1.
Einstein and his contemporaries
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Chuff's theory was slow to catch on, and many of his contemporaries refused to see any value in his work
3.
At thirteen, Jon was nearly six feet tall, taller than most of his contemporaries
4.
And even the women! Yes, even the women, her contemporaries, and at one stage her rivals
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world those in argumentation and research their contemporaries, and knowledge of contemporary
6.
” Many of Aron’s contemporaries, such as Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre, the father of Existentialism, applied themselves to stir up those ancient passions
7.
The reason that he is so important is that he was one of the very few writers who was able to capture and present to contemporaries and
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contemporaries are seen grafted onto the primitive educational establishment of his time
9.
At an age when most of the Ithaca-based media mogul’s contemporaries have been retired for 15 years or more, the chairman and chief executive officer of Park Communications, Inc
10.
Most ironic, she had only taken her present job because she couldn't select a career—didn't know what to major in at college, and decided to wait rather than spend five or six years knocking around inside the ivied halls the way too many of her contemporaries did
11.
6 Although this perfect life which he lived in the likeness of mortal flesh may not have received the unqualified and universal approval of his fellow mortals, those who chanced to be his contemporaries on earth, still, the life which Jesus of Nazareth lived in the flesh and on Urantia did receive full and unqualified acceptance by the Universal Father as constituting at one and the same time, and in one and the same personality-life, the fullness of the revelation of the eternal God to mortal man and the presentation of perfected human personality to the satisfaction of the Infinite Creator
12.
If you are spiritually indolent and morally unprogressive, you may take as your standards of good the religious practices and traditions of your contemporaries
13.
They grasped the human concept of the Messiah as the son of David, as presented by the earlier prophets; as the Son of Man, the superhuman idea of Daniel and some of the later prophets; and even as the Son of God, as depicted by the author of the Book of Enoch and by certain of his contemporaries; but never had they for a single moment entertained the true concept of the union in one earth personality of the two natures, the human and the divine
14.
Paul and his contemporaries applied all of Jesus' spiritual implications regarding himself and the individual believer to the church as a group of believers; and in doing this, they struck a deathblow to Jesus' concept of the divine kingdom in the heart of the individual believer
15.
contemporaries would most likely have worn it to attract attention
16.
While it had the component-video capability of its contemporaries, the GameCube suffered in several ways compared to Sony's PS2
17.
He was made better by his contemporaries like the Spaniards Lope de Vega who penned as many as 1500 plays, and the author of Don Quixote, Miguel de Cervantes
18.
―This is an ancient scroll I recovered in Agen, and may have been authored by Nostradamus or one of his contemporaries
19.
For the past many years, all he had led until now was desk officers and civil servants, and though many of his contemporaries would probably have delighted in the long, unbroken period of peace, he had missed some good old-fashioned action
20.
David and his other contemporaries in the room had been watching the interview with Jack South in fascination
21.
Instead of joining the madness of their contemporaries,
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There were two young nuns, little girls of grade school age who, like their contemporaries at the men’s monastery, were there to become nuns
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Patel and Azad, both veteran crisis managers for the party, had been contemporaries of Rajiv
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contemporaries went on to fill senior managerial positions all over the
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contemporaries holding the offices that our parents held when I attended!) I am so glad
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Like Galileo, Feynman broke away from traditional note-taking contemporaries and decided to put the entire theory of quantum electrodynamics into freshly visual and diagrammatic form
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This ironic situation of being ignored by contemporaries
28.
The latter are all contemporaries of Arjun and he
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M oses is recounted of as having undergone had he not decided to recount of it to at least one of his contemporaries
30.
Therefore how would he not be superior to all those around him and all his contemporaries? How would he not gain the love and respect of all those whose lives he touched as he went forth displaying his glorious humane conduct, treating the whole of creation with charity, friendship, mercy and compassion in their fullest sense
31.
The man who had succeeded in pushing his thoughts farther into the region of the hitherto unthought than any of his contemporaries would not, I think, if he came once, come again
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the contemporaries and friends of the latterconsidered him an
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One of the secrets of Lope's influence over his contemporaries is
34.
Owing to “electromagnetic dispolarities” and “gravitational discretenesses”, Formo-images of all poems of Homer and Ovidius, Shakespeare and Petrarch, or discourses of Socrates, Seneca, Cicero, [Heinrich Cornelius] Agrippa and many other authors, who have subjectively shaped some SFUURMM-Forms in particular words and sentences, continue to arouse, in Self-Consciousnesses of “people” that live now, some delight and profound feelings (with allowance for completely new SFUURMM-Forms!), just like those of the contemporaries of these “ancient” authors
35.
contemporaries; but it so happens that none of the so-
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the younger contemporaries of Jesus, his Apostles, and
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challenged his contemporaries to deny and in any way
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contemporaries are silent, and that though the names of
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after the events, and when all the contemporaries of the
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contemporaries of one another, who, as related by
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very small section, of their contemporaries, while the
42.
as their contemporaries of Judea might have been able to
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" divine fury" of his on the minds of his contemporaries,
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to adopt the narratives of contemporaries; but it was
45.
Evangeleida)than most of his contemporaries, and he sings of the conquistadores with true
46.
They were all contemporaries, though Murillo (1618-1682) was considerably younger than the
47.
Therefore, Christ probably spoke in Aramaic as did his disciples and contemporaries
48.
CONTEMPORARIES MAY USE THE SAME EXPRESSIONS AND MEAN DIFFERENT THING
49.
It will be noticed that in these instances it is chiefly the insistence upon outline that distinguishes these artists from their contemporaries
50.
In the earlier ages men readily believed in ghosts and demons; in our day a man who professes such a faith has to fight a battle, and to render a severe account of his intellectual state to his contemporaries
51.
’ But when shall these things be? —The answer of the New Testament is, I venture, with many contemporaries, to think, different from that which is commonly assigned in the modern church
52.
If these things be so, the 'resurrection’ may be nearer than the majority of our contemporaries imagine, who are saying, 'Where is the promise of His coming? For since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the Creation
53.
’ If any of our contemporaries seek to defend themselves in making light of the threats of positive infliction hereafter, behind the lying refuge of biblical 'texts’ and 'passages,’ we declare for ourselves that we have found in the New Testament no single, page which leads us to think otherwise of 'judgment to come,’ 'the resurrection of damnation,’ than as a prospect before which all rejecters of Christ may well 'tremble
54.
There are no men or women living who better deserve the reverence of their contemporaries than the heralds of Christianity who have labored in the present century
55.
Without undervaluing the successes of our contemporaries, it is impossible not to feel that there is some apparent deficiency in the power of modern Christianity
56.
Cathedral, and their works are more nearly of equal value than is understood by some of our contemporaries
57.
Thus, Tellson's, in its day, like greater places of business, its contemporaries, had taken so many lives, that, if the heads laid low before it had been ranged on Temple Bar instead of being
58.
This furnishes perhaps the least defensible of the items in the charge of neglect brought against his contemporaries
59.
If Protagoras and Prodicus can persuade their contemporaries that no one can manage house or State without them, is it likely that Homer and Hesiod would have been allowed to go about as beggars--I mean if they had really been able to do the world any good?--
60.
Fascinated by the idea, citizens of Athens would imitate the Lacedaemonians in their dress and manners; they were known to the contemporaries of Plato as 'the persons who had their ears bruised,' like the Roundheads of the Commonwealth
61.
The 'way of life' which was connected with the name of Pythagoras, like the Catholic monastic orders, showed the power which the mind of an individual might exercise over his contemporaries, and may have naturally suggested to Plato the possibility of reviving such 'mediaeval institutions
62.
The paradoxes of one age have been said to become the commonplaces of the next; but the paradoxes of Plato are at least as paradoxical to us as they were to his contemporaries
63.
We can hardly judge what effect Plato's views would have upon his own contemporaries; they would perhaps have seemed to them only an exaggeration of the Spartan commonwealth
64.
The whole treatise shows how deeply the idea of the Roman Empire was fixed in the minds of his contemporaries
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Not much argument was needed to maintain the truth of a theory which to his own contemporaries seemed so natural and congenial
66.
The 'Utopia' of Sir Thomas More is a surprising monument of his genius, and shows a reach of thought far beyond his contemporaries
67.
But can you imagine, Glaucon, that if Homer had really been able to educate and improve mankind--if he had possessed knowledge and not been a mere imitator--can you imagine, I say, that he would not have had many followers, and been honoured and loved by them? Protagoras of Abdera, and Prodicus of Ceos, and a host of others, have only to whisper to their contemporaries: 'You will never be able to manage either your own house or your own State until you appoint us to be your ministers of education'--and this ingenious device of theirs has such an effect in making men love them that their companions all but carry them about on their shoulders
68.
And is it conceivable that the contemporaries of Homer, or again of Hesiod, would have allowed either of them to go about as rhapsodists, if they had really been able to make mankind virtuous? Would they not have been as unwilling to part with them as with gold, and have compelled them to stay at home with them? Or, if the master would not stay, then the disciples would have followed him about everywhere, until they had got education enough?
69.
Thus, led by the strangest of fates, I was treading underfoot one of the mountains of that continent! My hands were touching ruins many thousands of years old, contemporary with prehistoric times! I was walking in the very place where contemporaries of early man had walked! My heavy soles were crushing the skeletons of animals from the age of fable, animals that used to take cover in the shade of these trees now turned to
70.
The orator, or the politician, who can produce such a state of things, is commonly popular with his contemporaries, however he may be treated by posterity
71.
The old clergyman, nurtured at the rich bosom of the English Church, had a long-established and legitimate taste for all good and comfortable things; and however stern he might show himself in the pulpit, or in his public reproof of such transgressions as that of Hester Prynne, still the genial benevolence of his private life had won him warmer affection than was accorded to any of his professional contemporaries
72.
They were contemporaries, competitors in the military pecking order
73.
Her virtuosity burst out like a breaking dam, and that fascinated her contemporaries
74.
In her family’s eyes he had no ordinary, definite career and position in society, while his contemporaries by this time, when he was thirty-two, were already, one a colonel, and another a professor, another director of a bank and railways, or president of a board like Oblonsky
75.
Levin found himself, like the majority of his contemporaries, in the vaguest position in regard to religion
76.
Mr Samgrass's deft editorship had assembled and arranged a curiously homogeneous little body of writing - poetry, letters, scraps of a journal, an unpublished essay or two, which all exhaled the same high-spirited, serious, chivalrous, otherworldly air and the letters from their contemporaries, written after their deaths, all in varying degrees of articulateness, told the same tale of men who were, in all the full flood of academic and athletic success, of popularity and the promise of great rewards ahead, seen somehow as set apart from their fellows, garlanded victims, devoted to the sacrifice
77.
Her contemporaries, the young wives, mothers and widows, loved her soothing to dowagers in these wild days when young people seemed to have forgotten because she had suffered what they had suffered, had not become embittered and always lent them a sympathetic ear
78.
Though he was a guitar player of soul and nuance far beyond both that of his flashier contemporaries and certainly my novice abilities, the humanity of his singing was modest and intimate in a way that felt like he was among us, not above us
79.
The musical interludes featured Ian Dury and Hazel O’Connor, concluding with U2 playing a stripped-down theater set with members of The Alarm as their guests, just at the moment when they were beginning to outdistance the pack of their contemporaries
80.
With his white hair, Amory had once seemed so much his senior as to hail from a different century, but now they could have been contemporaries
81.
Casaubon inquired, but before the day was far advanced he led the way to the studio of his friend Adolf Naumann, whom he mentioned as one of the chief renovators of Christian art, one of those who had not only revived but expanded that grand conception of supreme events as mysteries at which the successive ages were spectators, and in relation to which the great souls of all periods became as it were contemporaries
82.
Madame Cornoiller possessed one striking advantage over her contemporaries
83.
In this they were at odds with their contemporaries
84.
‘Your father, a man of the last century, evidently stands above our contemporaries who so
85.
We can understand that the matter seemed like that to contemporaries
86.
The people of the west moved eastwards to slay their fellow men, and by the law of coincidence thousands of minute causes fitted in and co-ordinated to produce that movement and war: reproaches for the nonobservance of the Continental System, the Duke of Oldenburg’s wrongs, the movement of troops into Prussia- undertaken (as it seemed to Napoleon) only for the purpose of securing an coinciding with his people’s inclinations, allurement by the grandeur of the preparations, and the expenditure on those preparations and the need of obtaining advantages to compensate for that expenditure, the intoxicating honors he received in Dresden, the diplomatic negotiations which, in the opinion of contemporaries, were carried on with a sincere desire to attain peace, but which only wounded the self-love of both sides, and millions and millions of other causes that adapted themselves to the event that was happening or coincided with it
87.
There were very few resident landlords in the neighborhood and also very few domestic or literate serfs, and in the lives of the peasantry of those parts the mysterious undercurrents in the life of the Russian people, the causes and meaning of which are so baffling to contemporaries, were more clearly and strongly noticeable than among others
88.
He told her of external social events and of the people who had formed the circle of her contemporaries and had once been a real, living, and distinct group, but who were now for the most part scattered about the world and like herself were garnering the last ears of the harvests they had sown in earlier years
89.
But to the old countess those contemporaries of hers seemed to be the only serious and real society
90.
59 The pick advances laboriously through the calcareous layers alternating with very slender threads of clay, and schistose beds in plates incrusted with oyster-shells, the contemporaries of the pre-Adamite oceans
91.
The complaints of old age, which he endured better than his contemporaries because he had known them since his youth, all attacked at the same time