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"ineluctable" Definitions
  1. that you cannot avoid

111 Sentences With "ineluctable"

How to use ineluctable in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "ineluctable" and check conjugation/comparative form for "ineluctable". Mastering all the usages of "ineluctable" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Berbatov became embroiled in an ineluctable dispute with the fans.
The ineluctable mixture of gray, brown, and black tones was impressive.
I have ineluctable loyalties to writers who set potent fiction there.
In so doing, it symbolically refuses the ineluctable limits of human life.
Dershowitz, like Trump, also has an ineluctable power to draw media attention.
Evil, for this frightened little Jewish boy, was as ineluctable as sunshine.
It's agitated, ailing, and on the brink of complete and ineluctable devastation.
In both, the Far North exhibits an attraction that turns ineluctable, then fatal.
This ineluctable progression stops only when they suddenly transform into an isometrically-rendered building.
"Yesterday Tomorrow" is, at its heart, a musical meditation on the ineluctable passing of time.
The Brexit referendum last month shattered the notion of ineluctable integration in the European Union.
That's where he'll be living, his power fictive but his presence ineluctable, snappily ever after.
The latter, as was understood by any Greek tragedian or historian worth his salt, was ineluctable.
"Google's Ideological Echo Chamber" wants to be a discussion of ideas about diversity through solid, ineluctable science.
Nevertheless, the conveniences that digital assistants offer may make them an ineluctable part of the next generation of cars.
They are part of the ineluctable journey to a climactic battle, which in turn points the way towards more films.
Any uplift that you may feel won't come from having your ideas affirmed, but from something ineluctable – call it art.
It's unclear what Trump can deliver as president that will quiet what is essentially these voters' fear of ineluctable change.
Yet like all stars, this palpable humanity comes with an ineluctable facility for both holding the screen and your attention.
I haven't stopped grieving the ineluctable loss, and I've just begun suspecting that I might grieve as long as I live.
Many of our most intractable economic ills can be traced to some degree to this ineluctable fact: America is getting old.
He stumbled through these affairs of the heart while also weathering the complications of immigration and the ineluctable tug of home.
But Mr. Ryoo adroitly moves his camera through vast, crowded settings, and the climax sweeps you up in its ineluctable intensity.
And there was an ineluctable reality: By the time the government got around to cutting checks, many of the men were dead.
"I think the savage urbanization is first of all a choice and not an ineluctable consequence of human expansion," Limasse Five says.
"John Ehle's meld of historical fact with ineluctable plot-weaving makes 'The Land Breakers' an exciting sample of masterful storytelling," Ms. Lee wrote.
It's hard to overstate how absurd the look was, and yet, as with your multi-shearling dress, it had an ineluctable logic to it.
Social networks, no matter how big they get or how familiar they seem, are not ineluctable forces but experimental technologies built by human beings.
" But he also needed to safeguard against his ineluctable biases and blind spots, and ensure that his film didn't "lapse into cliché or stereotype.
Democracies are also prone to disorder and corruption, but these are ineluctable features of any political system comprised of selfish and flawed human beings.
As well as taking a shot at France's gun laws, Trump couldn't help but muse about the ineluctable decline of France and French society.
She felt an ineluctable connection to the people as she ate their bread masterpieces, toured buildings by Antoni Gaudí and danced to flamenco music.
In answer to the "What, again?!" reactions my travel plans sometimes elicit, I try to explain the ineluctable lure that eclipses hold for me.
Utopians had a tendency to believe that the society they were crafting would actually be the final product of the ineluctable march of history.
One view, which was dominant even among Democratic-leaning economists in the 1990s, saw rising inequality mainly as a result of ineluctable market forces.
In a scripted performance, those tumultuous events could be re-remembered as intentional and progressive: What had been chaos and contingency became ineluctable historical necessity.
Imagine if all of Tilda Swinton's or Marlon Brando's acts were silent — wouldn't these two powerhouses' ineluctable pulls on audiences be all the more potent?
One of the ineluctable rules of quantum mechanics (and perhaps journalism) is that you can't observe something without disturbing it and influencing it in some way.
Surely these nineteenth-century communities have much to teach us about daring to imagine alternatives, about interrupting what may seem like the ineluctable march of history.
He attributed the farmers' grievances, even those caused by ineluctable market forces, to machinating cliques, rather as Mr Trump claimed globalisation could be reversed by squeezing bosses.
" Kate Daloz Brooklyn, N.Y. I was struck by Kapur's thesis that utopians had been seeking an interruption of "what may seem like the ineluctable march of history.
But, at a time when our national conversation gets darker by the day, he also wants to show the rest of the internet that toxicity online isn't ineluctable.
The happy narrative we told ourselves was that there was an almost ineluctable path to liberal democracy, and the evidence suggests that this is not how it works.
All of these ineluctable future events are, in one way or another, crises of centralization, generated by the problems inherent in the centralization of political and decision-making power.
These days, the ineluctable forces of demographics and longevity gains are forcing states to confront their underfunded pension largesse of the past, and for most it's not terribly pleasant.
Mr. Washington is, to state the overobvious, a great star, which means that he has that ineluctable what's-it for selling the goods no matter what their sell-by date.
Sequences are repeated, and the patterns become recognizable: the ineluctable and inescapable games of power, the fear and the hope of those caught up in a world beyond their control.
As with the best rom-coms, the romance feels ineluctable, no matter how hard the two leads fight it — but what fun it is to watch Duris and Paradis spar.
Inherent in the portable-benefits boosters' message is that contracted gig labor is the ineluctable way of the future, and that worker-benefit structures must adapt from the traditional employer-based model.
A few minutes later, Mr. Wurm followed his own instructions and, without cracking a smile, balanced a cheap white running shoe on his head as if subject to some ineluctable law of physics.
Pence's strategy was ineluctable—Trump's basic indecency has forced his supporters to find creative ways around defending the indefensible—but he was also providing a template for the Republican Party's post-Trump reckoning.
A recurring gag involves Ace of Base's "All That She Wants," the Europop hit that had no problem ignoring custom checkpoints to spread with the ineluctable ease of a virus back in 1992.
Gone is the original's joyful sense of mischief; what's left is an inoffensive piece of twaddle that never fully appreciates the ineluctable bond between community spirit and a drop of the hard stuff.
The new analysis, which refines famous past research by one of the scientists, finds that, although declines in running performance with age are ineluctable, they may be less steep than many of us fear.
But there's a more sinister aspect to all this that I fear will attach itself to whatever entertainment franchise is next to grip the world's imagination — an ineluctable mob mentality, a sense of storytelling privilege.
Though xenophobia is part of our complex inheritance—quickened, no doubt, by the same instinct that causes chimpanzees to try to destroy members of groups not their own—this inheritance is not our ineluctable fate.
In design, their gratuitous beauty humbles us into reflections on the divine; in cruelty of purpose, they are a memento mori, a symbol of ineluctable fate embodied in the futile wriggling of an ensnared fly.
In those 23 years, the band, now a trio completed by Andy 'Fletch' Fletcher and lead songwriter Martin Gore, have continued to evolve, despite the ineluctable pressures of fame and fortune, and an occasionally turbulent history.
Since an ineluctable part of being a human self is suffering, part of what we humans come to art for is an experience of suffering, necessarily a vicarious experience, more like a sort of 'generalization' of suffering.
In an era when the United States seems to be on the retreat — notice the absence of Americans from this story — it can be easy to shrug off China's advance as another instance of its rapid, ineluctable expansion.
Like any number of Ms. Akerman's other movies, this one revisits some of her preoccupations — home, exile, memory, identity, bodies, specifically the female body, on- and offscreen space — through the prism of Natalia, long one her most ineluctable subjects.
"I Saw the Light" is the latest movie to try to capture that certain ineluctable something about Williams (1923-1953), the poor Alabama boy turned country-music star who died at 29 and inspired later legends like Bob Dylan.
These days, attributing inequality mainly to the ineluctable forces of technology and globalization is out of fashion, and there is much more emphasis on factors like the decline of unions, which has a lot to do with political decisions.
The unnamed specter, and specter it is, is hive-mind-rapture, the unitary consciousness: the internet as the ineluctable melding of what has, since human origins, been a solitary proposition—we are born alone, we die alone—into some unknown totality.
But if there are not—if Britain's current model is indeed path dependent and ineluctable, if Mrs May and Mr Smith are letting ends obscure means—then the country needs a very different discussion: about how it can make the best of its existing strengths.
" Dr. Notterman had worked at Bellevue Hospital in 1983, then the epicenter of the AIDS epidemic, where he saw people in the prime of their lives — babies, even — go through the stages of frantic fear of the wasting of their bodies to "an ineluctable sadness.
The natural and ineluctable process expands your pelvic bones, displaces your internal organs and ends with you pushing a new human out through your vagina or having your abdomen and uterus cut open to remove this new child, often tearing your most intimate and sensitive body parts.
She's an ace Everywoman, the star with that ineluctable something who also feels like best-friend material, the sort you can weep, laugh and close the bar down with, and who makes it easy to wake up the next morning feeling faintly optimistic about the new day.
These days, chatter about distribution deals, a movie's commercial potential and even if a title will be in play at the next Academy Awards tends to drown out meaningful discussions of cinema and whether independence can be quantified by vision, spirit, money or some ineluctable combination of these.
" In the war of words, the court ruled that what's in the Legislature's code stands: "Based upon the common and plain meaning of the word 'sex,' as well as the Legislature's clear intent, we are left with the ineluctable conclusion that the word 'sex' does not include 'sexual orientation.
Beginning with "Ineluctable modality of the visible" floating above a 3-D animation of Sandymount strand while Dedalus's wandering thoughts audibly waft through, it makes Joyce's first full-on stream-of-consciousness joy ride in "Ulysses" less alienating and more than a little intriguing even for those who know the text.
A MINUS Mekons: Deserted (Bloodshot) Powering rock music of ineluctable muscle with Tom Greenhalgh's congested outcry at its heart, it's more like they're struggling out of the mud than spinning their wheels in the sand, so pray it's not an omen that the mud still has them as it does us all.
Kippenberger's German heritage is an ineluctable presence in works like "A Quarter Century" — the proclamation "one of you, among you" can be perceived as a parody of Nazi propaganda ("Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Führer"), but it can also be read as an adoption of its strategies, a charge his critics leveled against him.
Whether it's a foreign policy expert insisting on military intervention, a business-school prophet proclaiming the virtues of disruption, a Silicon Valley genius reducing politics to engineering, or a Times columnist championing the ineluctable march of autonomous technology, today's thought leaders all share a core worldview: that extreme wealth and the channels by which it was obtained are not only legitimate but heroic.
While the main mobile story in the last 10 years has been about the ineluctable rise of smartphones boosted by Apple's iOS, Google's Android, and a huge range of handset makers using the latter to push the boundaries ever more on what it means to have a portable computer in your pocket, KaiOS Sebastien Codeville says that this does not tell the whole story.
Essentially raised outside the spotlight, Charlotte and her husband were educated in elite Paris schools before graduating from the Sorbonne (Rassam holds a History degree; Charlotte, a B.A. in Philosophy) In addition, the pair share an ineluctable bond, each having suffered the loss of their fathers at an extremely young ages: Rassam at age three and Charlotte, only four when her father Stefano Casiraghi died in a motorboat accident in 1990.
Buddhism also prescribes "acceptance and resignation in the face of life's pain and suffering", in accordance with belief in karma and the expiation of sins from previous lives. Women may choose to believe that serving as prostitutes is the ineluctable result of karma.
When Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, Chamberlain appointed Churchill to the Cabinet as the First Lord of the Admiralty; Gunther wrote that "the nation demanded" that he rejoin the government, and predicted that "the ineluctable force of events may eventually push Churchill into Chamberlain's seat".
Barrotta et al, Freud and Italian Culture (2009) p. 182 by maintaining that any given slip can always be explained mechanically without a need for deeper motivation.Greetham, Theories p. 257-8 J. L. Austin had independently seen slips not as revealing a particular complex, but as an ineluctable feature of the human condition, necessitating a continual preparation for excuses and remedial work.
Srivastava was born in 1960 in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh. He received his master's degree in Economics in 1980 from Gorakhpur University and joined Civil Services in 1983. His first poetry book Ineluctable Stillness came in 2005 followed by two more poetry collections and a semi-autobiographical non-fiction. Srivastava wrote Soliloquy of a Small- Town Uncivil Servant, a literary non-fiction published in March 2019.
The wizard Clothahump described the swamps of the south as "tropical, friendly, and largely uninhabited" when he sent Jon-Tom the Spellsinger and Mudge the Otter to investigate the rising power of a new magician, Marcus the Ineluctable. Along the way they encounter warring colonies of tough-talking prairie dogs, magical mime-vines, a mammoth mountain of living muck and a hidden colony of dreaded Plated Folk.
As Noboru is watching his mother and the sailor, a ships horn sounds, which Ryuji turns towards. Noboru is elated, and believes he has witnessed the true order of the universe because Ryuji turns away from feeling and is drawn to the sea. He describes this as an “ineluctable circle of life”, (p. 13) in which Noboru sees himself unified with Fusako and Ryuji.
" The ruling subsequently was upheld by the Florida Third District Court of Appeal, which stated "Following the ineluctable conclusion that the Village ordinance does not restrict a fundamental right or suspect class, [two cases previously discussed] control the analysis in this case. The ordinance is constitutional. We agree with the trial court's parting observation that the appellants 'still have a remedy. They can petition the Village Council to change the ordinance.
After being, in turn, anxious, angry, and sometimes morose, he accepts the coming ineluctable defeat with serenity, but with much emotion, with the comfort of his loved ones and colleagues. The documentary features the following politicians: Pauline Marois, André Boisclair and François Legault. Landry's strategist team consists of: Richard Nadeau, Brigitte Pelletier, Hubert Bolduc, Denis Hardy, Frederic Alberro, Marie-Johanne Nadeau, Nathalie Verger, Pierre Langlois, Éric Côté and Jacques Wilkins.
In the event, the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), service commanders of the Army, Navy, Air force, Border Guards and the Inspector General of Police (IGP) were appointed to the Supreme Military Council Government with General Ignatius Kutu Acheampong as the chairman of the council and Head of State. The additional responsibility exposed the service commanders to domestic and international politics, in addition to the ineluctable enmity and sabotage of Politics.
However, he is critical of the notion of a pre-existing condition of enlightenment because he accepts the Kantian notion of radical evil, wherein humans exhibit an ineluctable propensity to act against their own desires for the good and instead perpetrate evil.Laube, Johannes, "The Way of Metanoia and the Way of the Bodhisattva," in Unno and Heisig, pp. 318 and 321.For critique, see Hubbard, Jamie, "Tanabe's Metanoetics: The Failure of Absolutism," in Unno and Heisig, p.
Howard Winant writes that, "On the far right the cornerstone of white identity is belief in an ineluctable, unalterable racialized difference between whites and nonwhites." In the view of philosopher Jason Stanley, white supremacy in the United States is an example of the fascist politics of hierarchy, in that it "demands and implies a perpetual hierarchy" in which whites dominate and control non-whites.Stanley, Jason (2018) How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them. New York: Random House. p.13.
Tucker rejected the view that Stalinism was an "unavoidable," "ineluctable," or "necessary" product of Leninism. He highlighted the similarities between tsarist and Stalinist nationalism and patrimonialism, as well as the warlike brutality of the "Revolution from Above" in the 1930s. The chief causes of this revolution were Stalin's voracious appetite for personal, political, and national power and his relentless quest for personal, political, and national security. The chief consequences were the consolidation of Stalin's personal dictatorship, the creation of a military-industrial complex, and the collectivization and urbanization of the peasantry.
As representations of the unconscious, dream images have their own primacy and mechanics. Jung believed that dreams may contain ineluctable truths, philosophical pronouncements, illusions, wild fantasies, memories, plans, irrational experiences and even telepathic visions. Just as the psyche has a diurnal side which we experience as conscious life, it has an unconscious nocturnal side which we apprehend as dreamlike fantasy. Jung would argue that just as we do not doubt the importance of our conscious experience, then we ought not to second guess the value of our unconscious lives.
CBS Chicago described Campbell's black-and-white work as "rooted in nihilism, apathy, and frustration," though notes that these feelings are "prodded gently, and with love." The webcomic is centered around a ghost named Paul, who had nothing better to do with its afterlife than to simply return to doing its dayjob. Comics Alliance stated that Pictures for Sad Children is "defined by its spare, minimalist drawing [and] a deep, pervading sense of ineluctable sadness that lingers long after you've finished the comic." In 2010, Campbell held an art exhibition, featuring depressing installations in the style of the webcomic.
The development was different in Zeeland where people at first had a provincial appellate court in the form of the Hoge Vierschaar. As this court could only be convened by the Count himself, or his eldest son, and had to be presided over by the Count himself, this court only sat infrequently. The people from Zeeland in practice therefore had the ineluctable choice of appealing to the "Holland" Hof, or going directly to the "Great Council" (appeal omisso medio). The appeals procedure offered three remedies: appel, reformatie and reductie (the latter was reformatie of an arbitration award).
Reviewing the book at the SF Site, Greg L. Johnson said that this collection shows why Chiang's stories continue to win awards. Johnson wrote that "it will not take readers new to these stories very long to appreciate their quality and beauty". He added that science fiction relies on short fiction writers to "examine new ideas and push the boundaries of the field", and Chiang has demonstrated he is "more than up to that task". English fantasy author China Miéville wrote in a review in The Guardian that Chiang's stories in this collection "unfold with a logic that is ineluctable and compassionate".
This painting records the collision of two worlds — the ineluctable power of the immortal faith, and the mundane, foppish, world of Levi. Jesus spears him with a beam of light, with an apparent effortless hand gesture he exerts an inescapable sublime gravity, with no need for wrenching worldly muscularity. Jesus' bare feet are classical simplicity in contrast with the dandified accountants; being barefoot may also symbolize holiness, as if one is on holy ground. Similarly to his treatment of Paul in the Conversion on the Way to Damascus, Caravaggio chronicles the moment when a daily routine is interrupted by the miraculous.
This episode is alluded to by Stephen Dedalus in James Joyce's Ulysses, chapter three. Reflecting on the "ineluctable modality of the visible", Dedalus conjures the image of Johnson's refutation and carries it forth in conjunction with Aristotle's expositions on the nature of the senses as described in Sense and Sensibilia. Aristotle held that while visual perception suffered a compromised authenticity because it passed through the diaphanous liquid of the inner eye before being observed, sound and the experience of hearing were not thus similarly diluted. Dedalus experiments with the concept in the development of his aesthetic ideal.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Afrocentrism increasingly became seen as a tool for addressing social ills and a means of grounding community efforts toward self-determination and political and economic empowerment. In his (1992) article "Eurocentrism vs. Afrocentrism", US anthropologist Linus A. Hoskins wrote: > The vital necessity for African people to use the weapons of education and > history to extricate themselves from this psychological dependency > complex/syndrome as a necessary precondition for liberation. [...] If > African peoples (the global majority) were to become Afrocentric > (Afrocentrized), ... that would spell the ineluctable end of European global > power and dominance.
El Greco. The Tears of Saint Peter, c-1595-1614 Born into a bourgeois Catalan industrial family from Manlleu, Santiago Rusiñol i Prats (Barcelona, 1861 – Aranjuez, 1931) was asked by his paternal grandfather and godfather, Jaume Rusiñol, to continue the family tradition and become a cotton manufacturer. Instead, the young Rusiñol chose to enter the Catalan and Spanish art scene. A painter, narrator, collector, dramatist, amateur archaeologist, journalist and key figure of the Modernista movement, Santiago Rusiñol conceived of art as a priesthood and of the artist as the chosen one who, due to an ineluctable calling, is predestined to the sacrifice of living his ideal to the ultimate consequences.
If they dismissed communism as mere idealism, many thinkers showed their dependence on Marxist terminology in their writings. Jung emphasized the "historical inevitability" of conservatism taking over from the liberal era, in a mirror-image of the historical materialism developed by Karl Marx. If Splenger also wrote about the decline of the West as an ineluctable phenomenon, his intention was to provide modern readers with a "new socialism" that would enable them to realize the meaninglessness of life, contrasting with Marx's idea of the coming of paradise on earth. Above all, the Conservative Revolution drew influences from vitalism and irrationalism, rather than from materialism.
Date: 1859–1952 John Dewey in 1902. In Democracy and Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education, Dewey stated that education, in its broadest sense, is the means of the "social continuity of life" given the "primary ineluctable facts of the birth and death of each one of the constituent members in a social group". Education is therefore a necessity, for "the life of the group goes on." Dewey was a proponent of Educational Progressivism and was a relentless campaigner for reform of education, pointing out that the authoritarian, strict, pre-ordained knowledge approach of modern traditional education was too concerned with delivering knowledge, and not enough with understanding students' actual experiences.
As to whether there had been a duplication of convictions in respect of the three counts of robbery, Majiedt JA held for the majority (Van Heerden JA and Snyders JA concurring, and Farlam JA and Cachalia JA dissenting) that there had been a separate intent by the three robbers to rob each of the three women, and that separate intent in respect of each woman was executed separately in respect of each woman.Para 51. Both the single-intent and continuous-transaction test, and the test as to whether the evidence necessary to establish one crime involved proving another crime, compelled the court to the "ineluctable" conclusion that there were three separate robberies.Para 54.
In Hauser's eyes, Proust, who spent most of his time in bed, was the personification of wasted time; he even became its eulogist once he began publishing volume after volume of a massive novel, In Search of Lost Time, devoted, precisely, to the ineffectual passing of time. In contrast, Proust conceived of the “lost time” that is the subject of his novel as the sextant of human existence, the measure of our adjustment to its transiency. To the writer, the passing of time was not ineluctable but rather reversible, because the future offered him the opportunity to turn the disjointed events from his past into a new cohesive whole. The polemic about wasted time affected the harshest conflicts between Proust and Hauser.
Though the characters would seem to have little in common, their work in fact relates to the same topic. Some ideas in the play recall Goethe's novella Elective Affinities: Stoppard's characters "Thomasina" and "Septimus" have parallels in Goethe's "Ottilie" and "Eduard", and the historical section of Stoppard's play is set in 1809, the year of Goethe's novella. Among other parallels, the older work takes the theory of affinity between chemical elements as a metaphor for ineluctable, inevitable "human chemistry" in the same way as Stoppard makes use of the force of determinism acting on his characters. A feature of both works is the preoccupation with remodelling country house landscapes; Goethe's young character "Ottilie" (the counterpart to Thomasina) dies as an indirect result of this.
Although Winnig and the Baltic German landowners had in mind the integrity of the Reich, they talked about a "break away from Berlin" as a mean of exerting pressure on the rest of Germany to achieve their project. For instance, Winnig mentioned at the regional conference of the East Prussian SDP the threat of an ineluctable separation if the Reich did not take necessary measures regarding East Prussia. On 4 March 1920, Winnig published a memorandum on the East Prussian question and raised an abundant catalogue of demands at the East Prussia Conference on 9 March 1920, in order to obtain concessions from the Prussian and German governments for his autonomy demands. The failure of his separatist project led Winnig to participate in the failed Kapp putsch of 13 March 1920 against the Weimar Republic.
In Democracy and Education, Dewey argues that the primary ineluctable facts of the birth and death of each one of the constituent members in a social group determine the necessity of education. On one hand, there is the contrast between the immaturity of the new-born members of the group (its future sole representatives) and the maturity of the adult members who possess the knowledge and customs of the group. On the other hand, there is the necessity that these immature members be not merely physically preserved in adequate numbers, but that they be initiated into the interests, purposes, information, skill, and practices of the mature members: otherwise the group will cease its characteristic life. Dewey observes that even in a "savage" tribe, the achievements of adults are far beyond what the immature members would be capable of if left to themselves.
Thus, there is a dualism between the true aspect of everything and the physical side, false, but ineluctable, with each evolving into the other: as God must compress and disguise Himself, so must humans and matter in general ascend and reunite with the omnipresence. Elior quoted Shneur Zalman of Liadi, in his commentary Torah Or on Genesis 28:21, who wrote that "this is the purpose of Creation, from Infinity to Finitude, so it may be reversed from the state of Finite to that of Infinity". Kabbalah stressed the importance of this dialectic, but mainly (though not exclusively) evoked it in cosmic terms, referring for example to the manner in which God progressively diminished Himself into the world through the various dimensions, or Sefirot. Hasidism applied it also to the most mundane details of human existence.
Thus, there is a dualism between the true aspect of everything and the physical side, false but ineluctable, with each evolving into the other: as God must compress and disguise himself, so must humans and matter in general ascend and reunite with the omnipresence. Rachel Elior quoted Shneur Zalman of Liadi, in his commentary Torah Or on Genesis 28:21, who wrote that "this is the purpose of Creation, from Infinity to Finitude, so it may be reversed from the state of Finite to that of Infinity". Kabbalah stressed the importance of this dialectic, but mainly (though not exclusively) evoked it in cosmic terms, referring for example to the manner in which God progressively diminished himself into the world through the various dimensions, or Sephirot. Hasidism applied it also to the most mundane details of human existence.
The term "inescapable path“ and its meaning is quite illustrative for the novel. The main character Jefferson is trapped in his hopeless situation due to his sentence to the death penalty. Moreover, he can not withdraw from the encounters he has with the other main character Grant Wiggins, which also leaves the circumstances as inescapable. Grant Wiggins finds himself as well in an ineluctable position, where he would rather leave the town of Bayonne, but is constantly reminded of his commitments, regarding his students, his aunt and his partner Vivian. Furthermore, Grant sees society’s issues with racism as fairly graved when he realizes that corporately nothing progressed over the time being when he went to university: > "I had not come through that back door once since leaving for the > university, ten years ago.“ Grant feels like that apartheid is still the trigger for the social scissors in their society.
Large crowds of interests, constitute in associations and foundations, such as Tenstar Community, Omid Foundation Omid Foundation and many other progressing third sector institutions, as new creative class are forming their economic contents and values as the third sector economy, out of the general logo-centric illiteracy of previous century economy. Hence, the learning of the alphabet, the language and the paradigms of the 21st century actions become an ineluctable imperative. This fact is mainly applicable to the economical structures proposed by Post-contemporary vision, which its prosperity and richness creates in an added value out from the profit maximization of speculative economy based on old capitalism of industrial productivity. Post-contemporary assets are recourses from dynamic social economy, pro-profit-no-dividend which its plus value is subject to immediate reinvestment in problem solving, in economy of culture, in creative economy and creative education as the New Third sector operations.
The Lament for Ur has been well known to scholarship and well edited for a long time. Piotr Michalowski has suggested this gave literary primacy to the myth over the Lament for Sumer and Ur, originally called the "Second Lament for Ur", which he argues was chronologically a more archaic version. Philip S. Alexander compares lines seventeen and eighteen of the myth with "The Lord has done what he purposed, he has carried out his threat; as he ordained long ago, he has demolished without pity", suggesting this could "allude to some mysterious, ineluctable fate ordained for Zion in the distant past": The devastation of cities and settlements by natural disasters and invaders has been used widely throughout the history of literature since the end of the Third Dynasty of Ur. A stela (pictured) from Iraq depicts a similar destruction of a mountain house at Susa. Michelle Breyer suggested tribes of neighbouring shepherds destroyed the city and called Ur, "the last great city to fall".
Under the rule of its greatest statesman, strategist and army commander-in-chief, the philosopher and mathematician Archytas, Taranto reached its peak power and wealth; it was the most important city of the Magna Graecia, the main commercial port of southern Italy, it produced and exported goods to and from motherland Greece and it had the biggest army and the largest fleet in southern Italy. However, with the death of Archytas in 347 BC, the city started a slow, but ineluctable decline; the first sign of the city's decreased power was its inability to field an army, since the Tarentines preferred to use their large wealth to hire mercenaries, rather than leave their lucrative trades. In 343 BC Taranto appealed for aid against the barbarians to its mother city Sparta, in the face of aggression by the Brutian League. In 342 BC, Archidamus III, king of Sparta, arrived in Italy with an army and a fleet to fight the Lucanians and their allies.
The argument that Austria-Hungary was a moribund political entity, whose disappearance was only a matter of time, was deployed by hostile contemporaries to suggest that its efforts to defend its integrity during the last years before the war were, in some sense, illegitimate. Clark states, "Evaluating the prospects of the Austro-Hungarian empire on the eve of the first world war confronts us in an acute way with the problem of temporal perspective.... The collapse of the empire amid war and defeat in 1918 impressed itself upon the retrospective view of the Habsburg lands, overshadowing the scene with auguries of imminent and ineluctable decline." It is true that Austro-Hungarian politics in the decades before the war were increasingly dominated by the struggle for national rights among the empire's eleven official nationalities: Germans, Hungarians, Czechs, Slovaks, Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Romanians, Ruthenians (Ukrainians), Poles, and Italians. However, before 1914, radical nationalists seeking full separation from the empire were still a small minority, and Austria-Hungary's political turbulence was more noisy than deep.
The court emphasised that corruption demands "an integrated and comprehensive" response from the legal system. "Such a response would certainly include strengthening and improving the safeguards." "Unfortunately," several important innovations proposed by the Law Reform Commission in its draft Bill of 1999 were rejected or heavily watered down by the legislature when the PAJA was enacted early in 2000, either for lack of funding or for fear of the burden some of these proposals would have imposed on an unprepared government. For instance, a requirement that administrators take steps to communicate their rules to those likely to be affected by them was dropped from the PAJA altogether—"rather pointlessly, too, for the accessibility of such rules is an express requirement of the Constitution as well as an ineluctable requirement of the rule of law." Where the Law Commission’s draft Bill created an Administrative Review Council (ARC) and placed it under a duty to make recommendations for reform on certain subjects within two or three years, the PAJA merely gives the Minister discretion to make regulations establishing an advisory council which may advise her on certain reforms.

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