in their work may not represent, as we are often quick to think, a romantic sensibility or a form of sentimentality so much as an attempt to demonstrate the strength and desirability of equal marriages.
A fellow who has as much style as Moore tends to overestimate the intellect — he develops the kind of Faustian mind that will throw itself against the problem of perpetual motion, or of how to pick horses first, second, third, and fourth in every race.
Thus, for Henry of Ghent, the will is the sole cause of its free act (Quodl. I, q. 17), so much so that he tends to relegate the intellect's role to that of a sine qua non cause.
"Folk tends to go towards your intellect," she says, but she also likes to "tap into how your body relates to music".
Dr. Sperry, who had a doctorate in zoology, noted the prejudice in 1973 when he remarked: "Our educational system, as well as science in general, tends to neglect the nonverbal form of intellect.
It tends to happen.
Hilarity tends to ensue.
He tends to mumble.
It tends to obliterate personality.
COMPETITION tends to reduce profits.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com