Example sentences of "this view be " in BNC.

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1 Again , this view is related to Pius XI 's , as expressed in Divini Illius Magistri : ‘ The family holds directly from the Creator the mission and hence the rights to educate the offspring , a right inalienable because inseparably joined to the strict obligation , a right anterior to any right whatever of civil society and of the State … ’ ( 1929 : 14 ) .
2 This view is not convincing given that we all have a latent capacity to develop cancer cells through oncogene gene sectors ; exposure to fields might reasonably be supposed to accelerate transmutations .
3 It is Davie 's contention that this view is quite wrong : there are a great many outstandingly talented British poets , including Charles Tomlinson , C H Sisson , Elaine Feinstein and others ( Davie , as distinguished a poet as any of his subjects , modestly excludes his own work ) who do not answer to this description , and one purpose of Under Briggflats is to claim for them the attention they have often been denied ; in some cases , indeed , to rescue them from scandalous neglect .
4 This view is common to the ‘ Action Men ’ among Easton 's section police who are called upon to do what they consider is the job of the social services .
5 This view is pervasive amongst ordinary members of the RUC and leads us directly to the issue of how Northern Ireland 's divisions affect policemen and women , which the following chapters begin to address .
6 This view is reinforced by the mass media 's tendency to personalize politics and by informal discussions of politics ( for example , ‘ Mrs Thatcher 's Government , ) .
7 This view is summarized in a memorandum sent to embassies abroad by the Foreign Office early in 1945 , arguing for a necessary linkage of diplomatic commitments to economic strength , but going on to state that Britain 's looming economic problems were likely to be temporary : ‘ It must , however , be stressed that , given skill and good fortune , our financial difficulties will be acute only during the immediate post-war years .
8 Although overall this view is still widely held , it is possible to point to several cases of reversal when , for example , agriculturalists reverted to hunting and gathering .
9 In support of this view is the finding that the incidence of SAD amongst different populations increases as one passes from the equator towards higher latitudes — as do the length of the winter nights and the likelihood of waking in the dark on winter mornings .
10 The most general form of this view is that the tenth-century rulers of Germany and England worked the church , and particularly the reformed monasteries within it , into a system of government .
11 The logic of this view is that there is no harm in voting Labour or Liberal , or in not voting at all .
12 This view is supported by Millers of Truro .
13 This view is reflected in the focus of most child care research .
14 This view is rooted in the separation of management and education within schools and suggests a greatly increased emphasis upon the former by senior staff .
15 An attraction of this view is that the notion of the ‘ I ’ or ‘ self ’ appears to bear the character of transcendence and immanence , discussed at length in the previous section .
16 This view is well expressed by de Janvry and Ground when they say ‘ the primary role of the reform sector is political .
17 The proposition put forward by this view is that technology shapes the problems , demands and forms of organisation of workers and it is precisely the levels of technology that vary so much between the modern , dynamic , industrial sector and traditional areas .
18 This view is based upon a phrase which the Empress is supposed to have uttered ‘ It 's my pretty little war ’ , which in fact she never pronounced and which indeed was a newspaper invention appearing only in 1874 .
19 The unique implication of this view is that associability will not be lost when a stimulus is followed by inconsistent consequences .
20 This view is in complete contrast to those who maintain that environmental deterioration is widespread and of critical importance .
21 The policy implication of this view is a programme to help those farmers who can help themselves to grow cash crops .
22 This view is developed in a way which partly reduplicates the misleading tactics he identifies at work in the 1950s .
23 The major difficulty , however , with this view is that it stems again from a misreading of realism .
24 This view is not based on logic but is greatly influenced by the programming to which we have all been subject from day one of our lives .
25 This view is espoused by Myers ( 1986 ) , who believes that deforestation in the Himalaya has been responsible for flood disasters in the lower reaches of the Ganges and Brahmaputra and the higher incidence of flooding that has occurred since 1940 ; apparently flooding now affects some 10 6 ha of land as compared with 6 × 10 6 ha in the early 1950s .
26 A rather sophisticated version of this view is that RMI represents a legitimisation of the tension and debate between managers and clinicians as to who shall have the dominant perspective .
27 This view is supported by two of the main research studies .
28 It is also likely that this view is a departure from earlier law , in which it is not attested .
29 This view is supported by postmortem studies of brain tissue which have shown that there are more dopamine sensitive sites on the surfaces of cells taken from schizophrenics than are found in normal brains .
30 This view is essentially anthropomorphic ; we are mammals after all and it is perhaps comforting to think that our own distant relatives so directly proved their supremacy over slow-witted reptiles that had nothing to fight with but their bulk .
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