Example sentences of "i shall [verb] [conj] the " in BNC.

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1 I shall assume that the zoological species Homo sapiens is indeed a unity in the sense that in the hypothetical absence of all cultural restraints interbreeding between the members of any randomly selected human population of randomly selected individuals would be random , just as it would be in a randomly selected pack of mongrel dogs provided always that particular individual dogs were prevented from asserting dominance over their neighbours .
2 By unmasking the circularity of physiological explanations of perception that have been developed within the framework of the idea of the ‘ impingement ’ , I shall show that the a priori principle is upheld .
3 I shall suggest that the dominant philosophy in practice is paternalism .
4 I 'm taking my walking boots and a tent , and I shall go where the fancy takes me . ’
5 I shall ensure that the timing of the first formal review in such cases is fixed in accordance with my overall policy for ensuring that the time served by prisoners serving life sentences for the worst offences of violence fully reflects public concern about violent crime .
6 I shall ensure that the message that he has asked me to convey is conveyed tomorrow , when I go to Barrow to mark the roll-out of the first Vanguard submarine .
7 I shall ensure that the hon. Gentleman 's interest is drawn to his attention .
8 I shall direct that the terms of the Gracious Speech be printed in the Votes and Proceedings .
9 I 'd be grateful if you could look into this matter and I shall see that the phone number of the County Transport Enquiry Line is displayed in the village .
10 That leaves tomorrow to approach the board , and as I shall insist that the arrangement must be made by Monday — the bank of course , will wish to appoint its own auditors — if you can come to my office at four o'clock on Monday afternoon , Colonel Blair , I shall introduce — you to your superiors .
11 In this chapter , I shall argue that the concept ‘ inner city ’ is a fundamentally ideological category .
12 In my attempt at a wide-angled overview , however , I shall argue that the camera has not just two but many sides , and that feminist film criticism and theory can only benefit from casting its eye outside a field of vision in which the theory of the gaze and questions of representation and power have been dominant for too long .
13 I shall argue that the conservative and the reformist are both misguided : their views are comforting to many people , but in the end they are untenable as a theory of language .
14 When discussing Dennett and Sloman below , I shall argue that the opacity of one level of programming language to another is a better preliminary model of consciousness than the inaccessibility of the contents of one module from another .
15 I shall argue that the concept of profession , even in its most radical formulations , obscures more than it reveals about the work people do , and that alternative concepts based on the specific practices of various occupational groups should be substituted .
16 I shall argue that the suggestions which have been made carry with them grave problems .
17 I shall argue that the attractions of foundationalism , whatever they may be , do not derive from the theory of meaning which underlies it ; in fact , the most acceptable form of theory of meaning is noticeably lacking in the features characteristic of foundationalism , and supports instead an alternative epistemology , coherentism .
18 Nevertheless I shall argue that the idea that the National Curriculum ensures a common entitlement for all should be seen as persuasive rhetoric , rather than as an indisputable truth .
19 I shall argue that the question of ‘ subject choice ’ is not a neutral one and that individual school subjects can be seen to embody certain kinds of values .
20 That is , I shall argue that the power/knowledge assumptions which form the very basis of Bourdieu 's conceptual framework place him much closer to Foucault and the postmodernist end of the theoretical spectrum .
21 In this chapter I shall argue that the no boundary condition for the universe , together with the weak anthropic principle , can explain why all three arrows point in the same direction — and moreover , why a well-defined arrow of time should exist at all .
22 I shall argue that the psychological arrow is determined by the thermodynamic arrow , and that these two arrows necessarily always point in the same direction .
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