Sentence examples for of referring back from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

Fundamentalist Muslims are fond of referring back to Baghdad's "golden age," when its civilization shone more brightly than any other, when its philosophers, mathematicians and doctors led the way intellectually.

As in the essay "The Rise of Hermeneutics," understanding is said to involve a process of referring back from outer sensory phenomena to a reality that is inner.

In order to decrease the chance of conflicting situations in electronic communication, Pincas (2001) suggests that "attention should be given to netiquette rules of deference, politeness in acknowledging others' messages, modes of emphasis, and ways of referring back to previous messages" (p. 46).

But instead of referring back to the state regulations the bill is trying to thwart, HB1781 instead allows Texas high schools to sell "foods of minimal nutritional value" (FMNV), as that term is defined by federal law.

Other high-scoring advantages of primary care follow-up included ease of referring back to the specialist centre as required (63%, 253 of 400; CI 58 68%) and the least expensive option (55%, 221 out of 399; CI 50 60%).

He explained that the purpose of the interview was to explore the GPs' own thoughts and experiences regarding decisions about and consequences of referring back patients for plain radiography.

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Similar(53)

The explanation of Buffon's 1753 rejection of transformism has taken many forms, most of these referring back to an early article by A. O. Lovejoy in which he is seen to have undergone a radical change of mind from a "nominalist" to a "realist" position (Lovejoy 1911. See Bowler 2003, chp. 3).

In naming these OH-PCBs, we followed the recommendation of Maervoet et al. (2004) to name them as metabolites of PCBs, referring back to the Ballschmiter and Zell numbering system for PCBs (Ballschmiter and Zell 1980).

He says Facebook has "been playing with this idea for a couple of years," referring back to Memories.

The matter has been much debated, starting with Leibniz's critique (1706; Leibniz 1972) and Barbeyrac's defense (1718; Pufendorf 2003) of Pufendorf (see Schneewind 1996a; Hunter 2004; Lipscomb 2005; Haakonssen 1998; Grunert 2000), and still in recent discussions (see section 5.3 below) of normativity referring back to those earlier treatments.

With so much new art currently emerging from vital markets around the world, much of it referring back to "premodern" ideas, traditions, rituals, and art, today's new art is best understood not as some bounded and supplanting epoch or movement, but in relation to a thriving past being revised and remodeled in new contexts today.

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