1.
As our (collective) body of shared values continue to diminish under the dynamic influence of multiculturalism and where the evolution of self-contained communities, especially in our inner cities, continues mapping their (own) chartered course, such events must inevitably give rise to expanding pockets of diverse groups who, as a rule, feel more at ease in their (own) ethnic environments perceived to be culturally and socially sympathetic to their needs contrasted by ‖homogenous‖ groups who, increasingly threatened by ―foreign‖ values that provide little, if any meaning, seek refuge of their own
2.
Such thinking may inevitably give rise to amoral attitudes of horrible (moral) consequence to these individuals
3.
They will then give rise to experiences of either pleasure and happiness, or misery and unhappiness
4.
This will automatically give rise to such destructive verbal and physical activities as lying, stealing, fighting, and killing
5.
We can let such understanding give rise to great compassion, whereby we have a heartfelt motivation to relieve the pain, sorrow, and suffering of others
6.
The memory of the false cannot but give rise to the false
7.
ability to be conditioned and to give rise to variety
8.
How can these judgments give rise to true error when X1 and X2 differ conceptually at the
9.
that give rise to the ‘best’ appearance of the object, not realizing that each appearance contributes
10.
As an example, the earth helped give rise to humans on
11.
Propositions, we suspect, may give rise to similar relations with respect to content, whatever content may be
12.
Bits have no material causes, at least not a necessary material cause because any material can give rise to the form of the bit
13.
primal form, the bit, give rise to movement? There is no source of
14.
sense organ initiates processes that give rise to perception and meaning
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Wil give rise
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An elliptical galaxy can give rise to a great black hole that is fed by the mass of the stars that fall into it
17.
ates thermal shock waves which can give rise to similar
18.
However, at the centers of galaxies this would give rise to a broadband spectrum
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would give rise to a broadband spectrum of SM radiation, including radio, X-rays and
20.
terns is a puzzle to scientists nevertheless, they give rise to group behav-
21.
tric currents carried in interstellar and intergalactic plasma give rise to the
22.
give rise to the aurora borealis are the same as those which give rise to the
23.
pinch, collapsing to form nodes, which give rise to vortexes within our
24.
Which would give rise to unorthodox emotions and
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that give rise to those ideas should still apply to any society
26.
Such arcane methods of re/organizing give rise to much of the jockeying for position that currently undermines every organization we have consulted with
27.
that should not give rise to any concern because, even if that is the
28.
they’re sometimes bred with Greyhounds in to give rise to a
29.
Tired of throwing out so many empty brandy and champagne bottles so that they would not clutter up the house and at the same time intrigued by the fact that the newlyweds slept at different times and in separate rooms while the fireworks and music and the slaughtering of cattle went on, Úrsula remem-bered her own experience and wondered whether Fer-nanda might have a chastity belt too which would sooner or later provoke jokes in the town and give rise to a tragedy
30.
between real particles and that it is these particles that give rise to the
31.
malistic intentions and give rise to ingenuity, morality, and wonder
32.
and this would give rise to the first concepts of religion or spiritual belief which is the foundation of morality
33.
One thing you should remember is how wrong indentation can give rise to errors
34.
The other dimensions of space, give rise to the fifth dimension
35.
So how exactly do certain species give rise to other species?”
36.
There were no suggestive remarks or any alarming subjects contained within that would give rise to suspicion of murder
37.
In addition, if this were a long-term affair, it would certainly give rise to a motive for wanting her husband dead
38.
The parade of life has continued to give rise to exceptional and interesting specimens
39.
that such ideologies and the partisan agendas to which they give rise have been
40.
Various polyunsaturated fats of the omega-6 and omega-3 series give rise to the formation of eicosanoids, including
41.
stories would eventually give rise to a much richer Mother Goddess archetype—
42.
Reader, these things may well give rise to great searchings of heart
43.
cial, gender and class distinction give rise to the quicksand of in-
44.
respectively and give rise to its natural diversity
45.
give rise to competition in the health care field and lead to a
46.
And what does the feeling of anger give rise to ?
47.
However, the mind does purge unused connections and starts over with another global integration process to give rise to a higher experience of self – the self the Earth is evolving into
48.
But when we are liberated from money, our empathy can give rise to a philanthropic society whose institutions are faces of love: the idealization of our better selves – not how we might want to act when we are hurt, but how we hope to love when we forgive
49.
But what wisdom is necessary to birth a compassionate higher consciousness; what foolhardy ignorance required to create a god without heart or empathy? What culture will embrace, what wisdom can comform the emerging meta-human consciousness we are being called to obsessively construct the necessary conditions for? What must be the creed of that wisdom culture? A culture of and for what? Are we the type of culture that can give rise to Techine and survive or coexist with it?
50.
Though paper sheet music and digital recording both give rise to an orchestral production, a bodymind fed one or the other gives rise to a slightly different spiritual integration, i
51.
archosaurs appeared; a group that would give rise to the
52.
“Their complexity will never give rise to the complications of my aesthetic experience of awarefully regulating exchanges of energy and information with my surrounding environism
53.
He felt that he should not speak out to his wife about his annoyance at her style of clothing and the fact that he was against it, for this might give rise to friction between them
54.
And it is these wrong beliefs and notions that give rise to anger
55.
This should give rise to devotion and hence anger will vanish
56.
tables – each with seeds and the potential to give rise
57.
The objects that give rise to my attachment, hatred and
58.
themselves have ceased, their potential to give rise to suffer-
59.
He could no longer walk round his own garden without meeting an interlaced couple; and though he suggested to Herr Dremmel with what he felt was really admirable self-restraint that these public endearments might give rise to comment, Herr Dremmel merely replied that as Ingeborg was his _Braut_ it ought to give rise to much more comment, even to justifiable complaints, if his manner to her were less warm
60.
This could have serious consequences and might give rise to political upheavals
61.
“We are extremely grateful and I am sure you can deal with all the queries it might give rise to
62.
The objects themselves or at least the interactions with the subjects give rise to high or low quality
63.
other factors give rise to a belief that the customer does not, in fact, pose a low
64.
alia, transactions, which give rise to a reasonable ground of suspicion that these
65.
— lugar a give rise to, cause, give an opportunity to;
66.
while others give rise to uplifting impressions, depending on how well they correlate with the
67.
These conceptions have generated and continue to generate in the energy-information structures of this collective Consciousness the incredible fear of their Lives and insane devastation, intolerable suffering and horrifying depression, which, in their turn, give rise to global oppression, widespread spite and bitterness, killing and wars
68.
Middle East, will give rise to a group called The Brotherhood
69.
that precede and give rise to thoughts and deeds
70.
An unscriptural doctrine always give rise
71.
They also give rise to others of the same grouping
72.
An unscriptural doctrine always give rise to unscriptural language; for the words of Scripture are the very best which could be chosen to express the will of God to man
73.
out suppressed feelings and emotions that give rise to neurotic stress,
74.
Differences in, and complex interactions between, the above factors give rise to our individuality
75.
My esteem for your whole family is very sincere; but if I have been so unfortunate as to give rise to a belief of more than I felt, or meant to express, I shall reproach myself for not having been more guarded in my professions of that esteem
76.
"Ah, indeed?" said the major, who, seeing the object of his journey frustrated by the absence of the papers, feared also that his forgetfulness might give rise to some difficulty concerning the 48,000 francs—"ah, indeed, that is a fortunate circumstance; yes, that really is lucky, for it never occurred to me to bring them
77.
Holly, that the two does were likely to give rise to trouble
78.
Breakouts are an important class of trades and can give rise to strong price moves beyond the breakout point
79.
These situations may involve a liquidation or give rise to technical operations known as “arbitrage” or “hedging
80.
In some cases, no doubt, the concealment will elude detection and give rise to an incorrect conclusion
81.
Their insufficiency will give rise to an entirely different concept of common-stock selection, the so-called “new-era theory,” which beneath its superficial plausibility will hold possibilities of untold mischief in store
82.
If the receivables and inventories were written down to an unduly low figure on December 31, 1932, this artificially low “cost price” would give rise to a correspondingly inflated profit in the following years
83.
The two figures should not necessarily be the same, since the intricacies of the tax laws may give rise to a number of divergences
84.
When it can be shown that certain conditions, such as those last discussed, tend to give rise to under-valuations in the market, two different lines of conduct are thereby suggested
85.
Rather, many companies, in whole or in part, are engaged in resource conversion activities that give rise to tax shelter, mergers and acquisitions, changes in control, liquidations, investment activities, and major refinancings
86.
Such a tax has the three worst elements of a tax, to wit, the tax rate is at the optimum; the taxpayer has no control over when the tax comes due; and the event, unrealized appreciation, which gives rise to the tax does not give rise to the cash with which to pay the tax
87.
One of the three things that make a tax position unattractive is a taxable event—such as the distribution of a Citizens Utilities B stock dividend—where the event that gives rise to the tax does not also give rise to the cash with which to pay the tax
88.
Perhaps General Motors, Chrysler, and CIT have set a new precedent that will give rise to new legislation that will permit, and even encourage, all sorts of troubled issuers to reorganize expeditiously in a controlled manner while still preserving creditor rights
89.
LSV list several common errors that may give rise to the mispricings that contrarian investors can exploit:• extrapolating past earnings trend growth too far into the future;
90.
LSV list popular errors that may give rise to mispricings that contrarian investors can exploit
91.
Relevant underlying factors (1) give rise to common covariation across asset returns and (2) are “priced” (i
92.
The lesson was that common holdings among hedge funds give rise to a new type of risk which is purely “technical” (in the sense of reflecting the supply and demand for assets, rather than their fundamental values) and which we might call crowded trade risk (“we have found a new risk factor—it is us”)
93.
Three objective functions can give rise to three criteria pairs, each of which produces its own optimal set
94.
Finally, I conclude that, although small isolated areas have been in some respects highly favourable for the production of new species, yet that the course of modification will generally have been more rapid on large areas; and what is more important, that the new forms produced on large areas, which already have been victorious over many competitors, will be those that will spread most widely, and will give rise to the greatest number of new varieties and species
95.
As buds give rise by growth to fresh buds, and these, if vigorous, branch out and overtop on all sides many a feebler branch, so by generation I believe it has been with the great Tree of Life, which fills with its dead and broken branches the crust of the earth, and covers the surface with its ever-branching and beautiful ramifications
96.
As we sometimes see individuals following habits different from those proper to their species and to the other species of the same genus, we might expect that such individuals would occasionally give rise to new species, having anomalous habits, and with their structure either slightly or considerably modified from that of their type
97.
That species have a capacity for change will be admitted by all evolutionists; but there is no need, as it seems to me, to invoke any internal force beyond the tendency to ordinary variability, which through the aid of selection, by man has given rise to many well-adapted domestic races, and which, through the aid of natural selection, would equally well give rise by graduated steps to natural races or species
98.
Vexation at himself, a shame at his conduct, which could give rise to such a suspicion, and the insult from his brother, of whom he was so fond, produced upon his sensitive nature so deeply painful an impression that he made no reply
99.
I have always determined to admit British vessels as far as my vote would go; and should the House determine to exclude French vessels I should still vote for the admission of English vessels, because their former exclusion has been so artfully managed by the British Government, and the doctrine has been so admitted by the presses in this country, as to give rise to the most unjustifiable conduct ever pursued by one nation towards another