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AND FINALLY… Here's something you probably won't be doing on Saturday: taxiderming a mouse at the Brooklyn exhibit space Morbid Anatomy and posing it in a Victorian-style tableau complete with furniture and little costume.
Socrates already pressed the point at the outset by, in his usual fashion, posing it in the lowliest terms: should the stronger have a greater share of food and drink, or clothes, or land?
The problem with posing it, in a public forum, read by people who might be overly impressionable, is that it's already been answered, over and over again.
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Daniel Ellsberg posed it in another.
Polly posed it in the first paragraph of her column today.
The Nobel committee posed it in a backward way, by giving a prize that indicated it thought women had something particular to do with war zones.
Paul Gauguin posed it in the painting he considered his most important: D'où venons nous?
To this end, we reformulate problem (5) to pose it in a more tractable form.
He posed it in front of his father's '67 Mercury Cougar for a black and white snapshot that still hangs on a wall in his home in St Louis, Missouri.
ESPN Deportes correspondent John Sutcliffe asked each question in Spanish -- leaving the former University of Arizona standout appearing visibly confused while trying to keep up -- before posing it again in English.
It wasn't a pose — it was in his sinew, in his bones.
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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