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  1. History of philosophy (13862 bytes)
    1: ...[[understanding]], [[knowledge]] or [[wisdom]] on fundamental matters as diverse as [[reality]], [[knowledge]],...
    20: ... apply concepts to the world, and that these concepts are in a significant way more real, or more basi...
    22: ...some B are C." This syllogism fails if set A is empty.
    29: ...sed first cause, and this is God. Aquinas also adapted this argument to prove the goodness of God. Eve...
    44: ... often to combat atheism or other unbelief, by adopting the idea of material reality, and the [[dualis...
  2. Janet Reno (5747 bytes)
    36: ...ise the Florida court system. In [[1973]] she accepted a position with the Dade County State's Attorne...
    42: ...eived the federal government as a threat to their fundamental freedoms.
  3. Botany (8977 bytes)
    13: So '''why study plants'''? Plants are an utterly fundamental part of life on earth. They generate the [[oxyge...
    15: * Understand fundamental life processes
    24: ===Understand fundamental life processes===
    25: ...rch has ongoing relevance to the understanding of fundamental biological processes.
  4. Scientific revolution (17675 bytes)
    7: ...bates may arise from lack of recognition of these fundamental differences.
    15: *[[Ptolemy]]'s calculations of planetary motion. (This ...
    33: ...ed during the fourteen centuries between them and Ptolemy. But for Kepler and Galileo a claim this bol...
    40: ... millennia, the [[geocentric model]] had been accepted by all but a few astronomers. The idea that the...
    42: ... the end of the 17th century it was generally accepted by astronomers.
  5. Vernacular architecture (3581 bytes)
    1: ...raised by many writers for their sophisticated adaptation to their environment and users' needs.
    3: ...itecture has tended towards a narrow range of acceptable styles and forms, and because even today arch...
    5: ...[Christopher Alexander]] attempted to identify adaptive features of traditional architecture that appl...
    9: ...than whether or not a kind of architecture is accepted within academia.
  6. Science (19868 bytes)
    8: ...es science in terms of [[ontology]]: science attempts to identify what "things" in the world, their ca...
    15: ...es "[[paradigms]]," sets of (often unstated) assumptions, rules, practices, etc. and that transitions ...
    21: ...ng very rapidly in an area consisting mostly of empty space. Many of humanity's [[folk physics|preconc...
    26: ...Scientists use the term ''model'' to mean a description of something, specifically one which can be us...
    30: ...en" in the scientific sense. Some universally accepted models such as [[heliocentric theory]] and [[at...
  7. Crumhorn (1946 bytes)
    8: ...th, so in practice all playing is confined to the fundamental series. Some larger instruments have their range ...
  8. Flute (11293 bytes)
    31: ...s a real number multiple of a lower register, or "fundamental" tone of the flute. When a flute sounds harsh, o...
    33: Almost all flutes can be played in fundamental, octave, tierce, quatre and cinque modes simply b...
    44: The modern concert flute comes with various options. The B-flat key (invented and pioneered by [...
    48: ...g, depending on who you ask. Less controversial options include the amusingly named "gizmo key", whic...
  9. Musical instrument (3823 bytes)
    13: ...ets the [[vocal cord]]s into [[oscillation]]. The fundamental frequency is controlled by the tension of the voc...
    21: ...tioned in ancient sources, such as Egyptian inscriptions and the [[Bible]], and probably predate recor...
    26: *[[Folk instrument]] - a description and a list
  10. Trombone (15819 bytes)
    25: The standard ''tenor trombone'' has a [[fundamental]] [[note]] of B♭ and is usually treated as ...
    33: ...the entire gap between the first harmonic and the fundamental. The notes on the bass trombone are played in th...
    73: ...in to writing Double Bass parts up a twelfth. Exceptions to this occur often in Soviet and older Easte...
    75: ...ombone is treated like all the other members [excepting the bass trombone] as a transposing instrument...
  11. Accordion (10069 bytes)
    4: ...ggested that they may have existed in ancient Egypt.
    39: ...s six rows: the second row buttons are called the Fundamental Bass and are ordered in quints, the first row but...
    54: ...eighth column in the picture above), and only has Fundamental Bass and major chords
    55: *"24 Bass" goes from A♭ to A, and has Fundamental Bass, major and minor chords
    59: ...from C♭ to G♯, and has everything except diminished
  12. Pipe organ (24478 bytes)
    19: ...instruments may combine several styles in an attempt to provide authentic voices for an extended reper...
    65: ... [[harmonic series (music)|overtone series]] of a fundamental; normally these mutation stops would not be playe...
    83: Nearly all stops (there are however notable exceptions) fall into one of two types:
    144: ...for manuals are Choir, Great, Swell (English); Hauptwerk, Brustwerk, Oberwerk, Schwellwerk, R?itiv (Ge...
    146: ...rman]] equivalents of these three names are: ''Hauptwerk'', ''Oberwerk'' and ''Positiv'' respectively....
  13. Abraham Lincoln (48771 bytes)
    46: ...e fighting, in his defeat of a congressional attempt to reorganize his cabinet in [[1862]], in his man...
    59: ...93 p704 quoting Lincoln; Talk--> He served as a captain in a company of the [[Illinois]] [[militia]] d...
    87: ...ered its opinion upholding the tax exemption, accepting Lincoln's arguments.
    93: ...the Buchanan administration's push for the [[Lecompton Constitution]] which would have admitted Kansas...
    95: Accepting the Republican nomination for the Senate in 18...
  14. Geology (12007 bytes)
    22: ... [[volcano]]es, as opposed to the ''[[Neptunism|Neptunists]]'', who believed that all rocks had settle...
    26: ...in uniformitarianism, the idea was not widely accepted at the time.
    33: ... and by [[Arthur Holmes]], but wasn't broadly accepted until the [[1960s]] when the theory of plate te...
    44: ...worked in much the same way over geologic time. A fundamental principle of geology advanced by the 18th century...
  15. Plate tectonics (27764 bytes)
    1: ...tinental drift]], and is currently the theory accepted by the vast majority of scientists working in t...
    5: ...1960s]] and has since almost universally been accepted by scientists and has revolutionized the [[Eart...
    31: ...preading center the action becomes clear. Crest depths of the old ridges, parallel to the current spr...
    33: ...hat one of the key pieces of evidence forcing acceptance of the sea-floor spreading hypothesis was fou...
    37: ...d by alternating periods of quiet and episodic eruptions that start with explosive gas expulsion with ...
  16. Ethiopia (20233 bytes)
    69: ... a referendum. In [[1994]], a constitution was adopted leading to Ethiopia's first multiparty election...
    77: ... assembly was held in June 1994. This assembly adopted the constitution of the Federal Democratic Repu...
    79: ... than ever before in their history, although some fundamental freedoms, including [[freedom of the press]], are...
    110: ...The normal rainy season is from mid-June to mid-September (longer in the southern highlands) preceded ...
    128: ...m]] was one of the first nations to officially adopt [[Christianity]], when St. [[Frumentius]] of [[Ty...
  17. Madagascar (29377 bytes)
    53: ...the [[1500]]s, when [[Portugal|Portuguese]] sea captain [[Diego Dias]] sighted the island after his sh...
    57: The British accepted the imposition of a French protectorate over Ma...
    61: ...eriod of provisional government ended with the adoption of a constitution in [[1959]] and full indepen...
    70: ...aka regime came under increasing pressure to make fundamental changes. In response to a deteriorating economy, ...
    76: ...de margin, despite efforts by federalists to disrupt [[ballot]]ing in several coastal areas.
  18. Eritrea (12964 bytes)
    100: ...conomic future depends upon its ability to master fundamental social problems like [[illiteracy]], [[unemployme...
    113: ...the rank of patriarchate of Eritrea, within the Coptic church.
    180: *[http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/eritrea.html Stanford University - A...
  19. Thailand (14276 bytes)
    101: ...m, and cloudy southwest monsoon from mid-May to September, as well as a dry, cool northeast monsoon fr...
    128: [[Cuisine of Thailand|Thai cuisine]] blends four fundamental tastes: sweet, spicy, sour and salty.
  20. Germany (46412 bytes)
    66: ...d the [[Hanseatic League]]. In [[1530]], the attempt of the [[Protestant Reformation]] of Catholicism ...
    73: ... power, rejected crown and constitution. This prompted violent rollbacks by the monarchs, and the demi...
    75: ...lm I]] and the increasingly liberal parliament erupted over military reforms. The king appointed [[Ott...
    95: ...nd]], violating the Versailles Treaty, in an attempt to rebuild national self-esteem. Emboldened, Hitl...
    126: ...ists in [[administrative law]] where a lot of the fundamental matters remain in the jurisdiction of the individ...

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