The key to Basil's argument is his assertion that "we also hear the names in the nature, and a father always
begets a son like himself, and we may understand the Father to be the cause of an essence like his." (8) Just as human fathers produce sons who share the father's nature, so too with the divine Father and Son.
In comparison to results of previous studies, the MP 10a population bears a high degree of similarity to Augustine 1883 tephra (SIMAN [less than or equal to] 0.98:
Beget et al., 1994; Fig.
"This is the first time this type of behavior has been documented for a volcano," says
Beget. He says volcanologists have not studied most of the other volcanoes in the world well enough to know if they behave the same.
Again, this reflects the Marighella equation at work: Terrorism
begets repression, which engenders hatred, which in turn fuels more terrorism....
But power that only
begets hatred is not good, and in the end hatred becomes the most indomitable power of all.
Reducing weight
begets a virtuous cycle in which powerplants, braking and steering systems and suspensions can be downsized because there is less weight to propel, stop and turn.
The award, named for the now-deceased editor of Cervi's Rocky Mountain Journal in Denver, recognizes the career of an editor whose finely crafted writing and commitment to community embodies the phrase "good journalism
begets good government."
Since every force in the universe eventually
begets a countervailing force, there seems to be a wonderful business opportunity here for some enterprising accounting firm to create a competing service called the "flapdoodle audit." This is a process whereby an accounting firm would determine to what extent the organization had fallen prey to an epidemic of hokum, bunkum, twaddle, tish-tosh, and horse-bleep.
"Science
begets technology, which
begets economic activity," Lederman said.
I read that a New Labour think tank has backed her view that violence in Iraq
begets violence at home.
Impeding progress by sustaining fixed false beliefs (they call them delusions in proper psychiatric parlance)
begets, in the end, only heightened stress, coming from hither ("why are we not competitive?") and from yon ("why does it cost us twice as much and take twice as long as in Company X?").
The artist's interest in exposing the links between serious Romanticism and asinine romance not only
begets some fantastically strange imagery but also lays bare centuries-old mechanisms of, say, male genius that have designated certain obsessive, sensually directed tendencies as capital and others as lowercase.