Example sentences of "chapter i " in BNC.

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1 In the remainder of this chapter I will explore some of the ambiguities and problems which face those who set out to research the police and assess some of the fears of the academic incursion into police society .
2 In this chapter I propose to link the idea of subjective knowledge to an exploration of the insider 's personal history .
3 In the last chapter I outlined certain similarities between karate competition and boxing .
4 In practice one can only talk about one thing at a time , and in this Chapter I shall risk a distorting simplicity by looking at questions of theory largely in isolation from institutional matrices and situations , and concentrating on British activities to the exclusion of the American ones that accompanied or preceded them .
5 In an earlier Chapter I argued that the canon is ‘ bursting ’ , because of the advent of other anglophone literatures , and the increasing interest in contemporary writing .
6 In the present Chapter I have written of movements in theory in the present tense , whereas what is ideally required is something grammatically subtler — perhaps there are languages where it exists — like a special tense in which the present extends back to include actions or events that are already in the recent past .
7 In this chapter I shall write only about women in the last group and their position in the British labour market since very little has been written about them .
8 In the first chapter I argued that the fact that the Scots settlers and the Irish natives were respectively Calvinists and Roman Catholics had profound consequences for the development of social conflict .
9 In this chapter I have once more attempted to describe the work of two pioneers , while at the same time using their work as a platform for discussion of issues which are crucial to my own philosophy .
10 In this chapter I have attempted to show that early experiences in England of Religious Drama were partially equated with a ‘ game ’ or a ‘ pastime ’ and as such avoided the charge of blasphemy or sacrilege .
11 In the first chapter I attempt to set out some of the different forms of theism and atheism .
12 In the next chapter I examine further the idea that believers in God may be less than certain of God 's existence .
13 In the last chapter I introduced the ‘ uncertainty principle ’ , the idea that belief in God was more compatible with a degree of uncertainty that God existed than with certainty of His existence .
14 In the course of this chapter I have taken an historical perspective upon the nature of religious belief , looking in particular at writers from the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries .
15 In this chapter I have deliberately not concentrated upon analysing lists of attributes .
16 In this chapter I have done more to highlight some of the problems in reaching a definition of God than to offer a solution of my own .
17 In this Chapter I shall begin by briefly considering the ( rather wide ) range of interference theories that have been applied to latent inhibition .
18 In that chapter I treated the habituation experiment as a form of recognition memory task in which subjects compare current sensory input with representations of previous inputs .
19 In this chapter I shall describe the genital region in man and woman and discuss some aspects of normal sexual function and variations in sexual behaviour
20 In this chapter I shall try to locate our present concerns in a pattern of historical development , and seek to excavate from this a prognosis for the viability of current strategies and initiatives .
21 In this chapter I have concentrated on the image of the inner city as a battle-ground — a battleground on which opposing forces , ideas , and values can be identified .
22 To end this chapter I would like to return to the question of livestock farming and take a further look at the balance that has to be drawn between animal welfare , conservation and protecting the environment .
23 In this chapter I have described some aspects of platelet physiology and biochemistry and the possible role of this interesting cell in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and thrombosis .
24 Earlier in the chapter I referred to ‘ judicious ’ ignoring ; you have to judge when it is best to ignore certain childish actions .
25 Looking back over this chapter I am struck by the dreadful pitfalls which seem to beset every step which the sociologist might contemplate taking in documentary research .
26 In this chapter I have also endeavoured to clarify the relationship between the soft systems approach and other more conventional methods of examination .
27 Nonetheless , it is always useful to have some general guidelines , and in this final chapter I have gathered together many of the points that , from my personal experience , are worth bearing in mind when embarking on such a project .
28 In this chapter I discuss what we need to know before we start on our travels , which I call examining the context of the curriculum and Malcolm Skilbeck refers to as ‘ situational analysis ’ .
29 In this chapter I look back over responses to the challenges of curriculum planning and development in Africa in the ‘ sixties and ‘ seventies .
30 In this chapter I have attempted to draw a distinction between the targets we set and our ability to hit them .
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