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"And blue jeans, signifying freedom in the way they do, are still the most successful fashion design ever created in this state". Graphic artists were similarly inspired.
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He said in an e-mail that to him the goats signified freedom.
Historically, the wearing of pants was meant to signify freedom and equality for women, but I think trousers have just turned women into a sort of male clone.
Free choice among a wide variety of goods and services does not signify freedom if these goods and services sustain social controls over a life of toil and fear – that is, if they sustain alienation.
All again wash their hands, then consume unleavened bread (matza) and bitter herbs (maror) dipped into a mixture of crushed fruits and wine, signifying that freedom and spiritual progress are the reward of suffering and sacrifice.
Designed by local artist Louise Lockhart, it signifies the freedom women were given by the advent of the bike.
Much turns on how it might be possible for God to move us in a way that is truly consistent with our voluntary nature, where "voluntary is taken to signify libertarian freedom".
In this Essay, we argue that pluripotent epiblast founder cells in the embryo and embryonic stem (ES) cells in culture represent the ground state for a mammalian cell, signified by freedom from developmental specification or epigenetic restriction and capacity for autonomous self-replication.
Signifying sunshine, beauty and freedom, butterflies are ubiquitous in our culture, ever-present on greeting cards and used to sell everything from oven chips to SUVs.
Babylon Victor Pelevin Faber, £9.99, 250pp Buy it at BOL Victor Pelevin's new novel, a simmering ragout of modern satire, Buddhism and Egyptology, was originally published in Russia as Generation P. The book's arch opening chapter explains the nomenclature: the Soviet teenagers of the 1970s chose Pepsi as their preferred soft drink, signifying the taste of freedom.
It is also important to note that action in the ordinary sense is "some motion or exertion of power, that is voluntary, or that is the effect of the will…[the term is] most commonly used to signify outward actions" (Freedom of the Will, 1754; Edwards 1957–, vol. 1, 346).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com