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Membership into these societies was based on brave acts and deeds.
But this was Isambard's own act and deed.
But because of this transcendental freedom, as opposed to empirical necessity, every act and deed is a person's own responsibility.
It is a concept that condemns acts and deeds that seem unfair even in the slightest.
These battles are sometimes referenced as historical events by accounts which do not cross-check the stories in Acts and Deeds against another source.
More than a leader and supporter of the organized bar, Judge Sobel by act and deed epitomized all that is good about the profession of law.
Most historians nowadays regard Acts and Deeds as a versified historical novel, written at a time of strong anti-English sentiment in Scotland.
Wasn't it the Jarainids of the farthest east, beyond the homelands, who believed that a man's life was an endlessly repeating circle of the same acts and deeds?
Instead, administration officials said today that the solution to the violence did not lie in stepped-up involvement by the United States but rather in acts and deeds by the two parties.
"Yet most of all grant us brotherhood, not only for this day but for all our years - a brotherhood not of words but of acts and deeds.
The work "Sri Thatha Vimsathi" composed on the greatness of Sri Thatha Desikan clearly records various acts and deeds of this great scholar.
A book called The Acts and Deeds of Sir William Wallace, Knight of Elderslie was written by a minstrel named Blind Harry in the 15th century.
"The law says that laymen cannot render opinions as to the mental capacity of one executing a will, but you can certainly testify as to specific acts and deeds that prove an unsound mind."
Blind Harry was active some two hundred years after the events described in his The Acts and Deeds of the Illustrious and Valiant Champion Sir William Wallace, c.1470.
This amounted to the total reported in a sensational pamphlet of 1563, which described as: the true and terrible acts and deeds of the sixty-three witches and sorceresses who were burned at Wiesensteig.
While these acts and deeds were in progress in and out of the office of Sampson Brass, Richard Swiveller, being often left alone therein, began to find the time hang heavy on his hands.
My uniqueness is given but it simultaneously exists only to the degree to which I actualize this uniqueness (in other words, it is in the performed act and deed that has yet to be achieved).
Some accounts have uncritically copied elements from the epic poem, The Acts and Deeds of Sir William Wallace, Knight of Elderslie, written around 1470 by Blind Harry the minstrel.
Kaurwaki's religious and charitable donations were greatly admired by her husband, who commanded the Mahamatras (senior officials) that her donations should be regarded by all officials concerned as her act and deed, redounding to her accumulation of merit.
In the 16th century the French language imposed itself even more by the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts to replace Latin in judgements and official acts and deeds (although the local Oïl languages had always been the language respectively spoken in justice courts).
This book has not been seen in modern times and may never have existed; the poet's attribution of his story to a written text may have been a literary device; many contemporary critics believe that Acts and Deeds is based on oral history and the national traditions of Blind Harry's homeland.
The opposite of all that besottedness was the classical, ethical idea of history as manifested in the Kantian personality who confronts us as the bearer of the moral law the law of act and deed that is itself an essential part of that honesty which man owes to himself: the test of criticism.