Sentence examples for thought one can from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

Building on these two lines of thought, one can, following Van Gulick (2001), draw a distinction between representational and non-representational relata of the reduction relation, and accordingly between representational and ontological reduction.

To this extent, and Wilde finds this a deeply un-Hellenic thought, one can transform one's past through a process of aesthetic transfiguration or sublimation.

Next, insofar as facts are grasped in thought, one can also ask under what conditions does knowledge of some facts permit knowledge of another fact.

Over such a period, she thought, "one can observe that venerable old age can be a guide but not a prerequisite for success in public office" – another slight ripple of amusement.

Similar(56)

The Law of Attraction (which is a body of work made famous by author Rhonda Byrne through her international best-seller The Secret ) is the name given to the belief that "like attracts like" and that by focusing on positive or negative thoughts, one can bring about positive or negative results.

T and T* are in turn distinct thoughts, so that, starting with any single thought T, one can obtain an endless sequence of possible thoughts: T, T*, T**, T***, and so on.

The speeches weren't only criticisms of capitalism, but food for thought on how one can prevent rent prices from affecting cultural communities; how big business and grassroots venues can coexist.

I will present some general thoughts on how much one can expect to be able to infer, and outline a potential technique for making such inferences based on hypothetical rewirings of copies of subsystems.

It not only observes the Oscar Wilde dictum "One should either be a work of art, or wear a work of art," it includes the more generous thought that one can be a work in progress and wear a work in progress.

Typically, supervenience claims are driven by the thought that one can only affect the higher-order (in this case mental) properties of an event or object by affecting its lower-order (physical) properties.

Such intuitions will, e.g., count against the thought that one can engage in the initial just acquisition of H by wanting H or by intensely focusing one's attention on H and will support the thought that some sort of physical engagement with unowned materials is necessary for acquiring an entitlement to them.

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