It was common, she said, for children to regress, both behaviourally and academically. |
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But if you free yourself of these expectations and regress back to a seventh grade mentality, you will have a great time. |
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In supportive therapy, the therapist works to help the patient not regress around this phase. |
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With Rain, I was able to regress into my last life and discover that I was one of the greatest men in history! |
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It seems that every purist movement has an infinite regress of fringes upon fringes, with each seeking to be more pure than the others. |
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Each stage of the regress depends on the coherence of a compresence bundle at the next stage, ad infinitum. |
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Theatre's capacity to regress us to childhood may also open the other scene, the unconscious, revealing repressed desires and forgotten fears. |
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Young kids may become clingy and regress to earlier behavior, such as wanting to sleep with their parents or wetting the bed. |
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This lesion has been shown to respond to elevated levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone and to regress with cortisone. |
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First, there is a potential regress of rules, that is, that explicit rules requires further rules to apply them, and so on. |
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The existence of some indemonstrable principles within a science is necessary in order to avoid an infinite regress in explanations. |
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That being so, those sentences exhibit, after all, no signs of the feared regress. |
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A livelier scientific curiosity, one is inclined to think, might lead not to infinite regress but to progress toward the infinite. |
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Either this process continues forever, creating an infinite regress of premises, or it comes to a stop at some point. |
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No matter how much I'd like to regress and give in to senioritis, AMR will not let me do so. |
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God must be a first cause and a self-moved mover otherwise there will be an infinite regress to causes of causes. |
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Younger toddlers are unable to verbalize their feelings, and their behaviors may regress after the new child is born. |
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He offers his assistance as a hypnotist to regress the amnesiac back to the point of her nightmares, hopefully sparking her memory. |
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You climb so far, get into New York and Washington and Los Angeles, and then you regress to the days of living hand to mouth. |
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The tendency of rational progress to become irrational regress arises much earlier. |
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If the whole universe is expanding at a rate that is calculable, then by regress, we can go back to the starting point of this expansion. |
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Take Ronnie as an example of the progress or regress of the last however-long in music. |
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When it does, Bralove said, the patient can regress in measureable ways, turning to drugs or alcohol for solace. |
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It is not difficult to see that this leads to an infinite regress. |
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That is, they regress the unemployment rate on the change in real wages to determine whether the relationship is flatter when inflation is low. |
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If there is regress or no change, it too can be demonstrated and appropriate measures taken. |
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At first glance, her paintings might seem to summon an ancestry in Vasarely or Albers, or to regress even further and look back to Bomberg and the Vorticists. |
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It has taken a little over a fortnight for a large group of adults to regress to that institutional hugger-mugger one first encountered at boarding school at the age of eight. |
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Reincarnation does seem to offer an explanation for some strange phenomena such as the ability of some people to regress to a past life under hypnosis. |
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Despite some advances, there has been little progress in some key areas and regress is evident in others. |
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Around the 12th day of the pseudopregnancy, the corpus luteum and the uterus start to regress, accompanied by mammary gland involution. |
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But this regress presupposes that resemblances are entities that can resemble one another. |
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It was widely held that democracy would lead to national regress, rather than progress. |
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In the final analysis, to stand still is to regress, and fear is a bad advisor. |
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In addition, the symptom may regress a few weeks after the end of the pregnancy. |
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Regarding some goals, such as poverty reduction, there had even been regress. |
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These are moments I do not wish to remember, because it breaks my heart to see humanity regress. |
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Some varicose veins regress after pregnancy while others persist and thus require further attention. |
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Title in English: The European action of regress of the last seller in a chain of sales in the single market. |
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Rights provide democratic systems the foundations for just society and the means to measure progress or regress. |
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It requires a great deal of effort and for that reason, new exercisers are very tempted to quit and regress to an earlier stage. |
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It would be a regrettable step for the applicant countries too if the EC were to regress to a looser association of states. |
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Certain psychological factors may even cause students to regress, which came as a surprise to many of the parents. |
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But at around 12 months, B. seemed to regress, and by age 2, he had fully retreated into his own world. |
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When panic sets in, they regress completely and start ordering up things that are technical flops, too. |
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Or do I step away from the remote and regress, becoming the quaint sort of character who watches only one episode at a time? |
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Moreover, the causality condition appears to threaten an infinite regress. |
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On the theory of real distinction, this view leads to an infinite regress. |
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If expansionary policies are not adopted, the economy may regress. |
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The physiological changes usually regress after the delivery. |
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People under stress often regress to earlier stages of development. |
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So it looks as though internalist justifications are like irritatingly persistent children in that they give rise to an unending regress of reasons for reasons. |
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The ritual of routine visits for most chronic diseases usually includes monitoring to check on the progress or regress of the disease and the development of complications. |
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During late anaphase and telophase, the metaphase furrows rapidly regress. |
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If not and if there is no infinite regress, then the argument at once comes to a standstill. |
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Spermatogenesis occurs in December, and the males are fertile from May to August, after which the testes regress. |
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Its bearing on the progress or regress of man is not an inconsiderable question. |
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It's a tragic position and, while the Scots regress, even the Luxembourgers are going forward as we appear to be backtracking. |
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If they see us regress, that will discourage them. |
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When dealing with stress or new experiences some children may regress. |
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The Regions have been obliged to take on board the Commissions proposals and guidelines that have been strongly influenced by the desire of some Member States to regress on this issue. |
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An exercise of this type must not upset the balance or cause us to regress, in the name of the principle of subsidiarity, as some parties seem to wish. |
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This chapter nicely treats various regress arguments and the primitives that tropists must embrace to rebut them. |
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In these dogs, body weight loss slowly reversed and general condition improved but clinical laboratory measurements did not completely regress and soft tissue calcification was noted at autopsy. |
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One common empirical strategy in these studies is to regress reduced form equations for changes in wages and employment including some measure of international competition. |
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Amid the wreckage of failed development, culture will surely regress into decline and decay, or fall easy prey to isolationism, brute force or despotism. |
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In general it analyzes how societies progress, stagnate, or regress because of their local or regional economy, or the global economy. |
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The traditional regress of grievances preceding the granting of supply never included requiring public officials to break the law, yet that is what this motion would order. |
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Canada well, most of it tries again Economic reform and social regress? |
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Similarly, a Turkey spurned by Europe could soon regress into a sour and militant Islamist mood, right on Europe's front line. So the question left by the failed constitution should not be: how can we resurrect it? |
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Think of the infinite regress you get when youAAEre caught between two mirrors, and how unstable that can make you feel about your place in the world. |
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Here he argues that while many admit an infinite regress in an accidentally ordered series of causes, no philosopher admits infinite regress in an essentially ordered series. |
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This leads to infinite regress, something Dawkins has argued against many times. |
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An astute commentator on a previous draft observed that universal partial ownership of individuals by other individuals might imply an infinite regress. |
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Any attempt to replace the belief in God the Uncreated as Creator by an atheistic explanation seems to end in something like belief in an infinite regress. |
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