Sentence examples for nature in view from inspiring English sources

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Increasing constraints were placed upon the interpretation of nature in view of the teachings of the Bible.

The conductivity and viscosity of PEO/LiTFSI complexes are determined as a function of temperature, molecular weight (Mn) and the end group nature in view of the design of future polymer electrolytes.

Poor thing, he said we'd be saving his life – the Soviets were at his place on a secret holiday that was meant to be good for them, and no one must ever find out what they were doing here, because otherwise they would do something to him that no one would ever find out about… "Despite doubts of a moral and aesthetic nature, in view of her old acquaintance my mother did however agree.

Similar(57)

Human nature, in her view, is not disembodied or neutral; it is always distinctively sexed or sexuate, a neologism for sexed, but not necessarily erotic, bodily difference.

Nature in their view is an artistically working fire, going on its way to create, which is equivalent to a fiery, creative, or fashioning breath.

It has been successfully applied to the study of biological network topology, from the global perspective of their scale-free, small world, hierarchical nature, to the zoomed-in view of interaction motifs, clusters and modules and the specific interactions between different biomolecules.

This undermines the main point of the idea of a state of nature in many views, which is to distinguish the rights, claims, duties, powers and competencies we have prior to membership in society from those we acquire as members of society.

The dynamic nature in their views highlights the complexities surrounding partner notification for HIV.

"A Christian Environmental Perspective on the View of Nature in Asian Thought". Asia Journal of Theology 16.2(2002): 396-408.

And yet they are very different; what common nature have we in view when we call them by a single name?

He made the idea central to his discussion of social cooperation, arguing that the division of labour did not arise from human wisdom but was the "necessary, though very slow and gradual, consequence of a certain propensity in human nature which has in view no such extensive utility: the propensity to truck, barter, and exchange one thing for another".

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