- In psychology,
certain seemingly-maladaptive
human behaviors superficially appear to be
attempts to
confirm one's own self
views (i.e. self-esteem, self-concept...
-
themselves to
behave as "sleepwalkers"
instead of
trying too
earnestly to
ratiocinate." The
historian of
astronomy Owen Gingerich,
while acknowledging that...
- woodcarver, the
skilled butcher, the
skilled swimmer does not
ponder or
ratiocinate on the
course of
action he
should take; his
skill has
become so much...
- Bengal, who was said to
spend nights in the
company of over a
hundred ratiocinating spiritual men.
Akbar also
wanted to
sharpen his
theological grasp because...
-
personal life. On Mauron's concept, the
author cannot be
reduced to a
ratiocinating self: his own more or less
traumatic biographical past, the cultural...
- celestial, ChristianB2, (Se)bastian /ti/ /ʃ/ consortiumA2, otiose,
ratiocinate, sentientB2 /ʃ/ /sk/ scheduleB2 /iːʃ/ /ɪtʃ/ nicheAB2 /ð/ /θ/ bequeath...
- and
equipping the fleet. Logothetēs, "one who accounts,
calculates or
ratiocinates" (literally "one who sets the word") — A
secretary in the
extensive bureaucracy...
-
creation to his own
personal life. The
author cannot be
reduced to a
ratiocinating self: his own more or less
traumatic biographical past, the cultural...
- Prin****lities. In Gr****, logothetēs
means "one who accounts,
calculates or
ratiocinates",
literally "one who sets the word". The
exact origin of the
title is...
-
ruling with
finality that the
Cityhood Laws are constitutional. The
Court ratiocinated that: “We
should not ever lose
sight of the fact that the 16
cities covered...