Example sentences of "which [art] law " in BNC.

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1 For the scales on the ‘ objective ’ measuring devices used to derive the data upon which the laws are founded are not validated independently of subjective experience .
2 As a clue to that significance we might first recall the way in which the laws regarding menstruation and childbirth and this new circumcision appeared at the same time in the history of the Jewish people , and remember what was earlier said about the nature — culture dichotomy and the need of culture to control or impose itself upon what it deems to be nature .
3 He describes as ‘ ominous ’ any ‘ suggestion that , out of ‘ respect ’ for the law we should refrain from any forthright criticism either of particular laws , or of the institutions of law enforcement or the governmental process by which the laws are made . ’
4 It is also believed that the old Scandinavian rulers of the area held their annual ‘ folk mote ’ at which the laws were read to the assembled inhabitants at a large circular mound , now overgrown with trees , and known to the local people as Fox Hill , supposedly a corruption of Folks Hill .
5 He only maintained that the present forms of Church government which the laws of the land had established were such as ‘ No law of God nor reason had proved them to do ill . ’
6 The evidence of uncertainty and equivocation in the way in which the laws of war have , or have not , been applied to the problem of nuclear weapons is plain enough .
7 This raises the question , discussed in the final section , as to whether there may be other respects in which the laws of war might actually be compatible with deterrence in some form .
8 Dwyer outlined the bare bones of his playing philosophy : ‘ We are no sure that the manner in which the laws developed has reflected the way the game was meant to be played ’ , he said .
9 However , Sartre was no more prepared than Merleau-ponty to return to what he characterized as Marxist organicism , in which the laws of history unfold according to their own autonomous momentum .
10 A restoration of the ancient Cross from which the laws of the land were proclaimed .
11 ( The reader who fails to see how any system of entities in which the laws unc both fail can have any practical value has only to recall the familiar 3-dimensional vector calculus , denoting vector multiplication .
12 The statements so arrived at ( I will call them observation statements ) then form the basis from which the laws and theories that make up scientific knowledge are to be derived .
13 According to the inductivist account of science , the secure basis on which the laws and theories that constitute science are built is made up of public observation statements rather than the private , subjective experiences of individual observers .
14 The program considers every possible move which the laws of the game allow it to make , and arrives at various positions which we may call HisPos .
15 Now , as a result of the singularity theorems , nearly everyone believes that the universe began with a singularity , at which the laws of physics broke down .
16 There would be no singularities at which the laws of science broke down and no edge of space-time at which one would have to appeal to God or some new law to set the boundary conditions for space-time .
17 In real time , the universe has a beginning and an end at singularities that form a boundary to space-time and at which the laws of science break down .
18 The region 's leader , Milan Babic , announced that Krajina was a federal unit in which the laws and regulations of the Republic of Serbia applied .
19 The variety of contexts in which the laws are preserved and the chance survival of the precepts of Childebert I and Chlothar II show that the great law-books of the Merovingian kingdom , the Pactus Legis Salicae and the Lex Ribvaria , were only one part of the legal output of the period , and they suggest that the Merovingian kings legislated often .
20 We are required by the Copyright Act to have a written request before we can supply the copy , for which the law demands that we make a charge .
21 This is very much the way in which the law approaches the extraction of the truth , and it is different both from the vivid imprecision of ordinary life and the intimacy of a police interrogation .
22 It is difficult to deal sensibly with the craze unless we remember that it is the latest in a series of recognisably similar phenomena , which the law has had difficulty in regulating : the early ‘ happenings ’ , influenced by LSD ; the ‘ blues parties ’ , which were the last to hit the headlines ; the continuing ‘ northern soul ’ craze , and no doubt others which even the participants have long since forgotten .
23 Incorporation would also pave the way for multi-disciplinary practices , which the Law Society now bans .
24 We make settlements by which we provide that property shall devolve from one person to another within the limits which the law allows , e.g. to a man , then to his wife , then to be divided among his children .
25 This right to redress which the law confers on the possessor is independent of , and at least as old as , if not older than , the legal protection given to the owner .
26 The concept of parental rights may be in serious general decline — ‘ it has become increasingly difficult to reconcile its existence with the predominant emphasis which the law now places on the welfare of children ’ .
27 It was soon apparent that many of the audience were critical of the way in which the law is being administered .
28 In other cases , the doctor should , of course , seek to respect the patient 's wishes , since , in any event , the patient will be requesting the doctor to do only that which the law already requires and permits him to do , with perhaps some greater specificity as to detail .
29 The line which the law draws is at the very least indistinct , and turns on such imponderables as malum in se , mayhem , degrees of harmfulness , and public policy , and calls for an examination of such unsatisfactory cases as Donovan , Bravery v.
30 A good example of this is the way in which the law , the media and public opinion view supplementary benefit fraud , ‘ fiddling the dole ’ .
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