Sentence examples for namely that which from inspiring English sources

Exact(15)

According to the Idealist account, there is in the end only one true description of the universe, namely that which is couched in terms of the concrete universal.

The plot delineates two fundamental categories of noise, namely, that which is of natural or biological origin and that which is of anthropogenic origin, specifically, shipping.

Most notably, "liquidating" a sovereign is limited to collecting a small subset of the country's property, namely that which is not protected by sovereign immunity.

One such example is Thrasymachus' claim that justice is best defined as the advantage of the stronger, namely, that which is in the competitive interest of the powerful.

Knowledge regarding the amount of blur perceived to be "bothersome" to an individual, namely that which is assumed to be annoying and to adversely affect task performance, remains limited.

The third objection may be thought to present more difficulty than the others, namely, that which alleges that motion arises in things in which it did not exist before, and adduces in proof the case of animate things: thus an animal is first at rest and afterwards walks, not having been set in motion apparently by anything from without.

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Apparently Plutarch understands "being" in Timaeus 52d2 as equivalent to "animal" in Timaeus 39e8, namely as that which comprises both the divine intellect (in a soul) and the intelligible Forms.

Burke's impulses and instincts are strikingly universalist: "There is but one law for all, namely, that law which governs all law, the law of our Creator, the law of humanity, justice, equity — the Law of Nature and of Nations".

The jouissance presumably lost to the speaking subject returns only in the guises of what might be labeled "limit experiences," namely, encounters with that which is annihilating, inassimilable, overwhelming, traumatic, or unbearable.

Lady Wilkinson (1858), who provides an extensive discussion of the etymology of the various names for this plant, suggests a very different origin, namely the Old English word affodyle (that which cometh early), citing a 14th-century (but likely originally much earlier) manuscript in support of this theory, and which appears to describe a plant resembling the daffodil.

It does no good to say that the diagonal of an atom is longer than its sides; for such an assumption entails that there are lengths shorter than the smallest part, namely, that amount by which the atom's diagonal is supposedly longer than its side, but a length shorter than the shortest length is a contradiction.

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