Example sentences of "in previous chapter " in BNC.

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1 As we have seen in previous chapters , a karate bout lasts for two or three minutes .
2 As I have argued in previous chapters , reconsidering that history helps us to reconsider psychoanalysis , especially the way it incorporates yet obscures the perverse dynamic .
3 It is , of course , precisely the concern with such matters , the concern with ‘ method ’ and the nature of ‘ natural philosophy ’ that has often been the topic of discussion in previous chapters .
4 All this may be done for the best of reasons but it only ensures that children bottle up their feelings as well as their tears , which , as we have seen in previous chapters , can have far-reaching effects .
5 As I have mentioned in previous chapters , at the time of a death complicated practical issues need to be decided : to bury or cremate ; was there a will and if not how do you organize probate ; how do you get hold of money from an account that is not in your name ; how do you register a death .
6 I have already argued in this chapter ( p. 79 ) that the rat 's level of arousal can help determine the vigour of the OR ; and , theoretically more important , in this and in previous chapters I have argued that the decline of this investigatory response represents the operation of a process of habituation .
7 In previous chapters we have seen how the ancient manor of Combsburgh had been partially enclosed as early as the fourteenth century , especially in the areas close to the market town , and how the bulk of the field structure had been established by the late sixteenth century .
8 ‘ I have explained both in previous chapters and during our programmes , ’ he writes in his best-selling book which accompanies the series , ‘ that from the yoga viewpoint , all life is sustained by a force which the Yogis have named prana .
9 First it may be recalled that , of the vacuum field equations ( 6.22a-f ) considered in previous chapters , ( 6.22a ) may immediately be integrated to give , ( 11.1 ) and ( 6.22d , e ) are integrability conditions for the remaining equations .
10 The original metric functions , as considered in previous chapters , are now given by ( 11.20 )
11 However , before moving on to consider such cases , it is appropriate first to review the colinear solutions described in previous chapters .
12 The difficulty arises because , as described in previous chapters , it is convenient to use f and g , or transformations of them , as coordinates in the interaction region .
13 Other aspects were discussed in previous chapters .
14 On the F-Plan it is even less possible because if you are consuming 1,000 calories a day in the form of fibre-rich meals a percentage of those calories is not digested , as explained in previous chapters .
15 As we have seen in previous chapters , it is infrequent that allowable candidate words are unique .
16 We saw in previous chapters that Aquitaine was a primary source of Anglo-French tensions .
17 There is an intimate connection between epistemology and theory of meaning which has shown its head already in previous chapters .
18 I am not arguing that there are no uses for a conceptual demarcation of classes quite distinct from the demarcations present within popular ideology — on the contrary , I have used such a demarcation in previous chapters — but I am arguing that the latter demarcations have a real importance and should not be dismissed as merely ‘ subjective ’ .
19 Moreover , they illustrate many of the theoretical points that have been raised in previous chapters .
20 In the present chapter we consider some of the main issues of policy and strategy which the Leeds approach raises : the way PNP policy was formulated and communicated ; the substance and interpretation of the policy ; and the LEA 's own strategies for implementing the policy — as opposed to those adopted in the schools which have been considered in previous chapters — with particular reference to the INSET programme .
21 A careful division of labour within the team sought to ensure that most aspects of the programme ( with notable omissions referred to in previous chapters ) would be effectively managed .
22 Though the American literature on spectator disorder generally contributes few useful insights , Smith 's distinction between issue-oriented and issueless riots helps to highlight the crucial difference between hooligan behaviour and the other forms of public disorder referred to in previous chapters .
23 We have noted changes in procedural legislation , as well as changes in the actual nature of policing in previous chapters .
24 Some of these methods have been described in previous chapters , which dealt with market research , sales forecasting , analysis of consumer and buyer behaviour and so on .
25 The second aim is to discuss these patterns of language impairment in relation to the models of normal language processing we have described in previous chapters .
26 In some respects it is an initiative influenced by the experience of the Plebs League and the NCLC , discussed in previous chapters .
27 In previous chapters we have seen how our views of the nature of time have changed over the years .
28 In previous chapters I have described general relativity , the partial theory of gravity , and the partial theories that govern the weak , the strong , and the electromagnetic forces .
29 In previous chapters we have discussed tax incentives , competition policy , and industrial policy .
30 None of this is a matter of syntax ; the intensional relations and the syntactic constructions which realize them are just the ones we have discussed in previous chapters .
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