Example sentences of "and hence [art] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Weismann , who was the first to raise so many important questions , suggested that animals senesce because , if they did not , there could be no successive replacement of individuals and hence no evolution .
2 : the computer has no knowledge of the biology or chemistry involved in the digestive process , and hence no conception of the way in which the intake of food satiates hunger ;
3 But we always do have such a choice and hence no sentence has observational consequences all its own .
4 He distinguished Ex parte Good , 5 Ch.D. 46 in that there the other debtor had already been made bankrupt and hence no claim could be made against him .
5 As a result there is no net space charge and hence no electric field .
6 If there was no asset specificity , then there would be no commitment on either side , and hence no problem .
7 But if so ; if there are no " irreducibly existential " propositions , then there are no " irreducibly existential " facts ; and hence no metaphysical problem of " being qua being " either .
8 A bad burn could mean no usable clinker and hence no pay .
9 This is because ( 1 ) the future earnings of and dividend payments on shares are unknown and have to be forecast ; ( 2 ) there is no maturity date and hence no maturity value ; and ( 3 ) shares are the riskiest investments to hold , having the residual claim on the firm 's assets and the net income generated by these assets , so that the appropriate discount rate is very difficult to calculate .
10 The same is true for many other periods ; for instance , coins provide a date for the deposit of the great Viking hoard from Cuerdale in Lancashire of c.AD905 , and this in turn provides a date for the associated objects and hence a pivotal fixed chronological point for our understanding of Anglo-Saxon metalwork .
11 The fact that small groups tend of necessity to comprise a membership of close kin favours the occurrence of kin selection and hence a high probability that cooperative behaviour will evolve .
12 In Britain today we have different criminal laws and hence a different range of crime from those which once existed .
13 The hardest problems are those where simple processes are hard to find , usually because of some complexity of the puzzle which makes it hard to see the effects of moves , or those where the basic coordinate system and hence a notation is hard to find .
14 Such a decline would lead to a decline in total money wages being paid out and hence a decline in the demand for consumption goods .
15 Now the voltage drop across a typical red l.e.d. will be about 2.2V when it is supplied with a normal value of forward current ( in the range 10 to 18mA ) and hence a voltage of about 6.8V ( 9–2.2V ) will appear across R6 .
16 One writer on dinosaurs suggests that raising the body off the ground requires more energy , and hence a more efficient heart that could supply commensurately more oxygen Bipedal walking and standing , runs the argument , requires the muscles to tense to straighten the legs .
17 We therefore begin , in Chapter 2 , by examining the argument frequently put forward that the new technology is leading to wholesale job destruction and hence a permanently high level of unemployment .
18 The increase in the cost of repaying mortgages ( the greatest component of the average family 's budget ) caused a reduction in the amount of money available for general consumption and hence a reduction in living standards .
19 Incest results in higher rates of homozygosity , the more frequent expression of lethal or subvital recessive genes , and hence a greater incidence of hereditary disease and early death among the offspring .
20 For while he goes to some lengths to avoid formulating a question which presupposes the distinction between subject and object , he is frankly concerned to provide an answer ( and hence a question ) which will be compatible with the claim that social changes are overdetermined by the complex whole , and which will therefore embody a particular view of the production of knowledge .
21 Much as the regimes of Eastern Europe might welcome the support of their neighbours against Moscow — and hence a strengthening of such multilateral forums — they also view their neighbours as rival claimants to Moscow 's favour and are wary of giving them a greater voice in their own affairs .
22 Rather than seeing child abuse as an exceptional problem requiring an exceptional response , and hence a qualitatively different practice , we should see it as part of child care and hence child care practice .
23 Then there are progressively large decreases in adult survival for each increment in juvenile survival , and hence a convex trade-off curve ( heavy line in Fig. 2 ) .
24 In cases where there were guilty pleas the defendants had almost invariably committed offences on several different occasions , and hence a defence that all the women consented would not be credible .
25 For instance , the use of cannabis by the young is far more likely to be branded as ‘ drug-taking'/'drug addiction ’ and hence a ‘ social problem ’ than is the consumption of thirty cigarettes a day by adults or half a bottle of brandy by middle-class businessmen .
26 There were undoubted gains for middle-class women in the nineteenth century , from a controlled access to divorce ( though one which sustained a double standard ) , the possibility of custody of children in the case of broken marriages , new rights in property and so on , and , no doubt many middle-class women , far from being ‘ redundant ’ , often participated in the major household decisions , supervised the servants , and increasingly gained access to birth control and hence a possibly less inhibited sexual pleasure .
27 The need to represent such relationships may be accommodated using a smaller list of roots ( and hence a coarser grain-size ) , and more meaningful overlaps may be the result .
28 Greenstein has reminded us of Marshall McLuhan 's distinction between " hot " and " cool " media , " hot " media presenting a complete pattern of stimuli , " cool " presenting an incomplete pattern and therefore requiring greater processing and hence a higher level of engagement on the reader 's part .
29 The explanation usually offered for this phenomenon is that subjects implicitly attach a verbal label to pictures and objects and hence a verbal memory trace as well as a pictorial memory trace is established .
30 If the duty is framed in subjective terms , as we have seen , the practical effect is not to impose a duty but to confer a discretion and hence a management which is not disposed to sacrifice profits ( or otherwise depart from its chosen course ) in order to advance other interests will not be compelled to alter its behaviour .
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