How To Use Treatise In A Sentence
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The work of Celsus of the end of the first century B.C. is a Latin treatise, probably translated from Greek, and is the surviving medical volume of a complete cyclopaedia of knowledge.
The Legacy of Greece Essays By: Gilbert Murray, W. R. Inge, J. Burnet, Sir T. L. Heath, D'arcy W. Thompson, Charles Singer, R. W. Livingston, A. Toynbee, A. E. Zimmern, Percy Gardner, Sir Reginald Blomfield
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The law of reflection was known as early as the time of Euclid, about 320 b.c., and to this geometrician was attributed, although probably erroneously, a "Treatise on Mirrors", in which the principles of catoptrics were correctly set forth.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
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A treatise that combined "Plinian lore with the recipes of Martino, cook to Cardinal Trevisan, who kept the best table in Rome.
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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Like there's a perfect mid-point between too little and too much, a middle-brow approach somewhere between an academic treatise and bibble, bibble, bibble, pllrrrp?
Archive 2005-07-01
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The notebook was disbound, probably around 1916, and while there's no physical evidence that these leaves came at the end of the notebook, "On Life" grew out of an early passage from the lengthier treatise.
Carolyn Vega: Percy Bysshe Shelley "On Life"
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A large number of sermons and pious treatises were also written in Latin during this period, by Aelred of Rievaulx for example, and by others: "Beati Ailredi Rievallis abbatis Sermones" (and other works) in Migne's "Patrologia," vols.xxxii. and cxcv.
A Literary History of the English People From the Origins to the Renaissance
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The second, ‘Of the Passions', was a condensation and revision of the second book of the Treatise.
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You want to write a treatise on swallow migration?
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M. Faye, of the French Academy, inclined to a lunar origin for them; [193] Feilitsch of Greifswald published in 1852 a treatise for the express purpose of proving all the luminous phenomena attendant on solar eclipses -- corona, prominences and "sierra" -- to be purely optical appearances. [
A Popular History of Astronomy During the Nineteenth Century Fourth Edition
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Alberti was also occupied by the dialectic of the vita activa – vita contemplativa. 33 Through his own treatise on the subject, De commodis literarum atque incommodis,34 and a study of the Florentine family, Della famiglia,35 Alberti deeply influenced a younger generation of powerful and wealthy soldier-scholars, including Leonello d'Este and Federico, who negotiated their turbulent political climate as much by tactical eloquence as by militaristic valor.
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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The next year he produced only a few medical trifles, but in 1557 he brought out two other scientific works which he characterizes as admirable -- one the _Ars parva curandi_, and the other a treatise _De
Jerome Cardan A Biographical Study
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[3] The ovum is really the fully mature egg ready for fecundation; before maturity it should not be called ovum but oöcyte; and in advanced treatises it is so referred to.
Woman Her Sex and Love Life
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The second edition of 1575 tops this up with, among other things, the first treatise on prosody in English.
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Now, it is conceivable that Hume encountered these texts, and recognized their propaedeutic value, only after completing his Treatise; but this bare possibility (the letter was written two years before its publication) is absolutely ruled out in the case of Bayle, if not of the other texts Hume names, by Hume's so-called early memoranda and especially by the use
This, About The Man I Met Out Here In Nearly Nowhere
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Elsewhere in his treatise he reflects on the possibility of combining nuclear deterrence with conventional deterrence.
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The intelligent author of the "Treatise on British Birds" does not condescend to justify the right we claim to encage them; but he shows his genuine humanity in instructing us how to render happy and healthful their imprisonment.
Recreations of Christopher North, Volume 2
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He was already the author of a successful treatise on midwifery.
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The Younger Edda is a prose paraphrase of, and commentary on, these poems and others which are lost, together with a treatise on metre, written by the historian
The Edda, Volume 1 The Divine Mythology of the North, Popular Studies in Mythology, Romance, and Folklore, No. 12
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I want to write a treatise on democracy and the difference between what exists and what the intent of the idea was.
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It is a small treatise of seventeen folios in which we find nothing on mensuration that the arithmeticians of the East did not know.
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As objects well known in the philosophical treatises (bstan-bcos-la grags-pa), sensibilia are thus the smallest spatial units of physical phenomena that are perceptible by the senses in one moment.
Fine Analysis of Objects of Cognition: Non-Gelug Presentation
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Hypsicles relates that his father and Basilides studied a treatise by Apollonius on a dodecahedron and an icosahedron in the same sphere and decided that Apollonius's treatment was not satisfactory.
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This is the work of Johann Beringer, professor in the University of Wurzburg and private physician to the Prince-Bishop -- the treatise bearing the title Lithographiae Wirceburgensis Specimen Primum, "illustrated with the marvellous likenesses of two hundred figured or rather insectiform stones.
A History of the warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom
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In place of conventional biblical and hagiographic narratives, we find subjects based more loosely on the bestiary, the Psalms, moralizing treatises, and monastic accounts of dreams and hallucinations.
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It was meant to involve writing heartfelt treatises about why a Masters in Law, and particularly subjects like International And Comparative Commercial Arbitration, would give me mojo.
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a scholarly treatise
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In his chronography the apologetic interest is subordinate to the historical, and in his [Greek: Kestoi], dedicated to Alexander Severus (Hippolytus had already dedicated a treatise on the resurrection to the wife of Heliogabalus), we see fewer traces of the Christian than of the Greek scholar.
History of Dogma, Volume 2 (of 7)
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I read the treatise through, and was so smitten with the accurate view it exhibited of the theatres of these days, that I immediately determined to transport myself, as well as I could, to the golden times of the _beheader of Mary Queen of Scots_.
The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor Volume I, Number 3
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Their treatise is one of the most detailed of the half dozen or so in my possession and the one which mentions numbers of nineteenth century ganaderos whose names are still fairly common currency today.
The foundational bull ranches
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The theological treatises were probably already known at the court of Charlemagne around 800, and a tradition of glosses to the text probably goes back to the later ninth century.
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This treatise is based on the analysis of the philosophical fundamental of Iconology which has been scrutinized in purpose on an open critical platform of Visual Culture.
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It can also be deduced from a copy of the second treatise of Serenus which has survived.
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States, in his treatise on 'The School Question,' is that, while the illiterate convicts in the California penitentiary, at the date of the report, numbered 112, against 985 who could read and write, '_among the younger convicts they could all read and write_'.
France and the Republic A Record of Things Seen and Learned in the French Provinces During the 'Centennial' Year 1889
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We have commented above on the disputes among modern scholars as to whether Aristotle wrote the treatises now assigned to him.
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He was not the first to publish a detailed survey of architecture, but his treatise was written in comprehensible language, relatively unencumbered by philosophical verbiage and richly detailed with how-to instruction.
Andrea Palladio's influential architecture at National Building Museum
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He also wrote a number of shorter, independent treatises on controversial philosophical topics, such as the Tractatus de relationibus [Treatise on Relations], Tractatus de universalibus [Treatise on Universals], Tractatus de consequentiis [Treatise on Consequences], and Quaestio de puncto [Question on Points].
John Buridan
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Treatises on mathematics, music, astronomy, alchemy, medicine, jurisprudence, as well as studies on Athenian judicial terminology and on the topography of Athens. [5.]
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Pollock, the veteran actor Ed Harris's directorial debut, is a mass-audience movie, not a peer-reviewed treatise, and so it's not fair to pick at historical inaccuracies or elisions.
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His treatise on the subject is the basis of our modern understanding of the pathology of the lung.
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Most of the critical treatises in the classical tradition are trite and commonplace.
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His books lack the extempore felicities and the reflected fellow-feeling which lent a charm to his spoken sermons; and on the table-land of his controversial treatises, sentence follows sentence like a file of ironsides, in buff and rusty steel, a sturdy procession, but a dingy uniform; and it is only here and there where a son of Anak has burst his rags, that you glimpse a thought of uncommon stature or wonderful proportions.
The International Monthly Magazine, Volume 5, No. 1, January, 1852
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Criticising the conclusion of a passage in Milton's treatise, the language of the first portion of which is pronounced "too sublime and angelical for mortal creatures to comprehend it," the Answerer declares, "This frothy discourse, were it not sugared over with a little neat language, would appear so immeritous, so contrary to all humane learning, yea truth and common experience itself, that all that read it must needs count it worthy to be burnt by the hangman.
The Life of John Milton Volume 3 1643-1649
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Early treatises advise rubbing the surface with garlic, but more usually the panel was scratched slightly to provide some tooth to which the paint can adhere.
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His early anatomical studies were intended to form part of his treatise on painting.
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And there was afterwards writ a proper and careful treatise, and did set out that there did be ruptures of the Æther, the which did constitute doorways, as those more fanciful ones did name them; and through these shatterings, which might be likened unto openings -- there being no better word to their naming -- there did come into this Particular Condition Of Life, those Monstrous Forces Of Evil, that did dominate the Night, and which many did hold surely to have been given this improper entrance through the foolish and unwise wisdom of those olden men of learning, that did meddle overfar with matters that did reach in the end beyond their understanding.
The Night Land: Chapter 7
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Accordingly, they sometimes put down their thoughts in bits, in short, equivocal, and paradoxical sentences which appear to mean much more than they say (a splendid example of this kind of writing is furnished by Schelling’s treatises on
Essays of Schopenhauer
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Charles H. Baker Jr., in his indispensable treatise on dispensables, "The Gentleman's Companion," describes the effects of regular absinthe-bibbing: "It does nibble the keen edge off the brain until a man becomes a sorry sort of thing; aimless, listless, and generally -- shockingly -- lacking.
Sampling Absinthe's Dubious Charms
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This treatise began with a discussion of the basic principles of acoustics (B1), defined the three types of mean which are of importance in music theory (B2), and went on to present Archytas 'mathematical descriptions of the tetrachord (the fourth) in the three main genera (chromatic, diatonic, and enharmonic - A16-A19).
Archytas
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The book is composed of four separate treatises, each dealing with a particular class of numbers.
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I was making some remarks upon what I termed a flock of them, that were basking under a sunny wall, when I was gently corrected in my phraseology by Master Simon, who told me that, according to the most ancient and approved treatise on hunting, I must say a MUSTER of peacocks.
Old Christmas
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The canon of his prose writings long included De Doctrina Christiana, an unorthodox theological treatise first printed in 1825.
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The medieval holy wars in the Middle East could not be solved by rational treatises or neat territorial solutions.
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Spermaceti was known, probably from classical times onwards, as a rare and precious unguent, "resolutive and mollifying," as M. Pomel, "chief druggist to the late French King Louis XIV," says in his treatise on drugs, translated into English in 1737.
More Science From an Easy Chair
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Aristotle wrote two ethical treatises: the Nicomachean Ethics and the Eudemian Ethics.
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Polus 'lies, correct those errors in navigation, reform cosmographical charts, and rectify longitudes, if it were possible; not by the compass, as some dream, with Mark Ridley in his treatise of magnetical bodies, cap.
Anatomy of Melancholy
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His elegant epistles, brilliant treatises, and eloquent protreptics for asceticism appeared to promise him great things.
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He produced no treatise on the subject, but his scientific interest in women was profound and lasting.
Christianity Today
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Inspired by ideas that Fénelon would soon espouse in his treatise "De l'éducation des filles" (1687), Mme de Maintenon showed ingenious insight in developing a forward-looking and lasting pedagogical model.
Louis XIV's Secret Wife
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Cennini's treatise describes methods for polychromy which can be recognized in surviving medieval polychromed sculpture, and generally its function was to add naturalistic colour to sculptures.
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Zimmermann, _Die europaischen Kolonien_, the main German treatise, in 5 vols. (1896-1903), dealing with Spain and Portugal (Vol. I), Great
A Political and Social History of Modern Europe V.1.
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The Treatise veers between the insecure pompousness and pompous insecurity of a man who dons bling on dirty fingers and then sets out to create the urtext of social seemliness.
Caroline Hagood: Blast From the Past: Honoré de Balzac's New English Release, Treatise on Elegant Living
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Besides these -- often crude and clumsy -- romances they possessed what may be called "theosophic" treatises and revelations of a highly mystical character.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
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His son, Seebohm, had done more than anyone to expose the wretched living conditions of the poor in his 1901 treatise on the slums of York.
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When questions arose affecting purchases and sales, the affreightment of ships, marine insurances, bills of exchange, and promissory notes, it was impossible to decide them; there were no cases to refer to, no treatises to consult.
International Miscellany of Literature, Art and Science, Vol. 1, No. 3, Oct. 1, 1850
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In this poem you set out to write a versified treatise on ‘man, on nature and on human life’, which is bound to be an overwhelming subject.
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The only article which can be called a treatise is the Astronomer Royal's "Gravitation," founded on the method of
A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume II (of II)
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The honest captain had caught this word from a recent treatise against agrarianism, and having an acquired taste for orders in one sense, at least, he flattered himself with being what is called a Conservative, in other words, he had a strong relish for that maxim of the Scotch freebooter, which is rendered into English by the comely aphorism of "keep what you've got, and get what you can.
Homeward Bound or, the Chase
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These opinions do not constitute a skeptical epistemology of the sort found in Montaigne's “Apology for Raymond Sebond” or in the more systematic and more openly Pyrrhonist (but far less influential) treatise Quod nihil scitur/That Nothing Is Known (1581) by Francisco Sanches, the son of Portuguese conversos who was reared and educated in France and taught in the medical faculty at Toulouse.
Loss of Faith
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In all he wrote about ten treatises on astronomy.
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This treatise began with a discussion of the basic principles of acoustics (B1), defined the three types of mean which are of importance in music theory (B2), and went on to present Archytas 'mathematical descriptions of the tetrachord (the fourth) in the three main genera (chromatic, diatonic, and enharmonic - A16-A19).
Archytas
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The author of a treatise on sepulchral urns lately discovered in Norfolk was moved to comment.
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Presumably, he intended follow up his ethical investigations with respective treatises on epistemology and aesthetics.
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A vital and life-changing work that has dramatically revised the way women talk and think about themselves, Beauvoir's magisterial treatise continues to provoke and inspire.
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Design, costume, acting, and theatrical bells and whistles made for an impressive production, turning what could have been an arid treatise on French existentialism into a vivid piece of camp absurdism.
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About 1,200 years ago a scribe wrote onto parchment seven Archimedean treatises, including two found nowhere else.
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In 1608, Oswald Croll published his Basilica chymica, a treatise devoted to a predominantly Paracelsian iatrochemistry.
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Sir C.L. Eastlake: "In the year 1830, as I was going to publish in L.tin the same treatise which in German accompanies this letter, I went to Dr. Seebeck of the Berlin Academy, who is universally admitted to be the first natural philosopher (in the English sense of the word meaning physiker) of Germany; he is the discoverer of thermo-electricity and of several physical truths.
Essays of Schopenhauer
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By no great books or long treatises, but by a ceaseless flow of brevities and repetitions, is the pulverized thought of the world wrought into the soul.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 83, September, 1864
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Donne's casuistical treatise was an early example of the liberalized Enlightenment attitudes of the 1700's.
Suicide
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Arguably, a clear and straightforward theory of how an unowned resource comes legitimately to be owned had to wait till Hume's Treatise of Human Nature.
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These will contain all his important contributions to science, with the exception of a large separate treatise on the _Oceanic Hydrozoa_ published by the Ray
Thomas Henry Huxley; A Sketch Of His Life And Work
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Yeats refers to the concepts, in his treatises, of earthly and celestial hierarchies and of a ‘Mystical Theology’, through which knowledge of God and the progressive deification of man may be attained by a process of Neoplatonic abstraction.
Later Articles and Reviews
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Everything else in the show can be understood as preparatory work for this treatise.
Times, Sunday Times
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I. "The Younger Edda", the work of the Icelandic historian and statesman Snorri Sturluson (1178-1241), is a treatise on poetics for the guidance of the skalds or Icelandic poets.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
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His close friend Claude Chansonnette, who became a distinguished representative of the movement known as juristic humanism, in 1520 requested Agrippa's opinion on his newly published legal treatise.
Loss of Faith
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In this treatise he shows that the cabalistic works, ‘which are palmed upon ancient authorities, are pseudonymous; that the doctrines themselves are mischievous; and that the followers of this system are inflated with proud notions, pretending to know the nature of God better than any one else, and to possess the nearest and best way of approaching the Deity.’
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Maitland's The Forms of Action at Common Law (1909) is the classic treatise on trespass quare clausum fregit, trespass vi et armis, trespass on the case, and all those other terms that used to convince many first-year law students to buy copies of Black's Law Dictionary that they never used again.
Language and Simplification in Law
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In place of conventional biblical and hagiographic narratives, we find subjects based more loosely on the bestiary, the Psalms, moralizing treatises, and monastic accounts of dreams and hallucinations.
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In his treatise Vitruvius listed different intercolumniation types: 3 diameters for diastilos, 2.25 diameters for eustilos, 2 diameters for eustylos and 1.25 diameters for picnostylos.
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Edmund Burke, in his treatise A Philosophical Enquiry Into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1756), described the sublime as an evocation of anxiety in the face of nature, an exhilarating but fraught recognition of its illimitable power over humankind.
Ballardian » Edward Burtynsky: Oil – A Ballardian Interpretation
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In 1516 he dedicated to the marquis of Monferrato his short Dialogus de homine and a more important treatise, De triplici ratione cognoscendi Deum.
Loss of Faith
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Dr. Ford, who has written a useful treatise upon the subject,7 finds hebdomadal periodicity in the attacks, and lays great stress upon this point of chronothermalism.
Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
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Bourgeois collectors began to play a part, and Mancini's treatise Considerazioni sulla pittura, addressed to the gentleman amateur, advised virtuosi on how to form a collection of paintings.
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¶ Wherefore after theyr example obtaynyng a lytle lesure, I red ouer sundrye treatises, as wel of those which wrot long ago, as of other now in our daies: fyndynge amonge them some to haue wrytten ouer brieflye, some confuselye, and falselye some.
A Treatise of Schemes and Tropes
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Spenser, sought diligently to compose in the quantitative metres of the classics; Puttenham, the author of one of the first English treatises on the Art of Poetry (1589), declared that by "leisurable travail" one might "easily and commodiously lead all those feet of the ancients into our vulgar language"; but while they may have satisfied themselves
The Principles of English Versification
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They study magic and write treatises and quarrel, as scholars will, but none of them can cast a spell to save his life.
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The resulting book falls somewhere between the teen diary / confessional genre and the academic feminist treatise.
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But an even more pertinent question would be whether the theses lead up to any sort of tract or treatise concerned with the Holy Spirit and nothing else.
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Since it was the Stoics who, in antiquity, developed a sentence logic, by contrast with Aristotle's term logic, it would appear that Boethius's treatise on hypothetical syllogisms is the tributary of Stoic logic.
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His treatises _De Inventione_ and _Topica_, the first and nearly the last of his compositions, are both on the invention of arguments, which he regards, with Aristotle, as the very foundation of the art; though he elsewhere confines the term eloquence, according to its derivation, to denote excellence of diction and delivery, to the exclusion of argumentative skill. [
Historical Sketches, Volume I (of 3) The Turks in Their Relation to Europe; Marcus Tullius Cicero; Apollonius of Tyana; Primitive Christianity
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In A Treatise Cudworth argues not only that ideas exist independently of human minds, but also the principles of morality are eternal and immutable.
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Keynes believed the system of reparations that was being discussed was confiscatory and destructive, finally bolting from the conference before the end to write his landmark treatise, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, which became a runaway best-seller on both sides of the Atlantic and forced Lloyd George to concede that Keynes was right, while the Treaty and its negotiators were wrong.
Shaping the World at Versailles: A Q&A With the Author of A Shattered Peace - Freakonomics Blog - NYTimes.com
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There belong also to this division numerous didactic poems in which a prosaic content is dressed up in poetic form, such as compendiums of physics, astronomy, and medicine, and treatises on chess, fishing, hunting, and the conduct of life.
An Estimate of the Value and Influence of Works of Fiction in Modern Times
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When he had written his treatise on monastic vows, Luther had only demanded that marriage should be open to everyone.
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Of these the Asclepius has some interest as a Latin version of a Hermetic treatise.
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As De Leon and Maldonado state in their excellent treatise on the subject: ‘All of these data point to man as the primary factor in the epidemiology of uncinariasis.’
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Van Mons, in his treatise on pears and apples, shows how utterly he disbelieves that the several sorts, for instance a Ribston-pippin or Codlin-apple, could ever have proceeded from the seeds of the same tree.
I. Variation under Domestication. Breeds of the Domestic Pigeon, Their Differences and Origin
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Boyer, in the tenth volume of his "Treatise on Surgical Affections," gives several examples of this affection not due to age: one case was a person, simultaneously attacked by an adynamic fever and a blennorrhagia, who suffered from gangrene of the penis; the local and constitutional disturbance was not high, however, and the patient escaped with the simple loss of the prepuce.
History of Circumcision from the Earliest Times to the Present Moral and Physical Reasons for its Performance
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Each square metre of this totally unremarkable watercourse, is worthy of its own treatise; each unit area deserves its own magnus opus from a fluid dynamicist.
Archive 2009-04-01
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Throughout his treatise Pope maintains the pose of the poker-faced instructor.
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What Stumpf calls phenomenology in his two Academy treatises of 1906 is a field of study to which he dedicated many works, from his early investigation on the origin of spatial perception up to his 1926 book on vowels and phonetics.
On A Trans-Atlantic Flight
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Facts of this description, facts previously unheard of, but which could not from any known law of causation be pronounced impossible, are what Hume characterizes as not contrary to experience, but merely unconformable to it; and Bentham, in his treatise on Evidence, denominates them facts disconformable _in specie_, as distinguished from such as are disconformable _in toto_ or in _degree_
A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive
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A philosophical treatise that tries to give shape to a phantom, leadership.
Times, Sunday Times
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One of his guiding lights is a treatise published in 1553 by Diego Ortiz, a composer-performer from Toledo, which shows the novice gambist how to embroider a given melody or chord progression with ornaments, variations, and outright inventions.
BrothersJudd Blog
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The last eleven chapters of the treatise address themselves to the nature of the discretion appropriate to mixed life.
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Hermann's contributions to mathematics include a treatise dealing with multiplication and division, although this book is written entirely with Roman numerals.
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In his treatise on the Florentine family, I libri della famiglia, Alberti echoes Vitruvius in describing the reciprocity between material works and the workings of the mind: There are ... activities in which the powers of body and mind function together to bring profit.
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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I think this way of explaining and understanding our faith, an easy assumption just from the word Unitarian, is widespread among folks who don't consider it all that important to read our history or delve into what seem like arcane theological treatises.
Philocrites: Isaac Newton's anti-Trinitarianism in the news.
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How forcibly does this distinguished jurist illustrate the remark of Cicero in his Treatise on Old Age: "Sed videtis, ut senectus non modo languida atque iners non sit, verum etiam sit operosa, et semper agens aliquid et moliens; tale scilicet, quod cujusque studium in superiore vita fuit.
An Essay on Professional Ethics Second Edition
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This manner of dress literally embodies the Ciceronian phrase "Let arms to the toga yield" that Piccolomini/Pius II had included in his treatise on an ideal education, composed for the king of Hungary in 1450.62
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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None but a large-souled and kindly-affectioned man, whose intellect was as comprehensive as his feelings were benevolent, could have produced the excellent little treatise which claims him as its author.
Discovery of Witches The Wonderfull Discoverie of Witches in the Countie of Lancaster
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Lorenz Oken (17791815), one of the leaders of the German Naturphilosophie movement, published an antimechanist treatise that taught the superiority of intuitively derived concepts, expressed a belief in the archetypal polarities of nature, and championed a search for ideal types and a teleological unity in nature.
1809
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Books, treatises, speeches, workshops and seminars on the topic are plentiful.
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Maverannahr scholars made a great contribution to Arabic language dissemination, its analysis and Arabic literature development, which is proved by Mahmud Zamakhshari's works, including dozens of scientific papers, fiction, didactic treatises, the works on Arabic morphology, syntax, phonetics and lexicology.
Turkmen scholar Mahmud Zamakhshari's heritage
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A treatise on the fulness of the everlasting gospel, setting forth its first principles, promises, and blessings.
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In his Euclid a series of references is provided to the arithmetical treatises; several portions of his Archimedes are strictly related to his works on Apollonius and on conic sections, the latter referring in turn to researches in gnomonics.
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The celebrated dispute about 'prophesyings' in the sense of 'preachings' in the reign of Elizabeth, and the treatise of Jeremy Taylor on 'The
Who Wrote the Bible? : a Book for the People
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Subsequently, septenary figures preoccupied Pico della Mirandola (Heptaplus), Giulio Camillo, John Dee, and Joachim Frizius, who wrote an influential treatise on Rosicrucianism in 1626.
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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This is the first and only edition of the first treatise about acrobats and funambulists.
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A dissertation is a detailed discourse or treatise on a particular topic that provides a new perspective to a phenomenon.
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Each square metre of this totally unremarkable watercourse, is worthy of its own treatise; each unit area deserves its own magnus opus from a fluid dynamicist.
Archive 2009-04-01
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The authors document how this treatise has significantly influenced the course of medicine and the study of botany over the years.
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When I was in grad school, almost certainly before that cart was created, we had to check our footnotes by grinding through illegible microfilm copies of 100-year-old monographs; by taking the intercampus bus to Berkeley to check on the only copy of a critical edition of certain little-known Medieval MSS west of the Mississippi; by writing a friend in Germany to check with his university research librarian about their copy of that 17th century treatise with marginalia scribbled by Werckmeister; by flying to Washington to buttonhole an old friend working as an assistant at the Library of Congress to see if he could help get me some face time with an important MS that just didn't seem to be available in microfilm; by.....
It's the All New Mobile Footnote Check Station!
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What Clinton phrases as a commonplace has not been located in midwifery treatises; Gouge, however, does employ the phrase "The drawing forth of a womans milke by her childe is a means to get and preserve a good stomach, which is a great preservative of good health" (Of Domesticall Duties, L12r).
The Countesse of Lincolnes Nurserie
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The authors, breaking with the intuitionism that had dominated eighteenth-century French treatises, updated the logic of geometry manuals.
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That's exactly why Mr Ramlogan ended his treatise with the implicit suggestion of structural transformation to concretise the concept of ‘power to the people’.
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Traité des fièvres palustres (Treatise on paludal fevers) and I returned to it on several occasions.
Alphonse Laveran - Nobel Lecture
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Mill's vision survived the so-called neoclassical revolution in economics beginning in the 1870s and is clearly discernable in the most important methodological treatises concerning neoclassical economics, such as John Neville Keynes 'The Scope and Method of Political Economy
Philosophy of Economics
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It is inappropriate here to discuss the substantial Graeco-Roman corpus of military treatises and concepts that the Byzantines inherited, copied and adapted for their own purposes.
De Re Militari: The Society for Medieval Military History » The Strategy of Heraclius
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Metamorphoses is a treatise on the art of poetry.
The Times Literary Supplement
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The morality with which ethical treatises are concerned is _theoretical morality_.
Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 Sex in Relation to Society
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In his spare time he intended to write a treatise on natural history.
JOSIAH THE GREAT: The True Story of The Man Who Would Be King
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These are seven in number, namely the Jnânaprasthânasâstra of Kâtyâyanîputra with six accessory treatises or Pâdas [731].
Hinduism and Buddhism, An Historical Sketch, Vol. 3
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When he turns to the creation stories and their relationship to the controversies over evolution, his insights are articulated in a striking and helpful way: "Making a protoscientific treatise of this song, thus depriving it of its grand resonance, suggests that a "literalist" reading of the Bible is not reading the Bible at all" p.192.
Archive 2008-12-01
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This treatise on painting included a discussion of the laws of mathematical perspective for artists.
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The final sections of the treatise concern the ways in which one organism can affect another across distance.
The Times Literary Supplement
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The Consolation of Philosophy, a treatise by a 6th-century theologian, Boethius, includes a classic statement of one strand of Christian eudaimonism.
Philip Reynolds: The Biblical Definitions Of The Pursuit Of Happiness
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The fact is, that Machiavelli, as is usual with those against whom no crime can be proved, was suspected of and charged with atheism; and the first and last most violent opposers of _The Prince_ were both Jesuits, one of whom persuaded the Inquisition "benchè fosse tardo," to prohibit the treatise, and the other qualified the secretary of the Florentine republic as no better than a fool.
The Works of Lord Byron. Vol. 2
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This is a highly readable, jargon-free treatise on a notoriously prickly subject, intended for general readers rather than academics.
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Perhaps all we need to do to answer it is to read the mathematical treatises which the Greek mathematicians wrote.
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Most of the original treatises have perished; two thousand of these, containing three million unpunctuated and unspaced lines, were abridged to one hundred and fifty thousand lines or sentences.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
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Three of the cloisters reconstructed at the branch museum feature gardens planted according to horticultural information found in medieval treatises and poetry, garden documents and herbals, and medieval works of art, such as tapestries, stained-glass windows, and column capitals.
NYC.com's Exclusive New York City Event Calendar : Art
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[209] l. 15 trinal triplicities: A treatise on the Heavenly Hierarchy
The Treasury of Sacred Song
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This is not a treatise on statistical theory.
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Darwin's last major publication was a treatise on the lowly earthworm that exemplified the meticulous scientific method that brought him to fame.
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There are numerous medieval treatises or tractates on uroscopy, like there are many publications on sophisticated laboratory methods of to-day.
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If Ibn Daud had made himself famous by a Biblical commentary or a halakic work, or if his philosophic treatise had the distinction of being written in popular and attractive style, like Bahya's "Duties of the Hearts," or Halevi's "Cusari," it might have fared better.
A History of Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy
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Wise self limitation is not the same thing as text-book philosophy, and an ejaculatory prayer in a moment of mortal danger is not a theological treatise either.
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Magius, 1664 "; then, pell-mell, there were: _A curious and edifying miscellany concerning church bells_ by Dom Rémi Carré; another _Edifying miscellany_, anonymous; a _Treatise of bells_ by Jean-Baptiste Thiers, curate of Champrond and Vibraye; a ponderous tome by an architect named
Là-bas
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Those who are not satisfied with the synthetic proofs of the theory of evolution which are provided by comparative anatomy, embryology, paleontology, dysteleology, chorology, and classification, may try to refute the analytic proof given in my treatise on the sponge, the outcome of five years of assiduous study.
The Evolution of Man — Volume 1
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He was a prolific writer of both religious tracts and scientific treatises, and many times he combined the two.
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Gates père hits the book circuit soon to promote his upcoming treatise on preserving the estate tax.
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There is not much difference in this respect between the treatises of the early publicists and those of modern writers.
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Yet this is no formal treatise.
The Times Literary Supplement
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The resulting book falls somewhere between the teen diary / confessional genre and the academic feminist treatise.
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Astronomers used and authored astrological tracts, astronomical tables and ephemerides, calendars and weather diaries, cosmographies, defences and histories of their discipline, instrument-treatises, observations of celestial phenomena, studies on optics, theories of planetary motion, and works on geometry and trigonometry.
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He published the first theoretical treatise on mills, and patented improvements to their gearing and scoop wheels.
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As Plutarch, who wrote a treatise on it early in the second century AD, was priest of a Delphi that was still busy with private and ritual enquiries, it is clear that the real subject was the oracle's loss of authority in political affairs.
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The collected microfilms contain medieval manuscripts of musical compositions, such as missals, antiphonaries, graduals, passions, lamentations, lute and organ tabulatures, as well as treatises on the theory of music.
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This is an amazing example of what John Locke argued in his Second Treatise about what man in a state of nature gives up when he joins a commonwealth and enters a society that agrees to give up some of their power to form a government.
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Another was fear of female sexual urges and several Victorian doctors wrote querulous treatises warning that if women gave way to ‘libidinous excesses’ they risked ill health or even mental collapse.
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It is known of course to all divines, but not necessarily, perhaps, to every other person, that this turbulent and ambitious patriarch, during what he calls his embassy to Syria, occupied himself in taking down notes of the contents of theological treatises by his predecessors and contemporaries, with his judgments on their merits.
The Book-Hunter A New Edition, with a Memoir of the Author
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The Stoics attacked the Categories on the assumption that this treatise is on language and about linguistic expressions.
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Linnean Society of England, for a masterly treatise on a group of acari, or _mites_, known as the _oribatidæ_.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 470, January 3, 1885
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Alchemical treatises frequently warned of the hazards of working with sulphurous exhalations and volatile chemicals.
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Full of this idea, the scientific gentleman seized his pen again, and committed to paper sundry notes of these unparalleled appearances, with the date, day, hour, minute, and precise second at which they were visible: all of which were to form the data of a voluminous treatise of great research and deep learning, which should astonish all the atmospherical wiseacres that ever drew breath in any part of the civilised globe.
The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club
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Yet other printed essays and treatises described in detail the latest hair fashions from France and how to achieve them with the assistance of a hairdresser, or friseur.
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The following year the Regensburg master mason Matthaus Roriczer published a short treatise on the proper way to make finials and pinnacles.
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The Treatise veers between the insecure pompousness and pompous insecurity of a man who dons bling on dirty fingers and then sets out to create the urtext of social seemliness.
Caroline Hagood: Blast From the Past: Honoré de Balzac's New English Release, Treatise on Elegant Living
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[105] It is one of Dr Owen’s best controversial treatises, being exhaustive, and yet not marked by that discursiveness which is the fault of some of his writings, and bringing into play some of his greatest excellencies as a writer, — his remarkable exegetical talent, his intimate knowledge of Scripture, and mastery of the stores of ecclesiastical history.
Life of Dr Owen
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Also, it favors the microscopic analysis over the synoptic view, which means that concepts, their meanings, and connotations are put in the spotlight, whereas the treatises in which they figure remain in the shadows.
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Dominio divino libri tres, to which are added the first four books of the treatise 'De pauperie Salvatoris,' by R.chard Fitzralph, archbishop of Armagh, "ed.R. L. Poole, 1890;" De Ente prædicamentali, "ed.R. Beer, 1891;" De Eucharistia tractatus maior; accedit tractatus de
A Literary History of the English People From the Origins to the Renaissance
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The truth is, neither would the matter treated of, nor the persons for whose sakes chiefly this labour was undertaken, admit of an accurate scholastical procedure in all parts of the treatise.
The Doctrine of the Saints��� Perseverance Explained and Confirmed
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Erasmus Darwin published his Zoonomia in 1794, which was partly a medical textbook, partly a treatise in biology.
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Here endeth a short treatise of a devout ancress called Margery
The Cell of Self-Knowledge : seven early English mystical treatises printed by Henry Pepwell in 1521
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He was aware of philosophers who wrote authoritative treatises, telling their readers what to think about a number of large and important matters.
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This was meant to be the first part of a treatise on conics which Pascal never completed.
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Being A BRIEFE TREATISE of the acide, or tart Fountaine in the Forest of
Spadacrene Anglica The English Spa Fountain
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Christopher Wren, and others, who lent their aid in depreciating the old mediæval style, which they termed Gothic, as synonymous with every thing that was barbarous and rude, it may be sufficient to refer to the celebrated Treatise of Sir Henry Wotton, entitled _The Elements of
Notes and Queries, Number 09, December 29, 1849
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He wrote three treatises on numbers which helped to bring the Indian symbols and ideas of decimal fractions to the attention of some of the learned people in Europe.
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[382] On the subject of the continuance of Christ's mediatorial office in heaven, Dr Owen gives a detailed exhibition of his views in the last chapter of his "Treatise on the Person of Christ," published four years after this sermon was delivered, vol. 1 p. 271.
The Sermons of John Owen
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Reduced to their essence, they offer mental switches, or conduits, that assist one to constellate ideas from stored experiences to fit the circumstances at hand. 95 This amplifies the value of artistic works like the studioli since, from Aristotle on, memory treatises concur that corporeal images are necessary for an idea or experience to be fixed securely in the mind and readily available for recollection.
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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Indeed, I am gratified that he condescended to address one of three seminal questions which I directed in response to his treatise on electoral systems and good governance.
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The connection these treatises have with Priscian's grammar can be gathered from the attention different authors pay to the signa quantitatis (or quantifiers), and the fact that considerable attention is given to the meaning and function of syncategorematic terms.
Peter of Spain
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Arnold Geulincx, a Flemish philosopher, produced a treatise on ethics along Cartesian lines in 1655.
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Literature provides insights into the human condition in a way that no political treatise can match.
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Yet this unassuming treatise, written by Amelia Simmons, is a giant in culinary history.
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He wrote several intellectual treatises that are admired even today.
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This arrangement was followed by Whittington in the Treatise, but was emended in 1963.
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Cano (died 1560) applied the term loci theologici to a treatise on the fundamental principles or sources of theological science.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy