Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"I think if there's a fundamental claim like that, the district court ought to decide it up front."
Coming to the fore in the 1960s, an anti-psychiatry movement challenged the fundamental claims and practices of mainstream psychiatry.
The common denominator, and sine qua non, is simply that writing, no less than researching and interpreting, has a fundamental claim on the historian's attention.
He was a strident critic of their fundamental claim that only the Tigers represented Tamil interests in Sri Lanka.
A final criticism questions the L.A. School's fundamental claim that Los Angeles should be considered the paradigmatic postmodern American city.
In accordance with the second fundamental claim of Westergaard's theory (see above), applying the operations to given notes should produce other notes that are understood by the listener as being derived from the given notes.
Young's fundamental claim is that the human body is alkaline by design and acidic by function, and that there is only one disease (acidosis) and one treatment (an alkaline diet).
Nevertheless, the fundamental claim by StilesCrisis also seems fair: IP piracy and avoiding government limits on free speech are two possible use cases for anonymized BitTorrent access, and the latter is quite rare.
Biotechnology attorneys have long argued that these filings almost always contain the fundamental claims of the original application and should be viewed as one application for the purpose of determining how long it takes to secure a patent.
Combined with the third fundamental claim of Brentano, the idea that all judgments are either positive (judging that A exists) or negative (judging that A does not exist), we have a complete picture of Brentano's theory of judgment.
This may produce the desired effect for television viewers watching the elite players, but the requirements may make rugby virtually unplayable for participants at the amateur level, undermining a fundamental claim of Rugby Union, that it is a game for "all shapes and all sizes".
The first, purely in relation to Meares Irlen Syndrome, finds that there is no evidence for one of the fundamental claims of therapeutic benefit, the second which focused primarily on Irlen Syndrome did however find compelling evidence of unique brain function linked to the syndrome.
He further argues that Derrida's fundamental claim that speech is really writing, and that writing is prior to speech, is based on a redefinition of terms, and that by such methods one could prove anything, that the rich are really poor, that the true is really false, and so on.