Intelligence Sentence Examples

intelligence
  • I'm sure a woman with intelligence will shock you.

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  • Does our intelligence demand unity?

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  • Allen couldn't be rejected, so he belittled her intelligence, the close relationship with her family and accused her of cheating on him.

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  • The soulless, ancient intelligence there was as fathomless as the night sky.

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  • All intelligence seems reflected in them.

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  • My intelligence far surpasses any of you worthless scum.

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  • In this instance it may happen that the work of intelligence has only been mimicked in nature by blind forces which have accidentally produced organic life; and Mill is disposed to hold that if the evolution of species should be clearly established as due to natural law - if there has been no creation by special interposition - the argument falls to the ground and theism (apparently) is lost.

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  • The children are possessed of a bright intelligence, which, however, soon reaches its climax, and the adult may be compared in this respect with the civilized child of ten or twelve.

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  • It now remains my pleasant task to direct and mould the beautiful intelligence that is beginning to stir in the child-soul.

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  • He regarded the whole business of the war not with his intelligence or his reason but by something else.

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  • Aristotle held that the vas or active intelligence alone is immortal.

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  • Experience forbids our excluding organic activity from natural causes, also our excluding intelligence from purposeful (zwecktdtigen) causes; hence experience forbids our defining the fundamental force or first cause out of which living creatures arose.'

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  • Care and intelligence are especially needful with certain insecticides such as poisonous gases, or the operators may suffer.

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  • A child is born with a certain intelligence quotient.

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  • It was, then, to a good subject that Miss Sullivan brought her devotion and intelligence, and fearless willingness to experiment.

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  • Whether the intelligence and efficiency of the officials charged by the state with the handling of its railway system will be sufficient to make them act in the interest of the public as fully as do the managers of private corporations, is a question whose answer can only be determined by actual experience in each case.

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  • Whether or not further study of the scripts of these writers confirms this hypothesis, it cannot fail to throw light on the nature of the intelligence involved.

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  • False reports were assiduously circulated by the intelligence department.

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  • Of a quick and cultivated intelligence, he had a sincere love of letters and art.

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  • The primitive condition of all intelligence is that the ego shall posit, affirm or be aware of itself.

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  • Post office statistics indicate a similarly high average of intelligence.

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  • The virtues of a scribe are honesty and care (or in a single word fidelity) and intelligence.

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  • Intelligence does not differ from sense by having no bodily organ, but the nervous system is the bodily organ of both.

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  • Luther had a high opinion of her intelligence; she took rank among those consulted on all important occasions; in one letter to her, seldom quoted, he gives the fairest statement he ever made about the views of Zwingli on the Sacrament of the Supper.

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  • Onias is described - in order to enhance the glory of Joseph - as a man of small intelligence and deficient in wealth.

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  • The same thing holds for the intelligence service in which Stalin sees the quintessence of the state.

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  • Sonyâs developments in artificial intelligence have also allowed us to develop QRIO, the prototype humanoid robot.

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  • Nain Singh gave an account of his journeys, and of his residence there, which, though brief, is full of intelligence and interest.

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  • What would happen, do you think, if some one should try to measure our intelligence by our ability to define the commonest words we use?

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  • While not confining myself to any special system of instruction, I have tried to add to her general information and intelligence, to enlarge her acquaintance with things around her, and to bring her into easy and natural relations with people.

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  • But, with all her eagerness and intelligence, learning to speak taxed her powers to the utmost.

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  • This is because they are programmed with artificial intelligence.

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  • The differences in appearance between the caterpillar and the butterfly, striking as they are to the eye, do not sufficiently represent the phenomena of metamorphosis to the intelligence.

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  • The people, though remarkable for their intelligence whilst Europe was in a state of barbarism, made no approximation to the mechanical operations of modern times, nor was the cultivation of cotton either improved or considerably extended.

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  • The brain is relatively large and the intelligence high.

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  • He has no claim to be regarded as a genius; but, as SainteBeuve has said, he well deserves a place "da p s la classe des esprits infiniment distingues" - distinguished, however, it ought to be added by intelligence rather than by intellect, and less by the power of saying much than by the power of saying a little well.

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  • In the year 1215 the barons having received intelligence secretly that they might enter London with ease through Aldgate, which was then in a very ruinous state, removed their camp from Bedford to Ware, and shortly after marched into the city in the night-time.

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  • He is represented as the god and creator of good, light, intelligence, in perpetual opposition to Ahriman the lord of evil, darkness and ignorance.

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  • The quantities for India have been computed from information furnished by the India office, and publications made under authority of the secretary of state and the commercial intelligence department of the Indian government.

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  • The guinea-pig is a singularly inoffensive and defenceless creature, of a restless disposition, and wanting in that intelligence which usually characterizes domestic pets, although said to show some discrimination.

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  • What the tree is in itself - that is, for a perfect intelligence - we cannot know, any more than a dog or horse can know what the tree is for a human intelligence.

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  • That strenuous application which was one of his most remarkable gifts in manhood showed itself in his youth, and his application was backed or inspired by superior intelligence and aptness.

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  • Such sympathy with youthful hope, in union with industry and intelligence, shows that Comte's dry and austere manner veiled the fires of a generous social emotion.

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  • With this may be compared a passage in the Ursprung der Sprache, where there is a curious adumbration of Spencer's idea that intelligence, as distinguished from instinct, arises from a growing complexity of action, or, to use Herder's words, from the substitution of a more for a less contracted sphere.

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  • He was a robust man, and inherited his father's love of violent exercise; but his character was weak and his intelligence mediocre, and he had none of the superficial and brilliant gifts of Francis I.

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  • The most conspicuous were the Nichi Nichi Shimbun (Daily News), the Yilbin Hoc/il (Postal Intelligence), the Choya Shimbun (Government and People News), the Akebono Shimbun (The Dawn), and the Mainichi Shimbun (Daily News).

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  • Rhinoceroses are of large size and massive build, but have little intelligence, and are generally timid in disposition, though ferocious when wounded or brought to bay.

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  • The spiritual sun is the source of love and intelligence, or life, and the natural sun the source of nature or the receptacles of life; the first is alive, the second dead.

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  • Elsewhere he was the artizan-god Ptah, who with his hammer broke the egg; sometimes Thoth, the moon-god and principle of intelligence, who spoke the world into existence.'

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  • The character of the man reveals itself especially in a perfect simplicity of style, the result of the clearest intelligence and the strongest sense of personal dignity.

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  • He was about ten years old in 1487, and was described as a handsome youth of intelligence and good manners.

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  • Ample arrangements were made for obtaining and circulating intelligence, and all lateral communications were improved and supplemented to the utmost.

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  • Intelligence of these events reached Bolivar while in the north of Colombia, and he lost no time in preparing to march against the refractory troops, who formerly had placed such implicit confidence in him.

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  • It was useful as marking definitely the boundary of the Roman sway, and as assuring the Romans that no inroad could be made without intelligence being had of it beforehand, while the limes itself and the system of roads behind it enabled troops to be directed rapidly to any threatened point, and the fortified positions could be held against large numbers till reinforcements arrived.

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  • His originality consists in having extended the positive intelligence of his century from the sphere of contemporary politics and special interests to man at large regarded as a political being.

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  • Like the Arabian logicians, and some of the scholastics, who held that ideas existed in a threefold form - ante res, in rebus and post res - he laid down the principle that the archetypal ideas existed metaphysically in the ultimate unity or intelligence, physically in the world of things, and logically in signs, symbols or notions.

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  • He is living, active intelligence, the principle of motion and creation, realizing himself in the infinitely various forms of activity that constitute individual things.

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  • The soul of man is a thinking monad, and stands mid-way between the divine intelligence and the world of external things.

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  • The ego is the ego; such is the first pure act of conscious intelligence, that by which alone consciousness can come to be what it is.

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  • Educated for the Church, he became elector and archbishop in 1515, and ruled his electorate with vigour and intelligence, taking up at first an attitude of hostility towards the reformers and their teaching.

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  • In this way the Good was made to appear as an end imposed upon things from without by a creative intelligence instead of as an inner principle of adaptation.

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  • It was, however, Berkeley who first sought to utilize the conclusions that were implicit in Locke's starting-point to disprove " the systems of impious and profane persons which exclude all freeedom, intelligence, and design from the formation of things, and instead thereof make a selfexistent, stupid, unthinking substance the root and origin of all beings."

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  • In other words the intelligence when it once begins to define an object for itself, finds itself launched on a movement of selfasserting synthesis in which it cannot stop until it had recognized that the unity of the object with itself involves its unity with all other objects and with the mind that knows it.

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  • In disposition they are quiet and gentle, and do not show much intelligence; they are also less noisy than the true lemurs, only when alarmed or angered making a noise which has been compared to the clucking of a fowl.

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  • Though wanting in strength of will, Constantine possessed intelligence and many other good qualities, and his reign on the whole was not unsatisfactory.

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  • It was a marked characteristic of the English colonists, and a strong element in their prosperity, that they were hospitable in welcoming men of other races, - Germans from the Palatinate, and French Huguenots driven out by persecution who brought with them some capital, more intelligence and an enduring hatred of Roman Catholic France.

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  • But if the intelligence which the duke rightly relied on had come to hand on the r 5th, it cannot be doubted that he would have effected a more expeditious concentration on his inner flank.

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  • His trusted intelligence officer, Colonel Colquhoun Grant, was at this time in France, and it had been arranged that his reports.

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  • Here he stopped to report to the emperor some intelligence which turned out to be false, and he remained for breakfast.

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  • The swellings on the palmar faces of the phalanges of the several fingers are also indicative, the 1st and and of the thumb respectively, of the logical faculty and of the will; the 1st, and and 3rd of the index finger, of materialism, law and order, idealism; those of the middle finger, humanity, system, intelligence; of the ring finger, truth, economy, energy; and of the little finger, goodness, prudence, reflectiveness.

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  • The tribes represented include Jamans, Wongaras and Mandingos (q.v.), some of whom are Moslems. The Mandingos have intermarried largely with the Bambara or Sienuf, an agricultural people of more than average intelligence widely spread over the country, of which they are considered to be the indigenous race.

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  • The author's intelligence and acuteness are more completely hampered by doctrinal presuppositions when he comes to treat questions relating to the history of the individual books of the New Testament canon.

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  • Whether dwelling on the land or dwelling in the lake, they have exhibited so many indications of capacity, intelligence, industry and social organi zation that they cannot be considered as presenting, even in their Stone age, a very low condition of culture or civilization.

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  • The commercial intelligence department collects and disseminates accurate information on general commercial questions, and collects and exhibits samples of goods of foreign origin competing with similar British goods.

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  • The staff comprises a controller-general (salary £1200 rising to £1500), a deputy controller-general and labour commissioner, a principal for statistics, a principal of the commercial department, an assistant labour commissioner, a chief staff officer for commercial intelligence, a chief labour correspondent, a special inquiry officer, and a staff of investigators and labour correspondents.

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  • The following spring he was in Mesopotamia at Army Headquarters, whence he returned to Cairo as intelligence officer for the Mesopotamia expeditionary force.

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  • In the ancient Mesopotamian religion the Intelligence of Jupiter was Marduk, "the lord of light," whose antithesis was accordingly conceived as the lord of darkness.

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  • The real "objective" to which our thoughts must show conformity is not a world of things in themselves, but the system of thiligs as it exists for a perfect intelligence.

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  • According to Captain Stanley Flower, director of the Zoological Gardens at Giza, Cairo, Egypt, the ancient Egyptians kept various species of wild animals in captivity, but the first Zoological Garden of which there is definite knowledge was founded in China by the first emperor of the Chou dynasty, who reigned about iioo B.C. This was called the "Intelligence Park," and appears to have had a scientific and educational object.

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  • The caravan trade was created by the Ghadamsi merchants who, aided by their superior intelligence, capacity and honesty, long enjoyed a monopoly.

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  • A man of rare intelligence, a fearless horseman and an eloquent orator, Abd-el-Kader had acquired a great reputation by his Abd piety.

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  • Some lizards possess a considerable amount of intelligence; they play with each other, become very tame, and act deliberately according to circumstances.

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  • A new world was discovered, for the sake of which everything else was abandoned; to make sure of that world insight and intelligence were freely sacrificed; and, in the light that streamed from beyond, the absurdities of the present became wisdom, and its wisdom became foolishness.

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  • He raised the English system of secret intelligence to a high degree of efficiency.

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  • Nature as the sum of that which is objective, intelligence as the complex of all the activities making up self-consciousness, appear thus as equally real, as alike exhibiting ideal structure, as parallel with one another.

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  • Just as nature exhibits to us the series of dynamical stages of processes by which spirit struggles towards consciousness of itself, so the world of intelligence and practice, the world of mind, exhibits the series of stages through which self-consciousness with its inevitable oppositions and reconciliations develops in its ideal form.

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  • Waterford, whence he marched through the counties of Kilkenny and Wicklow, and subsequently arrived in Dublin, where he remained a fortnight, sumptuously entertained by the provost, as the chief magistrate of the city was then called, till intelligence of the invasion of his kingdom by Bolingbroke recalled him to England.

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  • Tylor, the doctrine of spiritual beings, including human souls; in practice, however, the term is often extended to include panthelism or animatism, the doctrine that a great part, if not the whole, of the inanimate kingdom, as well as all animated beings, are endowed with reason, intelligence and volition, identical with that of man.

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  • In many parts of the world it is held that the human body is the seat of more than one soul; in the island of Nias four are distinguished, the shadow and the intelligence, which die with the body, a tutelary spirit, termed begoe, and a second which is carried on the head.

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  • Subsequently, however, (1780) he met the king again at Spa and completely won the monarch's favour by his natural amiability, intelligence and brilliant social gifts.

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  • The ancient texts have not come to us in this way, but through copies made by the human hand directed more or less by the human intelligence.

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  • Intelligence is not active intellect propagating universal essence in passive intellect, but only logical inference starting from sense, and both requiring nervous body and conscious soul.

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  • This feat so pleased the commanderin-chief that he empowered him to raise a regiment of 2000 irregular horse, which became known to fame as Hodson's Horse, and placed him at the head of the Intelligence Department.

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  • In his double role of cavalry leader and intelligence officer, Hodson played a large part in the reduction of Delhi and consequently in saving India for the British empire.

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  • In ultimate analysis, then, nature is conscious experience, and forms the sign or symbol of a divine, universal intelligence and will.

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  • To Berkeley, however, the difference is fundamental; sense ideas are not due to our own activity; they must therefore be produced by some other will - by the divine intelligence.

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  • External things are produced by the will of the divine intelligence; they are caused, and caused in a regular order; there exists in the divine mind archetypes, of which sense experience may be said to be the realization in our finite minds.

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  • The relation between the divine mind and finite intelligence, at first thought as that of agent and recipient, is complicated and obscure when the necessity for explaining the permanence of real things comes forward.

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  • The intelligence, integrity and morality of the Babis are high, but their efforts to improve the social position of woman have been much exaggerated.

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  • His views imply a cultivated intelligence well versed in practical affairs, opposing to the extremes of both nominalism and realism a practical common sense.

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  • It is allowable to deceive an enemy by fabricated despatches purporting to come from his own side; by tampering with telegraph 1112Ssages; by spreading false intelligence in newspapers; by sending pretended spies and deserters to give him untrue reports of the numbers or movements of the troops; by employing false signals to lure him into an ambuscade.

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  • For Antoninus came to his new office with simple tastes, kindly disposition, extensive experience, a well-trained intelligence and the sincerest desire for the welfare of his subjects.

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  • It remained, however, for Schelling to convert this parallelism into identity by identifying motion with the intelligence of God, and so to transform the pantheism of Spinoza into pantheistic idealism.

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  • Meanwhile, through holding with Kant that man is not God, but a free spirit, whose destiny it is to use his intelligence as a means to his duty, he is still the resort of many who vindicate man's independence, freedom, conscience, and power of using nature for his moral purposes, e.g.

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  • Schelling and Hegel thought it was infinite reason; Schopenhauer, unconscious will; Hartmann, unconscious intelligence and will; Lotze, the activity or life of the divine spirit; Fechner, followed by Paulsen, a world of spiritual actualities comprised in the one spiritual actuality, God, in whom we live and move and have our being.

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  • Schelling attributes to man an intellectual intuition of the Absolute God; and as there is, according to him, but one universal reason, the common intelligence of God and man, this intellectual intuition at once gives man an immediate knowledge of God, and identifies man with God himself.

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  • Again, Schelling urged that besides the rational element there must be something else; that there is in nature, as natures naturans, a blind impulse, a will without intelligence, which belongs to the existent; and that even God Himself as the Absolute cannot be pure thought, because in order to think He must have an existence which cannot be merely His thought of it, and therefore pure being is the prior condition of thought and spirit.

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  • Hence he rejected the infinite intelligence supposed by Fichte, Schelling and Hegel against whom he urged that blind will produces intelligence, and only becomes conscious in us by using intelligence as a means to ends.

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  • Following, however, in the footsteps of Schelling, he idealizes the one extended and thinking substance into one mental being; but he thinks that its essence consists in unconscious intelligence and will, of which all individual intelligent wills are only activities.

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  • In captivity the kakapo is said to show much intelligence, as well as an affectionate and playful disposition.

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  • The episcopate, while it gained in intelligence and morality, lost a part of its independence.

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  • In this latter case the term " Democracy," as applied to the historical development of Great Britain and the United States, denotes a constitutional state in which every citizen has rights proportionate to his energy and intelligence.

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  • Even the Eskimos, conspicuous as they are for their intelligence and sociability, save themselves the trouble of caring for their sick and old by walling them up and leaving them to die in a lonely hut; the Chukches stone or strangle them to death; some Indian tribes give them over to tigers, and the Battas of Sumatra eat them.

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  • Daniel also wrote a by no means successful reply to Pascal's Provincial Letters, entitled Entretiens de Cleanthe provinciales (1694); two treatises on the Cartesian theory as to the intelligence of the lower animals, and other works.

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  • The assertion preserved by Stobaeus that Thales recognized, together with the material element " water," " mind," which penetrates it and sets it in motion, is refuted by the precise testimony of Aristotle, who declares that the early physicists did not distinguish the moving cause from the material cause, and that before Hermotimus and Anaxagoras no one postulated a creative intelligence.

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  • Queen Elizabeth, with the almost incredible want of tact or instinctive delicacy which distinguished and disfigured her vigorous intelligence, had recently proposed as a suitor to the queen of Scots her own low-born favourite, Lord Robert Dudley, the widower if not the murderer of Amy Robsart; and she now protested against the project of marriage between Mary and Darnley.

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  • In addition to these affronts upon the state religion, he insulted the intelligence of the community by horseplay of the wildest description and by childish practical joking.

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  • For here we have to consider how the individual intelligence comes to know any fact whatsoever, and what is meant by the cognition of a fact.

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  • He consulted the older and graver Laurentius Andreae, who told him how "Doctor Martinus had clipped the wings of the pope, the cardinals and the big bishops," which could not fail to be pleasing intelligence to a monarch who was never an admirer of episcopacy, while the rich revenues of the church, accumulated in the course of centuries, were a tempting object to the impecunious ruler of an impoverished people.

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  • The intelligence of these events in the capital soon spread through the provinces; and in most of the large towns similar scenes were enacted, beginning with plunderings and outrages, followed by the institution of burgher guards for the maintenance of peace.

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  • The soul, located in the ventricles of the brain, is affected by the temperament of the individual; the dry temperament produces acute intelligence; the moist, memory; the hot, imagination.

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  • The facts that he used to walk with Bacon at Gorhambury, and would jot down with exceptional intelligence the eager thinker's sudden " notions," and that he was employed to make the Latin version of some of the Essays, prove nothing when weighed against his own disregard of all Bacon's principles, and the other evidence that the impulse to independent thinking came to him not from Bacon, and not till some time after Bacon's death in 1626.1 So far as we have any positive evidence, it was not before the year 1629 that Hobbes entered on philosophical inquiry.

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  • Before he was three he had insisted on being taken to hear Sacheverel preach at Lichfield Cathedral, and had listened to the sermon with as much respect and probably with as much intelligence, as any Staffordshire squire in the congregation.

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  • Though the author was a man of limited intelligence and destitute of historical skill, yet the last part of his work at least has considerable value as a contemporary account of events during the middle period of the 8th century.

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  • Later on Eanfled enabled him to visit Rome in the company of Benedict Biscop. At Lyons Wilfrid's pleasing features and quick intelligence made Annemund, the archbishop, desire to adopt him and marry him to his niece.

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  • Sophia was an accomplished woman of high intelligence, but unfortunately the relations between the royal pair were far from cordial and finally ended in complete disagreement, and the breach between them continued until the death of the queen in 1877.

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  • The literary tact which is so remarkable in the extant speeches is that of a singularly flexible intelligence, always obedient to an instinct of gracefulness.

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  • Mr Aldis described him as a slender, modest young gentleman, who surprised him by his intelligence and thoughtfulness, but who seemed nervous as they walked to the meeting together.

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  • South of the Ibos live the Aros, a tribe of relatively great intelligence, who dominated many of the surrounding tribes and possessed an oracle or ju-ju of reputed great power.

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  • In June 1896, owing to the indefatigable exertions of Major Wingate, a perfected system of secret intelligence enabled the sirdar to bring an overwhelming force of 6 to 1 against the Dervish outpost at Firket and destroy it.

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  • An expression of keen intelligence lighted up his features, and his large, sparkling grey eyes darted penetrating glances at every one who approached him.

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  • She exercised over him that influence which a stronger character always exercises over a weaker, whatever their respective positions; and unfortunately it was seldom a good influence, for Theodora (q.v.) seems to have been a woman who, with all her brilliant gifts of intelligence and manner, had no principles and no pity.

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  • His works included A Dialogue on Dying Well (1603), a translation from the Italian; Restitution of Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities concerning the English Nation, dedicated to James I.

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  • Love of luxury, pomp and finery is their chief characteristic. Taken as a whole, the Fula race is distinguished by great intelligence, frankness of disposition and strength of character.

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  • Argyll, deserted and detested, compromised himself by letters to Monk, containing intelligence as to the movements of the Royalists.

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  • If the chiefs had possessed information now accessible to us, they might not have made " the great refusal," but with only the intelligence which they possessed they could not have followed their audacious prince to the south.

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  • It may be said that the first duty of a huntsman is to obtain the confidence of his hounds, to understand them and to make himself understood; and the intelligence of hounds is remarkable.

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  • To this study he looked for the best hope of such a progressive development of Christian theology as should avert the danger arising from " the apparently increasing divergence between the intelligence and the faith of our time."

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  • For this reason the book is at once the most brilliant and the most difficult of Hegel's works - the most brilliant because it is to some degree an autobiography of Hegel's mind - not the abstract record of a logical evolution, but the real history of an intellectual growth; the most difficult because, instead of treating the rise of intelligence (from its first appearance in contrast with the real world to its final recognition of its presence in, and rule over, all things) as a purely subjective process, it exhibits this rise as wrought out in historical epochs, national characteristics, forms of culture and faith, and philosophical systems. The theme is identical with the introduction to the Encyklopddie; but it is treated in a very different style.

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  • The earlier Hegelians had interpreted it in the sense that the world in its ultimate essence was not only spiritual but self-conscious intelligence whose nature was reflected inadequately but truly in the finite mind.

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  • He further held that all knowledge is sensation ("non ratione sed sensu") and that intelligence is, therefore, an agglomeration of isolated data, given by the senses.

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  • The last owed success to Payindah's son, Fatteh Khan (known as the "Afghan Warwick "), a man of masterly ability in war and politics, the eldest of twenty-one brothers, a family of notable intelligence and force of character, and many of these he placed over the provinces.

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  • Warren Hastings, a tried servant of the company, distinguished alike for intelligence, for probity and for knowledge of oriental manners, was nominated governor by the court of directors, with express instructions to carry out a predetermined series of reforms. In their own words, the court had resolved to " stand forth as diwan, and to take upon themselves, by the agency of their own servants, the entire care and administration of the revenues."

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  • Some tracts of frontier territory are detached from the various regions and entrusted to political residents, as, for instance, on the Sudan frontier and also on the Abyssinian boundary, where strict surveillance is necessary to repress raiding incursions from Tigre, and where the chief intelligence department is established.

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  • The intelligence, for example, of the self-existence and original cause of all things is, he says, "not easily proved a priori," but "demonstrably proved a posteriori from the variety and degrees of perfection in things, and the order of causes and effects, from the intelligence that created beings are confessedly endowed with, and from the beauty, order, and final purpose of things."

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  • For administrative convenience the "stars" - whose name comes from the scrap of crimson cloth worn on cap and jacket sleeve - have been generally concentrated at Portland, and employed in labours specially allotted to them, for the most part demanding a higher rate of intelligence than the general average shown by convicts.

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  • He was a man of keen intelligence and cultivated mind, and deserves as much as Francis I.

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  • The expression indicates quick intelligence rather than force and mental calibre.

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  • Actual modes of expression are shown to embody distinctions which average intelligence can easily recognize and will readily acknowledge, though they may tend by progressive rectification fundamentally to modify the assumption natural to the level of thought from which he begins.

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  • Yet vous, intelligence, is the principle of first principles.

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  • On the one hand we have confrontation with fact, in which, in virtue of the rational principle which is the final cause of the phenomenal order, intelligence will find satisfaction.

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  • The kind of warrant that intelligence can give to specific principles falls short of infallibility.

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  • The immanent rationality of this first form, in virtue of which at the stage when intelligence acts freely on the occasion of the datum supplied it recognizes continuity with its own self-conscious process, is what gives the dialectical type its meaning.

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  • Intelligence had warranted false principles.

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  • In character, and especially in their industry, intelligence and keen local patriotism, the inhabitants of Lerida are typical Catalans.

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  • Mingled with all these were the ancient legends of gods and heroes, accepted as inspired scripture by the people, and by philosophers in part explained away by an allegorical exegesis and in part felt increasingly as a burden to the intelligence.

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  • Thus the doctrine of the Trinity satisfied at once the philosophic intelligence of scholars and the religious needs of Christians.

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  • Here may be noted a fundamental difference in the psychology of religion, since in the Roman Church the chief appeal is to the emotions, while in the Reformed it is to the intelligence.

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  • The Bible interpreted by man's unaided intelligence is as valueless as other writings, but it has a sacramental value when the Holy Spirit accompanies its teaching, and the power of God uses it and makes the soul capable of holiness.

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  • The Holy Spirit, the determining factor in the religious life, uses the Bible as his means, and calls the intelligence into action.

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  • Thus the suggestion preserved by Stobaeus that he conceived water to be endowed with mind is discredited by the specific statement of Aristotle that the earlier physicists (physiologi) did not distinguish the material from the moving cause, and that before Anaxagoras no one postulated creative intelligence.

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  • But Diogenes went much farther than Anaximenes by attributing to air not only infinity and eternity but also intelligence.

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  • This Intelligence alone would have produced the orderly arrangement which we observe in Nature, and is the basis of human thought by the physical process of inhalation.

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  • The upper class greatly surpasses the common people in physique and intelligence.

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  • In June 1858 intelligence was received in Constantinople of an outbreak of disease at the small town Benghazi, in the district of Barca, province of Tripoli, North Africa, which though at first misunderstood was clearly bubonic plague.

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  • As human intelligence and industry come into play the means of livelihood are proportionately extended; population multiplies, and with this multiplication production increases.

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  • For the Society, as befitted the great exponent of authority and the keeper of the consciences of many kings, had always been on the side of political autocracy; and therefore it became increasingly unpopular, when once the tide of French intelligence began to set in the direction of revolutionary reform.

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  • The Italians of the 14th century, more precocious than the other European races, were ripe for this emancipation of enslaved intelligence.

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  • To this point the awakened intelligence of the Renaissance, instructed by humanism, polished by the fine arts, expanding in genial conditions of diffused wealth, had brought the Italians at a period when the rest of Europe was comparatively barbarous.

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  • Equilibrium was maintained by diplomacy, in which the humanists played a foremost part, casting a network of intrigue over the nation which helped in no small measure to stimulate intelligence and create a common medium of culture, but which accustomed statesmen to believe that everything could be achieved by wire-pulling.

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  • Yet, though the Renaissance was thus widely communicated to the centres of German intelligence, it displayed a different character from that which it assumed in Italy.

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  • This new spirit in Italy emancipated human intelligence by the classics; in Germany it emancipated the human conscience by the Bible.

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  • But the cause in which German intellect and will were enlisted was so different that it is difficult not to make a formal separation between that movement which evolved culture in Italy and that which restored religion in Germany, establishing the freedom of intelligence in the one sphere and the freedom of the conscience in the other.

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  • Clay's quick intelligence and sympathy, and his irreproachable conduct in youth, explain his precocious prominence in public affairs.

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  • Marconi applied a modified and improved form of Branly's wave detector in conjunction with a novel form of radiator for the telegraphic transmission of intelligence through space without wires, and he and others developed this new form of telegraphy with the greatest rapidity and success into a startling and most useful means of communicating through space electrically without connecting wires.

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  • If Coke's reports show completer mastery of technical details, greater knowledge of precedent, and more of the dogged grasp of the letter than do Bacon's legal writings, there can be no dispute that the latter exhibit an infinitely more comprehensive intelligence of the abstract principles of jurisprudence, with a richness and ethical fulness that more than compensate for their lack of dry legal detail.

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  • Progress, or at all events change, does indeed take place, though very slowly, since the most primitive savage we know of has his portion of human intelligence, looks after and before, nay, in regard to the pressing needs of every day shows a quite remarkable shrewdness and resource.

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  • Egyptian thought ascribed this function to Thoth, who played somewhat different parts in different systems, but emerges as the representative of the immanent intelligence (1888); Siebeck, Lehrbuch der Religionsphilosophie (1893); Dorner, Grundriss der Religionsphilosophie (1903).

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  • He knows no reason but the human, no intelligence save what is exhibited by the animals.

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  • In these circumstances, the " Landtmanna " party in the Riksdag, who desired the lightening of the military burden, joined those who desired the abolition of landlordism, and formed a compact and predominant majority in the Second Chamber, while the burgher and Liberal parties were reduced to an impotent " intelligence " minority.

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  • Aga Mahommed, son of Mahommed Ilasan, the Kajar chief of Astarabad, a prisoner at large in Shiraz, was in the environs of that city awaiting intelligence of the old kings decease, and, hearing it, instantly escaped to Mazandaran, there to gather his tribesmen together and compete for the crown of Persia.

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  • But the question remains undecided whether, if his activity had been longer continued, Aehrenthal would have been able to maintain the position of Austria-Hungary as a great power without an appeal to the decision of arms. There is no doubt that Aehrenthal was a statesman of considerable mark, a man of wide knowledge and well-ordered intelligence; he was ambitious, but not vain, and an untiring worker.

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  • Some time later the grade of district superintendent was created, held by gentlemen of superior status and intelligence, to each of whom the control of a large section of the whole force, embracing a wide area, was entrusted.

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  • His intelligence was mediocre, his character weak, and he allowed himself to be dominated by his wife, Anne of Brittany, and his favourite the Cardinal d'Amboise.

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  • To him the universe is no realization of intelligence, which is to be deciphered by human thought; it is a constitution or system, made up of individual facts, through which we thread our way slowly and inductively.

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  • Revelation had been rejected because it lay altogether beyond the sphere of reason and could not therefore be grasped by human intelligence.

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  • Is it unreasonable to suppose that in a revealed system there should be the same superiority to our intelligence ?

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  • The shah received the intelligence with satisfaction, and despatched a firman, by return of the messenger, appointing Nasir Khan beglar begi (prince of princes) of all Baluchistan.

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  • On receiving intelligence of this discomfiture, the king himself marched with strong reinforcements, and a pitched battle was fought in which Nasir Khan was worsted.

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  • Of the four continuers of Brito's work, three are no better than their master, but Frei Antonio Brandao, who dealt with the period from King Alphonso Henriques to King John II., proved himself a man of high intelligence and a learned, conscientious historian.

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  • She appears to have been a woman of great beauty and considerable intelligence, and after the death of Otto the Great in 973 gradually superseded his widow Adelaide as the chief adviser of the new emperor, whom she accompanied on several military expeditions.

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  • The king's intelligence became yearly feebler, and in 1404 the death of Philip the Bold aggravated the position of affairs.

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  • The individual is prior to the universal, he says, not only "for us," but also in itself, and universals are abstractions which have merely a subjective existence in the intelligence which abstracts them.

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  • The inhabitants are a mixed race of Arab, Omanite and Persian blood, slender and small in their physical appearance; they possess great activity and intelligence, and are known in all the ports of the Persian Gulf for their commercial and industrial ability.

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  • He was also a man of education and intelligence, superior to those among whom he lived, with natural talents for governing and gaining the esteem of others.

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  • The course adopted by Kant's immediate successors in German idealism was to reject the whole conception of noiimena, for the reason that what is essentially unknowable has no existence for our intelligence.

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  • The connexion is not difficult to explain, seeing that in psychology, or the science of mind, we study the fact of intelligence (and moral action), and have, so far, in our hands the fact to which all other facts are relative.

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  • The ultimate explanation of things cannot be given by any theory which excludes from its survey the intelligence in which nature, as it were, gathers herself up. But knowledge, or the mind as knowing, willing, &c., may be looked at in two different ways.

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  • If, on the contrary, we must hold that man is essentially related to what the same writer calls "a common nature," then it is a legitimate corollary that in man as intelligence we ought to find the key of the whole fabric. At all events, this method of approach must be truer than any which, by restricting itself to the external aspect of phenomena as presented in space, leaves no scope for inwardness and life and all that, in Lotze's language, gives "value" to the world.

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  • He declined many offers from German bishops and finally retired to the monastery of Cluny, where he died about 1131 at a great age and leaving a good reputation for piety and intelligence.

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  • Swift's pamphlets, written in a style more level with the popular intelligence than even his own ordinary manner, are models alike to the controversialist who aids a good cause and to him who is burdened with a bad one.

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  • An intelligence from a superior sphere, bound on a voyage to the earth, might actually have obtained a fair idea of average humanity by a preliminary call at Lilliput or Brobdingnag, but not from a visit to the Yahoos.

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  • Whether it is regarded as in any sense possessed, of intelligence and consciousness is a question variously answered.

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  • The Logos of the Stoics (q.v.) is a reason in the world gifted with intelligence, and analogous to the reason in man.

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  • The princes thus imposed on the country were generally men of intelligence and culture.

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  • Psychology is with Cabanis directly linked on to biology, for sensibility, the fundamental fact, is the highest grade of life and the lowest of intelligence.

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  • But it is impossible to avoid ascribing to this power both intelligence and will.

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  • The king, perceiving him to be a man of some education and intelligence, appointed him pisarz or secretary of the registered Cossacks, and he subsequently served under Koniecpolski in the Ukraine campaign of 1646.

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  • Otherwise they exhibit few signs of animal intelligence.

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  • Jacobi, accepting the law of reason and consequent as the fundamental rule of demonstrative reasoning, and as the rule explicitly followed by Spinoza, points out that, if we proceed by applying this principle so as to recede from particular and qualified facts to the more general and abstract conditions, we land ourselves, not in the notion of an active, intelligent creator of the system of things, but in the notion of an all-comprehensive, indeterminate Nature, devoid of will or intelligence.

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  • This brought them within the sphere of reflection, and gave as their guarantee the impossibility of thinking them reversed; and led to their being regarded as wholly relative to human intelligence, restricted to the sphere of the phenomenal, incapable of revealing to us substantial reality - necessary, yet subjective.

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  • With Cousin the absolute as the ground of being is grasped positively by the intelligence, and it renders all else intelligible; it is not as with Kant a certain hypothetical or regulative need.

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  • This is one among many flaws in the Hegelian dialectic, and it paralyzes the whole of the Logic. Secondly, the conditions of intelligence, which Cousin allows, necessarily exclude the possibility of knowledge of the absolute - they are held to be incompatible with its unity.

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  • And whether the laws of our reason are the laws of all intelligence and being - whether and how we are to relate our fundamental, intellectual and moral conceptions to what is beyond our experience, or to an infinite being - are problems which Cousin cannot be regarded as having solved.

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  • The sudden and unpremeditated wish represented by the former is wholly inferior in character to the free choice of the latter, guided and illumined by intelligence.

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  • The parochial clergy were probably in a healthier condition; but the old abuses of pluralism and non-residence were as rampant as ever, and though their work may have been in many cases honorably carried out, it is certain that energy and intelligence were at a low ebb.

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  • His personal beauty, his keen intelligence, his scholarship, his love of music and the arts, his kingly ambition, were all obvious enough.

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  • He had been an admirable servant to both, full of zeal, intelligence and energy, and not too much burdened with scruples.

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  • A wider intelligence might have held that, let France gain what territorial aggrandizement it might upon the continent of Europe, it was impossible to resist such changes until the opponents of France had so purified themselves as to obtain a hold upon the moral feelings of mankind.

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  • The introduction to his first volume of Actes et paroles, ranging in date from 1841 to 1851, is dated in June 1875; it is one of his most earnest and most eloquent appeals to the conscience and intelligence of the student.

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  • Pitt's parliaments were competent to discuss, and willing to pass, all measures for which the average political intelligence of the country was ripe.

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  • If wiser legislation followed the great reform of 1832, Burke would have said this was because the political intelligence of the country had improved.

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  • Jesus appears to be accepted as one such incarnation, but not Mahomet, although it is agreed that, in his time, the "Universal Intelligence" (see later) was made flesh, in the person of Mikdad al-Aswad.

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  • The first of the creatures of God is the Universal Intelligence or Spirit, impersonated in Hamza, Hakim's vizier.

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  • The material world is an emanation from, and a "mirror" of, the Divine Intelligence.

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  • Not only is the charge of secrecy rigidly obeyed in regard to the alien world, but full initiation into the deeper mysteries of the creed is permitted only to a special class designated Akils, (Arabic `Akl, intelligence), in contradistinction from whom all other members of the Druse community, whatever may be their position or attainments, are called Jahel, the Ignorant.

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  • He believed that he held direct intercourse with the deity, or even that he was an incarnation of the divine intelligence; and in A.D.

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  • It became noted for the intelligence of its citizens, and for the educational advantages it offered at the time when education among the Boers was thought of very lightly.

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  • In the Thoughts on Education imaginative sentiment is never allowed to weigh against utility; information is subordinate to the formation of useful character; the part which habit plays in individuals is always kept in view; the dependence of intelligence and character, which it is the purpose of education to improve, upon health of body is steadily inculcated; to make children happy in undergoing education is a favourite precept; accumulating facts without exercising thought, and without accustoming the youthful mind to look for evidence, is always referred to as a cardinal vice.

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  • Not intelligence and public spirit but political wisdom was lacking to the National Assembly.

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  • A good selection of seed, according to the nature of the soil, demands, says De Vilmorin, intelligence and accurate knowledge on the part of the farmer.

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  • In addition to this he carried on a trade in wine and horses with the north of Italy, acquiring a high reputation for intelligence and honesty.

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  • Their doctrines were mainly based upon a belief in the government of the universe by some form of physical necessity, and though different opinions might prevail as to the mode of operation of the various forms of physical necessity the occasional recognition of non-material contributory causes never amounted to a recognition of the independence of human volition or intelligence.

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  • But, as with Socrates, their power of making a right choice is limited by their degree of knowledge or of ignorance, and the vexed question of the relation of this determining intelligence to the human will is left unsolved.

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  • But the insistence of idealist writers upon the relation of the world of nature to conscious intelligence, and especially to a universal consciousness realizing itself throughout the history of individuals, rendered it alike impossible to deny altogether some influence of environment upon character, and to regard the history of individual willing selves as consisting in isolated and unconnected acts of.

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  • For such knowledge implies the existence of a knowing consciousness as a relating and uniting intelligence capable of distinguishing itself from the objects to which it relates.

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  • It appealed to and evoked a high order of intelligence, and its insistence on personal individual salvation has borne worthy fruit.

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  • It was in connexion with this group that he then occupied himself with a plan for a religious periodical which should admit "a moderate degree of political and common intelligence," the result being the appearance in January 1801 of the Christian Observer.

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  • Schleiermacher classifies the virtues under the two forms of Gesinnung and Fertigkeit, the first consisting of the pure ideal element in action and the second the form it assumes in relation to circumstances, each of the two classes falling respectively into the two divisions of wisdom and love and of intelligence and application.

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  • With reference to this last, he says we cannot know God from himself, but only after the analogy of his creatures; and the special analogy used is the self-consciousness of man, its peculiar double nature, with the necessary elements, memory and intelligence, representing the relation of the Father to the Son.

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  • The edict of Caracalla, at the beginning of the 3rd century, by conferring the right of citizenship on all the inhabitants of the empire, completed an assimilation for which commercial relations, schools, a taste for officialism, and the adaptability and quick intelligence of the race had already made preparation.

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  • The emerging literature of emotional intelligence may be relevant.

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  • Eleven per cent of these resulted in actionable intelligence.

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  • Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences contradicts the old views of the nature of intelligence.

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  • It was a classic example of predetermined policy driving military intelligence.

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  • I also have a growing interest in swarm intelligence and homeostatic systems.

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  • Whilst our actions against those who seek to harm our society should be uncompromising and absolutely resolute, they must always be intelligence lead.

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  • Of course, anyone with even the slightest semblance of intelligence won't reply.

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  • Let us not slander our intelligence to that degree.

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  • The calculators use so-called " artificial intelligence " and artificial neural networks to make the predictions.

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  • The case for inclusion of naturalist intelligence appears pretty straightforward, the position with regard to spiritual intelligence is far more complex.

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  • The drugs swoop has been planned for more than three months and has involved intelligence gathering and observation techniques.

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  • It is not clear whether the discovery of the missile engine parts arose from a specific intelligence tip-off.

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  • We can see masculine transcendentalism at work in Wired magazine, or in all of the hype around artificial intelligence or virtual reality.

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  • Do you really want to work for a company whose buyers have the same intelligence level of an unflushed turd?

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  • Our intelligence services gradually uncovered this network's reach, and identified its key experts and agents and money men.

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  • And it's really of no interest at all to anyone with the slightest vestige of intelligence.

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  • Their style is emulated, without the intelligence or humor, by scores of media wannabes who confuse aggression with persistence.

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  • A sneer and a borrowed witticism, a detached, dispassionate veneer intended to convey intelligence.

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  • Is it poorly educated youths, texters, lack of education, intelligence, or what?

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  • Cushing was distinguished by his readiness to volunteer, his indefatigability, and by his good fortune, the reward of vigilance and intelligence.

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  • Although a hard, stern man, he had a keen sense of justice when his selfish interests were not involved, and few of the German kings possessed so practical an intelligence.

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  • The end of all study, says Descartes, in one of his earliest writings, ought to be to guide the mind to form true and sound judgments on every thing that may be presented to it.3 The sciences in their totality are but the intelligence of man; and all the details of knowledge have no value save as they strengthen the understanding.

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  • They would indulge in prophecies of the last judgment, and back their threats with a string of strange, half-frantic and utterly unmeaning sounds, the sense of which no one with any intelligence could discover; for they were obscure gibberish, and merely furnished any fool or impostor with an occasion to twist the utterances as he chose to his own purposes.

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  • The fact that it has become necessary to introduce regulations for its control by national legislation and international conferences shows the supremely important position which it has taken in the short interval of one decade as a means of communicating human intelligence from place to place over the surface of the globe.

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  • As the sum total of the wisdom propounded in the mystery of Agni, the searcher after truth is exhorted to meditate on that Self, made up of intelligence, endowed with a body of spirit, a form of light, and of an ethereal nature; holding sway over all the regions and pervading this All, being itself speechless and devoid of mental states; and by so doing he shall gain the assurance that "even as a grain of rice, or the smallest granule of millet, so is the golden Purusha in my heart; even as a smokeless light, it is greater than the sky, greater than the ether, greater than the earth, greater than all existing things; - that Self of the Spirit is my Self; on passing away from hence, I shall obtain that Self.

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  • He prepares the way, too, for a doctrine of evolution by his monistic idea of the substantial similarity of all things, inorganic and organic, bodily and spiritual, and still more by his conception of a perfect gradation of existence from the lowest " inanimate " objects, whose essential activity is confused representation, up to the highest organized beingman - with his clear intelligence.'

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  • This writer, by his conception of the world as will which objectifies itself in a series of gradations from the lowest manifestations of matter up to conscious man, gives a slightly new shape to the evolutional view of Schelling, though he deprives this view of its optimistic character by denying any co-operation of intelligence in the world-process.

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  • Several futile attempts have been made to draw conclusions as to the intelligence of various birds, from comparison of the weight of the whole brain with that of the body, or the weight of the hemispheres with that of other parts of the central nervous system.

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  • The second group, which he regards as instinctive in the wider acceptance of the term, nearly, if not quite, correspond to those above spoken of as intelligent - though he regards this term as falsely applied (see Intelligence Of Animals).

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  • Instinct involves inherited adaptation; intelligence, an inherited power, embodied in the higher nerve-centres, of accommodation to varying circumstances.

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  • The cerebrum is totally unaffected by aconite, consciousness and the intelligence remaining normal to the last.

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  • In philosophy his fundamental principle is that of what he calls the "triad" - a triplicity which he finds to pervade all things, which in God is "power, intelligence and love," in man "sensation, sentiment and knowledge."

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  • In this conception of nature are united the conceptions of law and order, of ever-changing life and interdependence, of immensity, individuality, and all-pervading subtlety, under which the universe is apprehended both by his intelligence and his imagination.

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  • Not only were the virtues to be explained by their relation to a common or universal good which only intelligence could apprehend, but there was nothing in all the furniture of heaven or earth which in like manner did not receive reality from the share it had in such an intelligible idea or essence.

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  • It demands physical strength, sound health, scrupulous cleanliness, good temper, self-control, intelligence and a strong sense of duty.

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  • The real " objective " to which our thoughts must show conformity is not a world of things in themselves, but the system of thiligs as it exists for a perfect intelligence.

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  • But perhaps Caird's phrase " a perfect intelligence " has beguiled him into thinking that the one subject of universal experience is not mere mankind, but God Himself.

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  • As in the case of the casket letters, it is alleged that forgery was employed to interpolate sufficient evidence of Mary's complicity in a design of which it is thought credible that she was kept in ignorance by the traitors and murderers who had enrolled themselves in her service, - that one who pensioned the actual murderer of Murray and a would-be murderer of Elizabeth was incapable of approving what her keen and practised intelligence was too blunt and torpid to anticipate as inevitable and inseparable from the general design.

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  • Even the detractors who defend her conduct on the plea that she was a dastard and a dupe are compelled in the same breath to retract this implied reproach, and to admit, with illogical acclamation and incongruous applause, that the world never saw more splendid courage at the service of more brilliant intelligence, that a braver if not "a rarer spirit never did steer humanity."

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  • To these "spheres" some writers add, by figurative usage, the terms "biosphere," or life-sphere, to cover all living things, both animals and plants, and "psychosphere," or mind-sphere, covering all the products of human intelligence.

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  • Where faith is so profound as to believe the Divine guidance all, and the individual intelligence nil, a man is able to persuade himself that any course he chooses to take is the one he is directed to take.

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  • Far less plastic and form-loving than the Italian, the German intelligence was more penetrative, earnest, disputative, occupied with substantial problems. Starting with theological criticism, proceeding to the stage of solid studies in the three learned languages, German humanism occupied the attention of a widely scattered sect of erudite scholars; but it did not arouse the interest of the whole nation until it was forced into a violently militant attitude by Pfefferkorn's attack on Reuchlin.

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  • The distinguishing characteristics of French humanism are vivid intelligence, critical audacity and polemical acumen, perspicuity of exposition, learning directed in its applications by logical sense rather than by artistic ideals of taste.

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  • No European race confronted with the problem of an immense coloured population has solved it more successfully than the Portuguese and their kinsmen in Brazil; in both countries intermarriage was freely resorted to, and the offspring of these mixed unions are superior in character and intelligence to most half-breeds.

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  • The more important are the Hualapais or ApacheYumas; the Mohaves; the Yavapais or Apache-Mohaves; the Yumas, whose lesser neighbours on the lower Colorado are the most primitive Indians of the United States in habits; the Maricopas; the Pimas and Papagoes, who figure much in early Arizona history, and who are superior in intelligence, adaptability, application and character; the Hopis or Moquis, possessed of the same good qualities and notably temperate and provident, famous for their prehistoric culture (Tusuyan); the Navaho, and the kindred Apaches, perhaps the most relentless and savage of Indian warriors.

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  • For the Love and Hate of Empedocles and the Nous (Intelligence) of Anaxagoras, Democritus substituted fixed and necessary laws (not chance; that is a misrepresentation due chiefly to Cicero).

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  • Here also psychology, by its elucidation of the important part which instinctive appetites and animal impulses play in the development of intelligence, still more perhaps by arguments (based largely upon the examination of hypnotic subjects or the phenomena of fixed ideas) which show the permanent influence of irrational or semi-rational suggestions or habits upon human conduct, has done much to aid and abet idealists in their contentions.

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  • A definite agreement was made between them at Joinville (December 31, 1584), the religious and popular pretext being the danger of leaving the kingdom to the king of Navarre, and the ostensible end to secure the succession to a Catholic prince, the old Cardinal de Bourbon, an ambitious and violent man of mean intelligence; while the secret aim was to secure the crown for the Guises, - who had already attempted to fabricate for themselves a genealogy tracing their descent from Charlemagne.

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  • He was the very opposite of Richelieu, as wheedling in his ways as the other had been haughty and scornful, as devoid of vanity and rancour as Richelieu had been full of jealous care for his authority; he was gentle where the other had been passionate and irritable, with an intelligence as great and more supple, and a far more grasping nature.

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  • It was with them that the deification of Aristotle began; and from them the belief that in him human intelligence had reached its limit passed to the later schoolmen (see Scholasticism).

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  • In one system the seat of Mercury, representing divine intelligence as the source of all knowledge - a view that reverts to Babylonia where Nebo (corresponding to Mercury) was regarded as the divine power to whom all wisdom is due - was placed in the liver as the primeval seat of the soul (see Omen), whereas in other systems this distinction was assigned to Jupiter or to Venus.

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  • It is wisdom that King Solomon asked God for, not intelligence.

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  • Love always finds its way to an imprisoned soul, and leads it out into the world of freedom and intelligence!

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  • It is now sixty-five years since Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe knew that he had made his way through Laura Bridgman's fingers to her intelligence.

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  • It is a rare privilege to watch the birth, growth, and first feeble struggles of a living mind; this privilege is mine; and moreover, it is given me to rouse and guide this bright intelligence.

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  • She almost overwhelmed me with inquiries which were the natural outgrowth of her quickened intelligence.

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  • Miss Sullivan never needlessly belittled her ideas or expressions to suit the supposed state of the child's intelligence.

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  • He used to say that there are only two sources of human vice--idleness and superstition, and only two virtues--activity and intelligence.

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  • Now the other sister, though they are the same family, is quite different-- an unpleasant character and has not the same intelligence.

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  • This intelligence gathering platform operates in a racetrack pattern behind the FLOT; it can track targets forward of the FLOT.

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  • Wilson 's surprise resignation has been credited to a dirty tricks campaign operated by British intelligence at the behest of the US.

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  • The film tells of a covert hit squad put together by Israeli intelligence to wreak revenge.

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  • Leeds miss his direct running and intelligence as much as Manchester United rue the loss of Ryan Giggs.

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  • Why did God create the first form, the first separate self-aware Intelligence?

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  • Of course, anyone with even the slightest semblance of intelligence wo n't reply.

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  • Jane, the evolved computer intelligence, can save the world 's three sentient races.

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  • I do feel when holding these items a sense of true sorcery and/or a link with interdimensional Intelligence.

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  • The RSPCA has collated intelligence on 4,000 individuals suspected of involvement in the practice.

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  • That is not surprising as these methods form the most mature applications of swarm intelligence.

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  • Asperger syndrome sufferers are said to be at the higher end of the intelligence scale.

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  • These five musicians from Sussex have created something of intelligence and worth that begs analysis, and not some throwaway pop.

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  • The troop commander can then counter specific hostile intelligence efforts.

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  • I will not insult your intelligence by indulging in a tuneless rendition of the theme from The Twilight Zone.

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  • That glib remark about Elvis is unbecoming of a man of your undoubted intelligence and insight Martin.

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  • Our intelligence services gradually uncovered this network 's reach, and identified its key experts and agents and money men.

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  • The Pentagon confirmed the notes had been taken by Stephen Cambone, now undersecretary of defense for intelligence and then a senior policy official.

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  • This unidimensional approach fails to adequately explore creativity, one of the most vital aspects of intelligence.

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  • Many psychologists also treat intelligence as a unidimensional phenomenon, reducible to a single IQ measure.

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  • I want, and every President must have, the best, unbiased, unvarnished assessment of America 's intelligence professionals.

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  • And it 's really of no interest at all to anyone with the slightest vestige of intelligence.

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  • Some people may argue that the apogee of human intelligence was when humans were not so reliant on technology.

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  • Standardized testing is an unreliable way to measure students' intelligence and cognitive ablility.

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  • Despite her beauty, intelligence and wit, Emma was not at all conceited.

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  • Watching a movie about androids who take over the world made me apprehensive about the future of artificial intelligence.

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  • Age recommendations on toy packages measure the safety of a toy - not your child's intelligence quotient.

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  • Intelligence testing-IQ tests may be ordered to determine if a child is developmental delayed mentally.

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  • Virtues could include wishes such as good health, sunny disposition, intelligence, musical talent, artistic ability, etc. Along with the virtue, the "godmother" should write a personal note to the parents.

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  • African Greys are quite popular because of their intelligence.

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  • Inquisitiveness and high intelligence tend to go hand in hand, so enjoy your fascinating feline friend.

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  • Cat fanciers choose this breed because of their intelligence and obvious adoration of humans.

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  • Turks make fabulous pets because of their friendliness and intelligence.

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  • They must first obtain explicit permission from either the Deputy Director of Intelligence, the Director of the FBI or the Official-in-Charge of Intelligence.

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  • They are especially convenient because you can find thousands upon thousands of free crossword puzzles just waiting for your intelligence!

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  • Tests may include agility, intelligence and speed.

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  • Also, you must not let your puppy's intelligence level drop too much.

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  • Hopefully playing virtual pet games will install the need to check on the pet and the need to improve its intelligence and physical ability through day-to-day interaction.

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  • Help Guide provides information and guidance to those that are feeling the effects of work stress including the warning signs of excessive work stress, how to break bad habits, and improving your emotional intelligence.

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  • Katie Holmes was a good student, impressing teachers with her intelligence, honesty, and wholesomeness.

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  • Jon Stewart's unique blend of intelligence and humor has made the "fake news" format of The Daily Show a huge success.

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  • The list ranks a number of readers' favorites for most desirable woman, taking into account "women who have the characteristics they value in a potential companion, like intelligence, humor, charisma, and ambition."

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  • Readers were asked to look beyond the celebrity's sex appeal and beauty to choose ladies who had characteristics they valued in a potential partner, including ambition, humor, intelligence and charisma.

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  • In most social circles, saying that you graduated from an Ivy League school is taken as an instant indicator of your intelligence and potential for success in life.

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  • These offices include the Office of the General Counsel, Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Office of Counternarcotics Enforcement, Office of Intelligence and Analysis and the Office of Legislative Affairs.

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  • However, the real reason they have long been selected for police and rescue work is their high level of intelligence and extreme loyalty to their handlers.

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  • Von Stephanitz admired the intelligence and temperament he found in these animals and was determined to develop the breed into the perfect herding dogs.

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  • However, because of their superior intelligence and tracking abilities, German Shepherds are now employed by search and rescue teams, police and military, and as helper dogs for the disabled.

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  • Their high intelligence and energy level can result in destructive behaviors such as chewing and digging.

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  • Tails are typically docked to be level with the back of the skull, and are held upright.The Welsh's expression should display intelligence and good humor as befits his lively and inquisitive nature.

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  • However, the Shetland Sheepdog, also known as the Sheltie, displays high intelligence and a tendency to watch over his child companions.

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  • Today, the Lab's retrieving skills, intelligence, obedience, instinct and patience have made this breed excellent hunting dogs, working dogs and family companions who excel at retrieving game.

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  • The versatility comes from the breed's inherent obedience, intelligence, patience, gentleness and loyalty combined with strength and athleticism.

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  • The dog's great temperament and intelligence have made it an ideal companion dog and service dog.

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  • These dogs were first bred in the 1990's to create a family dog that was hypoallergenic and had many of the positive traits of both breeds in temperament, obedience and intelligence.

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  • The psychiatric service-trained dog may be any breed and any size as long as it has the right temperament, intelligence, obedience and trainability to do the job.

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  • Rottweilers are a popular breed thanks to their combination of noble aloofness, intelligence and irresistible clownish behavior.

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  • It represents intelligence and is revered and considered sacred.

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  • Blending new fashion trends and vintage styles, the Book Mates collection is one of understated elegance and bold intelligence.

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  • Your main abilities are Strength, Dexterity, Constitution, Intelligence, Wisdom, and Charisma.

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  • You could think of it as a test of quickness rather than raw intelligence or IQ scores.

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  • Your actual intelligence won't go up, but you'll speed up your natural thought processes.

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  • You start with 20 points to distribute into Strength, Intelligence, Dexterity or Stamina.

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  • You will work with programming languages like C++, 3D graphics, artificial intelligence algorithms and high-level mathematics.

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  • Character attributes like strength, intelligence and endurance are improved by gaining levels or by purchase from guilds and characters you will encounter.

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  • Some free online games pit players against computer A.I. (artificial intelligence) controlled players, or just against the system.

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  • Maybe you are just curious about how games are made like, "how does polygon collision work?" or "how do you work with artificial intelligence?"

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  • At default, your companion is computer-controlled, so you are at the mercy of its artificial intelligence.

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  • The second option will determine your star's intelligence, physical prowess, appearance and what positions he will be qualified to play.

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  • During this time, I've noticed the lackluster quality of team AI (Artificial Intelligence).

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  • If you are an experienced fisherman and will delight in selecting your own lure, bait, and will want to customize your rod and reel, then find a fishing simulation with realistic artificial intelligence and environments.

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  • Well, that may have been before the intelligence games started appearing in the video game market.

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  • Research has shown that febrile seizures do not affect a child's intelligence level or achievement in school.

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  • Sickle cell anemia does not affect intelligence.

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  • Marfan syndrome by itself does not affect a child's intelligence or ability to learn.

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  • It is a positive sign of developing intelligence and of an active and healthy imagination.

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  • Tourette syndrome does not, in itself, negatively affect intelligence or cognition.

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  • It is defined as an intellectual functioning level (as measured by standard tests for intelligence quotient) that is well below average and significant limitations in daily living skills (adaptive functioning).

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  • Intellectual functioning level is defined by standardized tests that measure the ability to reason in terms of mental age (intelligence quotient or IQ).

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  • Children are given intelligence tests to measure their learning abilities and intellectual functioning.

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  • Such tests include the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale, the Wechsler Intelligence Scales, the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence, and the Kaufmann Assessment Battery for Children.

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  • Research in the late twentieth century and early twenty-first century shows even greater influence, contributing to intelligence, career choice, and, to a certain degree, success in adulthood.

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  • Studies have also linked firstborn children with higher academic achievement and possibly higher intelligence scores when compared to later-born children.

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  • The term emotional intelligence refers to the child's ability to understand the emotions of others, perceive subtle social cues, "read" complex social situations, and demonstrate insight about others' motivations and goals.

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  • In addition to social skills and emotional intelligence, factors such as the child's self-confidence or social anxiety can affect his or her social competence.

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  • In fact, in one study, peer rejection proved to be a more sensitive predictor of later mental health problems than school records, achievement, intelligence quotient (IQ) scores, or teacher ratings.

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  • Children with A-T usually have normal or above normal intelligence, but some cases of mental retardation have been reported.

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  • These children usually do not have any complications and have normal intelligence.

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  • Unfortunately, many children with macrocephaly experience delayed development, slow growth, seizure disorders, and limited intelligence.

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  • Symptoms include changes in personality, decreased intelligence with accompanying school problems, decreased coordination, involuntary jerks and movements of the body.

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  • Persons with achondroplasia are 3-5 feet (91-152 cm) tall and of normal intelligence.

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  • A mentally retarded child is defined as one who falls in the lower end of the range of intelligence, usually with an IQ (intelligence quotient) below 80 on some standardized IQ tests.

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  • Vocabulary size is one of the primary components of standardized tests of verbal intelligence, and it grows slowly in retarded children.

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  • About one third of individuals with CP have moderate-to-severe mental retardation, one third have mild mental retardation, and one third have normal intelligence.

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  • They can have normal intelligence; however, some individuals with MPS I H/S experience learning difficulties.

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  • Individuals with MPS I S usually have normal intelligence, although there have been some reports of individuals with MPS I S developing psychiatric problems.

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  • In the milder form, most of these individuals live to adulthood and have normal intelligence or only mild mental impairments.

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  • Typically, the nervous system or intelligence of an individual with MPS VI is not affected.

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  • For the most part, children with spina bifida have average or above-average intelligence.

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  • Intelligence quotient (IQ)-A measure of somebody's intelligence, obtained through a series of aptitude tests concentrating on different aspects of intellectual functioning.

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  • Intelligence is an abstract concept whose definition continually evolves and often depends upon current social values as much as scientific ideas.

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  • Several theories about intelligence emerged in the twentieth century and with them debate about the nature of intelligence and whether it determined by hereditary factors, the environment, or both.

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  • Their findings pointed to links between social class, race, and intelligence quotient (IQ) scores, despite questions by many about the validity of IQ tests as a measurement of intelligence or a predictor of achievement and success.

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  • Part of the problem regarding intelligence stems from the fact that nobody has adequately defined what intelligence really means.

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  • To explain this phenomenon, some psychologists have developed theories to include multiple components of intelligence.

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  • Since about 1970, psychologists have expanded the notion of what constitutes intelligence.

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  • When all these aspects of intelligence are viewed together, the importance of how people use their intelligence becomes more important than the question of "how much" intelligence a person has.

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  • Sternberg has suggested that some intelligence tests focus too much on what a person has already learned rather than on how well a person acquires new skills or knowledge.

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  • There are many different types of intelligence tests, and they all do not measure the same abilities.

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  • Many people are under the false assumption that intelligence tests measure a person's inborn or biological intelligence.

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  • Intelligence tests are based on an individual's interaction with the environment and never exclusively measure inborn intelligence.

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  • Intelligence tests have been associated with categorizing and stereotyping people.

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  • Additionally, knowledge of one's performance on an intelligence test may affect a person's aspirations and motivation to obtain goals.

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  • Intelligence tests can be culturally biased against certain groups.

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  • A formula is used to arrive at the intelligence quotient, or IQ.

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  • Revised in 1986, the Stanford-Binet intelligence test can be used with children starting at age two.

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  • Verbal intelligence, the component most often associated with academic success, implies the ability to think in abstract terms using either words or mathematical symbols.

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  • Performance intelligence suggests the ability to perceive relationships and fit separate parts together logically into a whole.

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  • The Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (KABC) is an intelligence and achievement test for children ages 2.5-12.5 years.

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  • A distinctive feature of the KABC is that it defines intelligence as problem-solving ability rather than knowledge of facts, which it considers achievement.

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  • Modern brain imaging techniques have confirmed that children's intelligence is not just hereditary but is also affected greatly by environment.

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  • Parents can help their infants develop their intelligence by talking and reading to them, playing with them, and encouraging them to play with a variety of age-appropriate toys.

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  • Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children-An intelligence and achievement test for children ages 2.5 to 12.5 years.

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  • Stanford-Binet intelligence scales-A device designed to measure somebody's intelligence, obtained through a series of aptitude tests concentrating on different aspects of intellectual functioning.

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  • An IQ score of 100 represents "average" intelligence.

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  • Wechsler intelligence scales-A test that measures verbal and non-verbal intelligence.

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  • Children suspected of having intelligence development problems should undergo a comprehensive evaluation to identify their difficulties as well as their strengths.

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  • The Stanford-Binet intelligence scale is a standardized test that assesses intelligence and cognitive abilities in children, beginning at age two, and in adults.

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  • The Stanford-Binet intelligence scale is used as a tool in school placement, in determining the presence of a learning disability or a developmental delay, and in tracking intellectual development.

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  • The Stanford-Binet intelligence scale is a direct descendent of the Binet-Simon scale, the first intelligence scale created in 1905 by psychologist Alfred Binet (1857-1911) and Theophilus Simon.

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  • These areas are covered by ten subtests that include activities measuring both verbal and non-verbal intelligence.

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  • Intelligence testing requires a clinically trained examiner.

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  • The Stanford-Binet intelligence scale should be administered, scored, and interpreted by a trained professional, preferably a psychologist.

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  • Savant syndrome occurs when a person with below normal intelligence displays a special talent or ability in a specific area.

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  • Children with Asperger's syndrome generally have a normal to above average intelligence level and adequate knowledge of vocabulary and grammar but poor concentration and ability to understand language subtleties, such as humor.

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  • Among the areas of cognitive development are information processing, intelligence, reasoning, language development, and memory.

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  • Learning theory focuses on the role of environmental factors in shaping the intelligence of children, especially on a child's ability to learn by having certain behaviors rewarded and others discouraged.

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  • Development tests do not necessarily correlate in any way with intelligence tests.

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  • Intelligence tests attempt to measure a child's ability to learn.

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  • Results of these tests may be represented on a scale, as a mental age, or as an intelligence quotient (IQ).

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  • It appears to measure general reasoning ability, although there is some evidence that it is more a test of the ability to form and use concepts than a test of general intelligence.

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  • The Test of Nonverbal Intelligence is a quick, language-free measure of cognitive ability in children aged five years and older.

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  • Intelligence test-A questionnaire or series of exercises designed to attempt to measure intelligence.

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  • Almost all children with school phobias have average or above average intelligence.

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  • The longer a child with hypothyroidism remains untreated, the greater is the loss of intellectual capacity, as measured by the standard intelligence testing (IQ).

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  • Intelligence testing may also be used with teens and young adults to determine vocational ability (e.g., in career counseling).

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  • Common achievement and ability tests include the Wechsler intelligence scale for children (WISC-III) and the Stanford-Binet intelligence scales.

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  • A number of studies have shown that iron deficiency anemia in infancy can result in reduced intelligence, when intelligence was measured in early childhood.

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  • It is not certain if iron supplementation of children with reduced intelligence, due to iron-deficiency anemia in infancy, has any influence in allowing a "catch-up" in intellectual development.

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  • Most children with dyslexia are of normal intelligence; many have above-average intelligence.

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  • Anyone who is suspected to have dyslexia should have a comprehensive evaluation, including medical, psychological, behavioral, hearing, vision, and intelligence testing.

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  • Bone mass increases as they age but does not affect appearance, health, intelligence, or life span.

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  • Speech therapy is often needed in young children, because the heavy skeleton can cause language delays even in children of normal intelligence.

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  • Learning disorders are academic difficulties experienced by children and adults of average to above-average intelligence.

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  • Stuttering does not affect intelligence.

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  • However, even with proper treatment, children with galactosemia often have a lower intelligence quotient (IQ) than their siblings, and they frequently have speech problems.

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  • Turner's syndrome does not affect intelligence, although persons with the condition have poor spatial perception and mathematical aptitude, often accompanied by learning disabilities.

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  • While nearly 50 percent of all children with hydrocephalus have average intelligence, some do not.

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  • Persons affected by dependent personality disorder have a disproportionately low level of confidence in their own intelligence and abilities and have difficulty making decisions and undertaking projects on their own.

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  • The Wechsler intelligence tests are a widely used series of intelligence tests developed by clinical psychologist David Wechsler.

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  • The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) is designed for children and adolescents ages six to 16.

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  • For all of the Wechsler scales (which also include the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, or WAIS), separate verbal and performance scores, as well as a total score, are computed.

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  • The Wechsler Intelligence Scales are standardized tests, meaning that as part of the test design, they were administered to a large representative sample of the target population, and norms were determined from the results.

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  • The only known risk of the Wechsler intelligence tests is that the results are misused or are given undue weight.

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  • Results of intelligence tests should not be considered a complete indication of a child's future path.

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  • Parents should consider the possible consequences carefully if they are considering telling their child the outcome of this or any other intelligence test.

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  • Although many people equate creativity with intelligence, the two terms are not synonymous, and it is not necessary to have a genius-level IQ in order to be creative.

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  • While creative people do tend to have average or above-average scores on IQ tests, beyond an IQ of about 120 there is little correlation between intelligence and creativity.

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  • Standard intelligence tests measure convergent thinking, which is the ability to come up with a single correct answer.

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  • Students who complete a classical education develop creativity, knowledge and intelligence.

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  • They assess your "communication skills, sales skills, motivation, and intelligence" through two phone interviews and three face-to-face interviews.

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  • Intelligence - TSA employs skilled intelligence professionals who devote their efforts to gathering and relevant data necessary to keeping the nation's transportation systems safe from threats of both foreign and domestic terrorism.

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  • Individuals who work with the TSA have a multitude of potential paths to take, from intelligence to screening or enforcement.

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  • The Office of Intelligence and Analysis collects information from all appropriate departments, state, local, private sector, and international, to analyze them and piece together any potential threats to the security of the nation.

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  • The company seeks contractors with military backgrounds or professional experience working in law enforcement or intelligence.

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  • Some interviewers take the questions a step further, requiring you to fill out one or more personality tests, intelligence tests or aptitude tests.

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  • Read the FBI Intelligence Bulletin on reverse mortgage fraud complaints.

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  • It became the home of the Military Intelligence Service Language School during this period, and still houses a similar school today.

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  • The level of the toy's artificial intelligence means it's equipped with the ability to make over 40 noises in response to stimuli, making it quite entertaining.

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  • All of this is made possible through sophisticated artificial intelligence programming.

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  • A dollhouse is a catalyst for hours of imaginative play that is shown to increase intelligence and emotional well-being in children.

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  • With built-in intelligence, consumers can not only select, but create their own cycles – create it once and save it for future use – saving time.

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  • World War I brought varying experiences for Huxley, and he returned to England for a time to work with the British Army Intelligence Corp.

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  • She may wear a skimpy outfit when saving the world and dispensing justice, but there's nothing skimpy about her intelligence, morality and physical power.

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  • They ask you to rate key factors like face attractiveness, emotional intelligence, and artistic ability etc. A total of fourteen of these categories are combined and calculated into your final score.

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  • For example, "I am a great husband and I do many things to help around the house", or "I am so lucky to be blessed with both intelligence and a great sense of humor".

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  • Humor, interest, intelligence, hobbies and the like are qualities that men fall in love with.

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  • Often games will give you a certain number of points to distribute among various personality characteristics such as charm, strength and intelligence.

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  • They represent freedom, gentleness, love, intelligence, and pleasure.

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  • Women with this placement, especially those of high intelligence, may actually be brilliant, and the male natives can usually be found trying to solve the most difficult of problems.

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  • You're drawn to professions that utilize your intelligence.

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  • They like to hide their intelligence behind a veil of mystery.

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  • Tiger loves the Dog's interest in starting new projects and admires the Horse's intelligence.

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  • The Dog provides a stable force and shared intelligence for the Horse.

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  • Both signs respect a high level of intelligence and are delighted to see that each has a substantial grasp of language and wit.

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  • However, a chart-dominant Pisces has a very strong intuitive sense which gives him an advantage in the area of emotional intelligence.

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  • She was largely responsible for giving Nancy her keen intelligence, spunky determination, and undying independence.

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  • While ADHD is often associated with learning disabilities, many people with ADHD have above average intelligence.

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  • There certainly isn't a solution that teaching methods for autistic children will work for every child, so the key is to find what works for your child and use that to tap into his intelligence and his desire for learning.

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  • A multiple intelligence test can be a useful tool for figuring out the best way to reach children or even adults.

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  • Some versions of the multiple intelligence test include "naturalistic" as a kind of intelligence for people who respond best to an outdoor environment, but that was not part of Dr. Gardner's original theory.

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