Once prediction is the only criterion for program design, software architecture tends to become rather baroque. [noun]
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The second solution--not forcibly to resist what we consider evil until we have found a universal criterion--that is the solution given by Christ. [noun]
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There can only be two solutions: either to find a real unquestionable criterion of what is evil or not to resist evil by force. [noun]
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That is why I continually search after the criterion of certainty. [noun]
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If the art of correcting the errors of speech by scientific methods is ever discovered, then philosophy will have found its criterion of certainty. [noun]
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Lamennais affirms that there is no other criterion than universal reason. [noun]
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I very much fear that it will be with the criterion as with the philosopher's stone; that it will finally be abandoned, not only as insolvable, but as chimerical. [noun]
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Some have taken for an absolute and definite criterion the testimony of the senses; others intuition; these evidence; those argument. [noun]
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TIME has hitherto served as a sort of criterion for society. [noun]
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Time, then, is the criterion of societies; thus looked at, history is the demonstration of the errors of humanity by the argument _reductio ad absurdum_. [noun]
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The most disheartening tendency common among readers is to tear out one sentence from a work, as a criterion of the writer's ideas or personality. [noun]
Do you have a better example in your mind? Please submit your sentence!