Example sentences of "he believe that [adj] " in BNC.

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1 There are also some splendid quotes ; Planck 's gloomy view of the advance of science led him to believe that scientific truth triumphs not by convincing its opponents , but rather because they eventually die .
2 Again , it was reason rather than faith that led him to believe that this was the only adequate ground for the proclamation of the universal offer of the Gospel .
3 Indeed , Wycliffe maintained that Gaunt regarded political instability as one of the greatest evils that could befall a state ; and Gaunt 's political career suggests that he believed that political stability was best ensured by the maintenance of the prerogatives of the monarchy .
4 He believed that hundreds of the " veiled women " demonstrating in the streets of Teheran in favour of an Islam Republic were actually militant Communists dressed up .
5 He believed that religious ideas had an independent historical influence , and that the realm of politics was usually the crucial controlling force in social change .
6 He believed that lower taxes were the route to higher growth and more jobs .
7 He believed that good architecture could only be created by good people and that you could only be good by being an unreformed Christian .
8 He believed that such an event would lead to a loss of belief in the will of the USA to maintain her commitments throughout the area .
9 He believed that many legitimate visitors would be forced to park on the main road because the council had closed the track .
10 He believed that many of these slips revealed some kind of sexual subconscious which suddenly ‘ accidentally ’ is brought to the conscious .
11 He believed that Soviet leaders in retrospect probably recognised that a genuinely non-aligned Afghanistan pursuing non-radical policies was a better guardian of Soviet security interests .
12 He believed that all home-produced cheese would rise in price and that the number of varieties would shrink .
13 He was able to tolerate this because he did have a kind of ultimate theological perspective of his own : in a style that owed a good deal to Hegel , he believed that all history is a movement of the spirit which is on the way to a return to God , and will at the last find its home in God .
14 He believed that all living forms can be related into a single developmental sequence .
15 And as the first US Ambassador to the Communist regime in Beijing , he believed that secret emissaries to his old Chinese contacts was the way to launch his personal brand of presidential diplomacy .
16 He believed that these monuments succeeded compositionally from five or six angles .
17 He believed that these groups were helping to alleviate the effects of catastrophes caused by the dawning of the New Age .
18 His diffidence with secondary art teachers , he intimated , was because he believed that these folk had had longer formal training and more paper qualifications than himself .
19 He believed that human beings were born sociable , cooperative , altruistic , nice , civilized and that if , in later life , they showed anti-social selfish , criminal erm , egoistic tendencies , it was because of what happened to them after they were born .
20 Forgetful of the silence which prevailed over his own most troubling experiences , he believed that direct and gentle questioning might embolden even the least articulate sufferer to speak all the grief and rage of the heart , and so dispel it .
21 He believed that parliamentary government could go a great way towards securing personal liberty but ‘ neither parliamentary government nor any other form of constitution … will ever of itself remove all or half the sufferings of human beings .
22 He believed that abrupt changes on the earth 's surface were responsible for killing off all the species over a wide area .
23 He believed that this was referred to by Geoffrey of Monmouth in the twelfth century .
24 He believed that this recording was one of the essential means to feed the imagination of children and so promote further creative work in a variety of fields .
25 He believed that this would reveal that the evolution of society followed ‘ invariable laws ’ .
26 He believed that sensible policies for extracting timber would allow a balance to be maintained , permitting humankind to harvest a permanently renewable resource .
27 He believed that some people are already moving to higher and higher planes of the mind , and there is here an endless potential .
28 This was not because he had any interest in values realized in animal life , but because he believed that some degree of goodness pertained to things or states of affairs which do not involve consciousness of any kind .
29 He believed that clinical descriptions of neuroses do not take into account the inner experiences of the patient which may be valid and even illuminating .
30 To exonerate him the court invented the second stage : did he believe that reasonable people would regard his behaviour as not dishonest ?
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