Formal possibilities, qua formal, are indefinite and the vast array of this multitude of possibilities can be considered in their pure ideality. |
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These artists and craftsmen were utterly unselfconscious of what they did qua artists and craftsmen. |
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Indian politicians are, I'll just simply aver, the best in the world, qua politicians-committed-to-winning. |
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But some actors declaim it with that incipient sob that used to be the sine qua non of the grand style, while others trundle along prosily. |
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Clearly the first of two sine qua nons is to be able to express one calculated column in terms of another. |
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Raw materials of good provenance, sourced locally wherever possible, are the sine qua non of any healthy, thriving food culture. |
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Supermodels qua supermodels properly belong to the 80s, that Gilded Age that we shall never quite see the likes of again. |
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Cisco, the nonpareil of networking equipment makers and at one time the sine qua non of tech stocks is feeling the pinch. |
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The Irish qua Irish have no more title to self-determination than have the freckled, red-haired or bow-legged. |
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Here he believed in good earnest that qua nulla est was equivalent to qua nihil ad rem. |
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A demand is embedded in the very grain of the voice qua voice irrespective of the meaning it carries. |
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Note, however, that one can to some extent rationally accept s qua a member of G and accept not-s as a private person. |
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Similarly, an analysis of Raging Bull needs to consider the kitchen qua boxing ring, and vice-versa. |
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This practice, one of the sine qua nons of Hungarian rural life, has lost much of its original sacral, ritual meaning. |
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That is, the logic of power is a reified logic to which the prince must, qua prince, ultimately submit. |
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We believe that this balance is a sine qua non to ensure the legitimacy and political commitment inherent in this agreement. |
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And, of course, she is that sine qua non of political housewifery, an impeccable hostess. |
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Letting a relaxed diaphragm rhyme the course of life palpitating in you, the sine qua non condition for spontaneity. |
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In its specificity, the female struggle is the condition sine qua non of the supersession of the programmatic class struggle. |
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That is why we regard civilian control of the military as a sine qua non of democracy. |
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In the land of the industrial revolution, foreign ownership and management is the sine qua non of industrial success. |
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I agree that Jewishness is the sine qua non of human existence, and I regret deeply my Jewishness is not as realised as your own. |
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Getting to know it was, I was led to suppose, a sine qua non of a fortunate and civilised childhood – a child without Alice was a child deprived. |
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The study subjects obviously are the sine qua nons of a clinical trial. |
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Viewed in this light, the emotions in general lack that property of universalizability which many philosophers have regarded as a sine qua non of the ethical. |
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It is, indeed, true that Americans derive from so many racial currents that it is a sine qua non that ways must be found to harmonize them without a loss of their uniqueness. |
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The compulsory financial guarantees for restoring environmental damage are a conditio sine qua non for efficient environmental protection. |
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That accumulation of identities is already a sine qua non when speaking of Hispanics, like Zimmerman. |
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As shareholders, qua shareholders, they must be treated equally. |
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Recognition as an artistic form and the presence of structuring are two sine qua non conditions to participating in the dialogue, she added. |
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For peace and stability are sine qua non conditions for ensuring lasting development. |
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Agricultural liberalization is therefore not a condition sine qua non for development. |
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Compromise therefore, and the implications this would have for personal reputations, was recognised as a sine qua non even before the plenipotentiaries left Dublin. |
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After all, products of a high and consistent quality, made with love and care, are the very sine qua non for achieving those goals. |
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The concert hall is the very field of communication qua meaning. |
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Ehyeh asher Ehyeh is not only a name, it is a sine qua non of functional eponymy. |
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In particular, he will enlarge upon the fact that quality-oriented creation is a 'conditio sine qua non' within the framework of global development towards a digital economy. |
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The third points to the need to move beyond what is by definition a notion of individual moral blameworthiness and to figure out how groups might be understood as morally blameworthy qua groups. |
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Breguet is now so deeply rooted in European culture that the name is virtually a sine qua non of any depiction of the aristocracy, the bourgeoisie or, quite simply, a life of luxury and elegance. |
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This conclusion is ba sed on an arg um ent th at, wh en tw o aircraft are confined in close qua rters, the essential action is to minim ize the relative crosssectional areas of each aircraft. |
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For a singer, a voice is the sine qua non. |
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An undertaking not to be the first to use nuclear weapons is a first step and a sine qua non for moving along this path, with a view to achieving general and complete disarmament. |
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Anyone must absolutely be able to use French-it is a sine qua non condition-without any problems or difficulties for someone who uses French with Air Canada airline subsidiaries. |
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Small, open jurisdictions, free from the suffocation of an overwhelming or corrupt center of power, competing for productive residents, are a sine qua non condition to a higher degree of justice. |
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Developing the private sector and improving public administration are therefore a sine qua non for ensuring the long-term structural revenue adjustment. |
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For staff in post, these proposals reinforce the condition sine qua non imposed to keep a contract agent job: pass the tests in competition with candidates from outside or lose your job. |
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The allocation of adequate human and financial resources is a sine qua non condition for bringing to life the commitments made by the municipal council. |
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It is quite obvious that the guarantees the Commission will offer against Council denaturing its proposal will be a sine qua non for our agreement. |
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The expansion of the scope, span and volume of EU action in research requires, as a condition sine qua non, a substantial simplification and rationalisation of the way the Framework Programme works. |
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It is an issue of obfuscation and stonewalling which has become the sine qua non of the government's behaviour not only in this area but in so many other areas. |
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Being qua being is then thought of as unique, eternal, changeless, as one, truly, and good, intelligible and desirable, in identity completed with itself. |
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As dialogue is very much a sine qua non for success, I would like to say to you, on behalf of my group, that you represent the personification of dialogue. |
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This relevance can in many cases, as here, be tested by the sine qua non or ' but for ' rule. |
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This paper argues that Aristotle's account of voluntary action focuses on the conditions under which one is the efficient cause of one's actions qua individual. |
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Searching for this genesis is sine qua non for overcoming that hypostatization of mathematical space which characterizes the ontological approach to the world as res extensa. |
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In 1923 Sir Flinders Petrie found another cache of fossils at Qua, wrapped in linen and carefully stored in rock tombs. |
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