Example sentences of "[conj] [noun prp] argue that [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Some philosophers saw ‘ force ’ as more fundamental than matter , and Schelling argued that polar forces underlay all phenomena , and that apparent rest was really equilibrium .
2 Roll and Ross argue that these portfolios may have desirable qualities for the potential investor .
3 Despite the potential for exploiting volunteers , Baldock and Ungerson argue that such schemes may provide the basis for a shift from unpaid to paid care-work .
4 Gemmill and Dickens argue that such tests examine both the validity of the model and the efficiency of the TOM and that they would have the following implications :
5 One outcome of this exercise is the claim that Marx 's philosophical views are to be found in Capital rather than in his earlier writing , and Althusser argues that this work , in particular , has been misunderstood .
6 During the early sixties Butler and Stokes argue that social services was an issue that satisfied the three conditions ; its effect was " substantial " ; and it " worked strongly to Labour 's advantage " — although their evidence for all of this was weak .
7 Modigliani and Miller argue that this situation can not persist for long as it offers arbitrage profits to the individual investor .
8 Davis and Moore argue that all societies need some mechanism for insuring effective role allocation and performance .
9 In Britain , Owen and Mivart argued that many cases of evolution consisted of parallel lines of development within the same group , all driven in the same direction as though by an internally programmed force .
10 Following Marx 's thesis about the tendency of the rate of profit to decline , Baran and Sweezey argued that this decline led to a drop in the effective demand in the economy , as more and more money is tied up in research and development and the purchase and maintenance of machinery .
11 Wimmer and Perner argue that this ability involves the ability to represent the relationship between two conflicting beliefs .
12 Hubbell and Foster argue that such thinking could lead to a return to the classical views of rain forest and speciation espoused by Corner , Fedorov and van Steenis .
13 Pollock and Majeed argue that this behaviour is somehow different in the two countries as the motive is profit in the United States but survival in the internal market here .
14 Lash and Urry argue that postmodern culture nevertheless particularly benefits the ‘ service class ’ of senior white collar workers : a group which is given special attention in Chapter 1 .
15 However , in contrast to those who can see nothing good in this type of organisation , Burns and Stalker argue that this type of organisation may be appropriate to an organisation operating within a particular environment .
16 Burns and Stalker argue that this type of organisation is more likely to survive in an uncertain environment .
17 But Poulantzas argues that this interpretation is a mistake because the policy actually serves the interests of monopolies better than any available alternative , and is thus in line with their strategy .
18 It may be the case , as McClelland argues that this type of constraint requires a certain type of architecture .
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