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On the one hand, sharia depends for its legitimacy not on any human decision, not on votes or preferences, but on the conviction that it represents the mind of God; on the other, it is to some extent unfinished business so far as codified and precise provisions are concerned.
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In this model, the boxes represent entities, the arrows represent causal or functional processes, and the area in grey represents the mind of the participant, which is not directly observable but is the target of investigation.
On the next level there should be a Buddhist scripture, representing the speech of the Buddha and there should be a Stupa of Enlightenment (chorten in Tibetan), which represents the mind of the Buddha.
It's easy to understand the wellspring of Romney affection by listening closely to the candidates who haven't been very visible and yet, even in their obscurity, seem to represent the mind of the Party.
Is this fair?" A bishop in Colorado reminded Moore that "the ordination of practicing homosexuals" did not represent "the mind of the Church," was "plainly contrary to the teaching of scripture," and was "totally irresponsible".
The director initially devised a production that would have two characters — the singer representing the mind of the dying person, a silent actor representing the body.
What makes this book such an interesting document is that it represents the current state of mind — I'm tempted to say the final word — of that generation of which Brodsky was the finest specimen.
In Washington's mind, it represents the culmination of an already traumatic odyssey.
When, however, a historian considers the different stages of some movement or process, or when an anthropologist studies the various aspects of the life of a society, the material they confront is internally related just because it represents the work of mind not, of course, of mind working in a vacuum but of mind facing and reacting with greater or less intelligence to particular situations.
The formula is this: the sentence represents the mind, making sense of what the body, in the form of line and stanza breaks, forces upon it.
(Cf. Currie 1995c, 161) In its original form, Berkeley's Puzzle is presented as a puzzle about the possibility of conceiving of something neither perceived nor thought of, or, as Winkler (1989) suggests, as a puzzle of how it could be that an idea in the mind represents the mind-independence of what is represented.
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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