Sentence examples for phenomenon about which from inspiring English sources

Exact(9)

Soviet-style Communism is no longer a phenomenon about which there are two views.

Conversion is a fascinating phenomenon about which much could be said; however, in my view, it isn't of interest as an argument in favour of religion itself.

On the evidence of this volume, it is the last projected instalment, scheduled to offer some intellectual perspective on the Folio-rush phenomenon about which he has amassed so many facts, that West is least qualified to write.

It was the kind of pop cultural phenomenon about which books would surely be written: and perhaps it is no surprise that Nicola Barker should be the first to enshrine the event in fiction.

These religious predators oppressively operate and boldly bully quite openly in the armed forces, a phenomenon about which MRFF has long sounded wailing sirens of primal, screaming rage.

This is a phenomenon about which we have to be cautious, since we know little enough about it and are, of course, in its midst.

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Similar(51)

According to this view, NF does not so much contradict ZFC as cover extra topics, such as the universal set — phenomena about which ZF has nothing to say.

Q-methodology is a quali-quantological approach suitable for studying complex phenomena about which different points of view can be expressed (Brown, 1996).

For example, many experiments play an exploratory role, that is, they assist scientists in discovering new phenomena about which they may not yet have any theoretical account or not even any clear ideas.

The Symposium on Rapid Magnetic Variations, held at Copenhagen in 1956, produced a list of geomagnetic phenomena about which observatories were sending monthly reports to the IAGA Committee of Rapid Magnetic Variations and Earth Currents.

MacFarlane notes that if we were to try to express such resources in Kant's system, we would have to appeal to non-logical constructions which make sense only with respect to a faculty of 'intuition', that is, an extralogical source which presents our minds with (sensible) phenomena about which judgments can be formed.

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