Example sentences of "see chapter " in BNC.

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1 See Chapter 26 .
2 Such judgment or order if the final time limit has expired , may be enforced by committal by a judge ( Ord 29 , r 1(1) ) — see Chapter 23 .
3 Although the court order should specify a time-limit in which the conveyance must be completed ( so that compliance can be enforced — see Chapter 8 ) such time-limit is rarely adhered to in practice .
4 In the light of such a polemic stand , it begs the question whether the revelation of how crime figures are manipulated by the police to sustain institutional beliefs ( see Chapter 5 ) could be said to undermine democracy or be classified as sedition .
5 They are also well aware of the limited ability of detectives simply to go out and detect crime and know but can not easily articulate that the symbolic import of the detection rate is a manipulation ( see Chapter 5 ) .
6 My own view is that connectionism ( see Chapter 7 ) is well placed to provide such a computational account of sensorimotor development ; but that is not the issue here .
7 Paradoxically , associationism is anathema to representational theorists like Fodor ; and Fodor criticizes connectionism ( see Chapter 7 ) for inheriting all the problems of associationism .
8 The converging conceptual worlds of computational theory and neuroscience are expressed in the huge and powerful ‘ neural nets ’ of parallel distributed processors and in the emergent science of cognitive neurobiology in which the brain is approached as an immensely complex information processor ( see Chapter 7 ) .
9 Although some philosophers and psychologists would emphasize the role of action in controlling perception ( see chapter 2 ) and some talk of ‘ top down ’ constraints on the interpretation of the perceived , the causal role of incident energy remains fundamental and the materialist version of the CTP essentially unchallenged .
10 Unfortunately , as I have demonstrated elsewhere ( see Chapter 3 of my Explicit Animal ) , it can not .
11 There was a precipitous decline in television 's projection of the Conservative Party 's overall credibility in the fourth week of the campaign , a week that included the infamous ‘ wobbly Thursday ’ ( see Chapter 4 , Table 4.16 , for details ) .
12 Motivations were measured in the second fortnight of the campaign , but the question wording was not time-specific ( see Chapter 2 ) .
13 ( See Chapter 6 on who found the press and television most useful . )
14 It is possible to make a single , and sell it at your own gigs , for quite a small sum of money ( see Chapter 13 , ‘ Doing it the Right Way ’ by Horace Trubridge ) .
15 She has clearly set a lead in a number of areas , pushing radical ideas and reforms ( see Chapter 9 ) .
16 But if your family is at the bottom or middle of the community hierarchy it is under constant critical scrutiny and the women particularly have to conform ( see Chapter 7 ) .
17 ( For the full interview with Prabhaben , see Chapter 7 , ‘ Sisters in Struggle ’ . )
18 Worst of all , my family would be ostracised socially ( see chapter on ‘ Adolescence and Marriage ’ from the Sikh community .
19 Particularly as we become older there is a tendency for rhythms to become less regular ( see Chapter 7 ) .
20 These include cortisol ( which rises later in the night as the body prepares for waking and is strongly influenced by the body clock ) ; antidiuretic hormone ( which is one of the ways in which fluid formation by the kidney is reduced at night , see Chapter 6 ) ; and the male sex hormone , testosterone , as well as some of the hormones that control the reproductive cycle in women .
21 It will also help to alert us and loosen up the joints in the spine by squeezing out fluid from the discs between the vertebrae ( see Chapter 1 ) .
22 Interestingly , in those subjects living for fairly long periods in isolation , in whom the pattern of sleep and activity becomes irregular ( see Chapter 2 ) , meals too become erratic in their numbers and composition .
23 What is certain ( see Chapter 14 ) is that the fetus can respond to inputs from its mother which show a 24-hour period , whereas the newborn baby — particularly when premature — is much less able to respond to 24-hour rhythms in this new environment .
24 Certainly , if it were true , it would readily enable explanations for the simultaneous presence of daily and ultradian rhythms in the adult and the switch from ultradian to daily rhythms during the months after birth ( see Chapter 7 ) .
25 In humans , as we have shown , there are also possible time-cues from the timing of meals , the sleep/wake rhythm and social activities ( see Chapter 2 ) .
26 The basis for such a treatment would have some parallel with the imposition of a daily routine and 24-hour environmental cues upon premature babies ( see Chapter 7 ) .
27 Our body clock has adjusted readily enough to the delay in our life-style at the weekend ( remember that the free-running period is more than 24 hours ) , but is less easily advanced , as is required , on Sunday night and Monday morning ( see Chapter 2 ) .
28 Of these the most honourable , but at the same time the most burdensome , was tenure by knight service , which involved many irksome ‘ incidents ’ ( see Chapter 2 , note 2 ) .
29 This was probably deliberately added by the potter as sand temper , to ‘ open up ’ the clay fabric , allowing water vapour to escape so that the pot would be less liable to crack during firing ( see Chapter 2 for further discussion ) .
30 Much is known about the metal artefacts produced in the British Bronze Age , but until recently very little was known of the copper sources exploited ( see Chapter 4 ) .
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