快好知 kuaihz


locke造句
1 Locke originated this theory in the 17th century. 2 Locke was evidently not prepared to accept this. 3 Another big favourite was 75-year-old tenor Josef Locke. 4 Locke gives much the same explanation. 5 Gary Locke estimated losses totaling billions of dollars, as damage reports of highways, homes and businesses continued to trickle in. 6 Lawson and Locke sit in Section 4, Row K, closer to home plate than third base. 7 Locke also suggests that a man's presence in a particular state implies tacit consent to its political system. 8 Locke faces the objection that there is no historical evidence for his account of the creation of political authority. 9 His ballgame companion, Marge Locke, is just as avid a fan. 10 Even though he did not actually advocate it, Locke certainly did much to foster such rational deism. 11 One, deriving from Hobbes and Locke, regards the consent given as an expression of rational enlightened self-interest. 12 It is clear that for Locke the perception model of faith created an unsatisfactory barrier between those with faith and those without. 13 Philosophy and religion Locke and the sense of sight Locke's philistinism was in no sense an aberration. 14 Locke is anxious to defend his political philosophy against the accusation that it encourages rebellion. 15 Unlike Locke, it does not possess the assurance of having won the argument on that ground. 16 He started a scrapbook of snippets from John Locke and other admired mentors. 17 For Locke the separate compartments for faith and reason, or reason and revelation, did not exist. 18 Here Locke draws a parallel between modes such as triangles, and substances such as gold and the Strasburg clock. 19 Against this background Locke begins his inquiry into the origin and extent of knowledge. 20 Locke is Obama's third nominee for secretary of commerce. 21 Locke: Work papers and stuff. I'm a home inspector. 22 Plato, Locke, Hegel, Spencer, are such temperamental thinkers. 23 John Locke was very much influenced by Boyle. 24 The industrial estate was planned by the railway engineer Joseph Locke. 25 Without even bothering to change from his ultra closed stance, Locke produced a brace of exquisitely faded woods. 26 This passage, among other things, mocks a woman who reads Locke. 27 Apart from one being inward and the other outward, Locke regards reflection and sensation as being very similar. 28 Though it did not appear until relatively late in his life, Locke had been working on the Essay since about 1660. 29 Short of murder, whatever occurred between husband and wife was not considered by Locke to be of public concern. 30 A similar point was made by the seventeenth-century philosopher John Locke, who saw it as an insoluble mystery.