Example sentences of "in [adj] chapter i shall " in BNC.

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1 In practice one can only talk about one thing at a time , and in this Chapter I shall risk a distorting simplicity by looking at questions of theory largely in isolation from institutional matrices and situations , and concentrating on British activities to the exclusion of the American ones that accompanied or preceded them .
2 In this chapter I shall write only about women in the last group and their position in the British labour market since very little has been written about them .
3 In this Chapter I shall begin by briefly considering the ( rather wide ) range of interference theories that have been applied to latent inhibition .
4 In this chapter I shall describe the genital region in man and woman and discuss some aspects of normal sexual function and variations in sexual behaviour
5 In this chapter I shall try to locate our present concerns in a pattern of historical development , and seek to excavate from this a prognosis for the viability of current strategies and initiatives .
6 In this chapter I shall set out all those questions which are most frequently asked by prospective patients , and which have not already been covered in Chapter 1 ; and in Chapter 3 , by giving details of the progress of one particular case , I shall endeavour to provide some idea of what to expect during a typical regression therapy session .
7 In this chapter I shall consider in more detail what is involved in this task , how context acts upon grammar so that the specific meanings of particular expressions are realized and communicative outcomes brought about .
8 In this chapter I shall argue that such problems are rooted in a variety of differences in values , practices , perspectives and professional ethos , arising out of a range of social , cultural and historical processes .
9 The latter received some notice in chapter one ( and will be discussed briefly again in chapter five ) ; in this chapter I shall be concerned primarily with the position of Stevenson , whose Ethics and Language is the fullest statement of the doctrine .
10 In this chapter I shall be considering some of the great historical Western moral philosophers of the past , confining myself , however , to the period of modern philosophy , which is usually conceived of as starting in the seventeenth century .
11 In this chapter I shall consider various answers given to that question .
12 In this chapter I shall try to describe the quantum mechanic 's tool kit with which he plies his trade .
13 In this chapter I shall give reasons for rejecting this approach , or if not for rejecting it then for supposing that the questions it raises can never be answered and so that it leads directly to scepticism .
14 In this chapter I shall consider some of the consequences of the National Curriculum for children who experience difficulties in learning at school .
15 In this chapter I shall be concerned with the description and interpretation of past states of language , bearing in mind that these were variable states , and with ‘ the use of the present to explain the past ’ .
16 In this chapter I shall not be attempting to show how this problem might be resolved .
17 In this chapter I shall argue that the no boundary condition for the universe , together with the weak anthropic principle , can explain why all three arrows point in the same direction — and moreover , why a well-defined arrow of time should exist at all .
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