Example sentences of "[prep] [art] next chapter " in BNC.
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1 | Because of Berkeley 's criticisms of them , Locke 's views on language and abstract ideas , views which were implicit in the discussion of nominal essences , are best left for the next chapter . |
2 | Together with the previous chapter 's review of country risk this should provide a sound foundation for the next chapter on the external debt problem . |
3 | However , to pursue this would lead on to criticisms of inductivism that I have reserved for the next chapter . |
4 | Because the discussion of these criteria is associated with a fresh and more promising period in the history of memory research , and also symbolizes the point in my own research trajectory at which I switched from working on imprinting to an even simpler form of learning in the young chick , they can appropriately form the starting-point for the next chapter . |
5 | My interpretation of what is going on at the present day is being saved for the next chapter , but some of the most startling results come from the latest ( and most accurately dated ) deposits . |
6 | She fell asleep with her mind determinedly focused on plans for the next chapter . |
7 | The company was , inexorably , being positioned for a further dramatic stage in its development , and Laura was uneasy about the next chapter in their own story . |
8 | We have enough to do in evaluating Marx 's and Engels 's use of anthropology and this is the task of the next chapter . |
9 | What might arise with practice is a better routine for coping with jet-lag , and this is the aim of the next chapter . |
10 | He is the subject of the next chapter . |
11 | Charleton was involved from its early days with the subject of the next chapter , The Royal Society of London for the Improving of Natural Knowledge . |
12 | On the list of its early members are such notable names as Robert Boyle , popularly remembered now for his work on the expansion of gases , Christopher Wren , the architect of St Paul 's Cathedral , John Evelyn , the diarist , John Locke ( who will be the subject of the next chapter of this book ) , Robert Hooke , remembered now for his work on elasticity , and , perhaps the most famous of all , Isaac Newton . |
13 | ‘ So wonderfully pleased and satisfied ’ was he with it that , as Molyneux wrote to Locke , ‘ he has ordered it to be read by the Batchelors in the College , and strictly examines them in their progress therein ’ ; and so it came about that Locke 's masterpiece was on the curriculum which faced George Berkeley , the subject of the next chapter , when he entered Trinity as a student in 1700 . |
14 | According to David Hume , the subject of the next chapter , Berkeley 's account of abstract ideas was ‘ one of the greatest and most valuable discoveries that has been made of late years in the republic of letters ’ . |
15 | Yet mutual distrust persisted between France and Germany , Hitler rose to power in Germany , the Italian intervention in Abyssinia revealed the contempt of Italy for the League of Nations , and the Spanish Civil War , the subject of the next chapter , presented the stark challenge of fascism . |
16 | Another and more direct way is to look at the anatomy and physiology of the brain ; that is the subject of the next chapter . |
17 | The range and significance of water in the processes of life is the subject of the next chapter . |
18 | The greatest of all the world 's waters , of course , are the oceans ; and they are the subject of the next chapter . |
19 | Food chains ( or webs ) are the subject of the next chapter . |
20 | This suggestion leads us on to the subject of the next chapter : the issue of how one uses authority . |
21 | Consequences in the form of penalties and punishments are the subject of the next chapter . |
22 | These ideas are further elaborated in a note at the end of the next chapter . |
23 | The way that this has been done in the past is the subject of the next chapter ; the way that it might be done in the future is the justification for this book . |
24 | These procedures form the subject of the next chapter . |
25 | This question is the subject of the next chapter . |
26 | And this was what happened in the 1960s and 1970s — the subject of the next chapter . |
27 | To understand the processes behind the definition of housework rules it is necessary to look more closely at the way in which women identify with the role of housewife ; this is the subject of the next chapter . |
28 | And judging ads , or deciding which are the good ones , either before or after they have been run , is the subject of the next chapter . |
29 | The intention of the next chapter is to examine , through actual cases of consumption , the means by which some balance may be achieved between the relevant factors . |
30 | What these differences between the two halves of the brain might be telling us , we had no idea at the time — but some clues will begin to appear by the end of the next chapter . |