... CLAUSEOF REASON
1. Hundreds of species of Hawaiian flowers have become extinct or rare ___ land development and the grazing of
wild goats.
A. now that B. due ... though c. In spite of d. Despite of
9._______ they are brothers, they do not look like.
a. Although b. Even c. Despite d. In spite of
10. We are concerned with the problem of energy resources ... Because
19. ___ his parents
’
generosity, all of the children in his family have received the best of anything.
A. Due to the fact that B. Because of C. Because D. Since
20. ___ she has a job,...
... should you do to……………… the environment ? ( keep / protect / prevent
/ reduce)
4. ……………… is one of the cause of flood. ( Forest / Forestry / Deforestation /
Forests)
5. We …………… up our neighborhood ... teacher is………….………….that I pass the examination. (PLEASE)
8. If we …………… …………… the water, a lot of fish will die.(POLLUTION)
IV. Make complete sentences using the cues . Then combine the two...
... interesting
32. I have never seen __________ people in one place.
A. so much B. so many C. so much of D. this many of
33. We have heard __________about you.
A. so many news B. so much news C. a lot news ... money B. money enough for vacation
C. enough money for vacation D. enough money for vacation
CLAUSEOF RESULT
1. My mouth is burning! This is ___________ spicy food that I don’t think I can finish ... spent __________ money buying movie tickets that he didn’t have enough left to buy a soft drink.
A. such B. a lot of C. too much D. so much
4. It was _________that we went for a hike in the mountain.
A....
... don’t use this road very often.
A. This road is not used very often. B. Not very often this road is not used.
C. This road very often is not used. D. This road not very often is used.
47. How do ... though c. In spite of d. Despite of
9._______ they are brothers, they do not look like.
a. Although b. Even c. Despite d. In spite of
10. We are concerned with the problem of energy resources ... sometimes have a quarrel d. of having a quarrel sometimes
32. Despite _______, we arrived on time.
a. the traffic b. of the traffic c. there was heavy traffic d. of there was heavy traffic
33....
... had happened.
A. so that not B. so as not to C. in order that D. so as to
33. He does morning exercises regularly __________ improve his health.
A. so as to B. and C. to D. so as not to
34. ... candle ______ he might read the note.
A. so that B. and C. because D. as a result
36. He turned off the lights before going out _____ waste electricity.
A. so that not B. as not to C. in order ... not to C. in order that not D. in other to
44. Many bridges in London are covered with wooden roofs _________ it can be protected from rain and snow.
A. so that not B. so as to C. in order that...
... in our conception of
human mentality. Frank Lorimer's The Growth of Reason
bears the sub-title: "A Study of the Role of Verbal Activity
in the Growth and Structure of the Human Mind." ... of general propositions is nothing more nor less than
philosophy; and so another vital age ofReason began.
The wonderful flights of imagination and feeling inspired
by the rise and triumph of ... assumptions
a certain limited number of types of philosophic systems are
possible, and this group of systems constitutes the philosophy
of the epoch."
2
Some years ago, Professor C. D. Burns published...
...
sensory
cortex
of our
brains : how
the smell of
baking
bread
,
the sound of
an
oboe
,
the taste of
a
peach
,
and
the color of
a sunrise are
all embodied
in a
vast chorus of
neural ... lore contains a
humble
analog
of this timesaving
trick
.
Faced with the
problem
of
cutting
the stem ends off
each and
every
one of a
large
bag
of
green
.
beans before
tossing
them ...
and of
reducing
its
level
of
activation
.
What
we
have here
is
a
simple
tug
-
of
-
war between
the
excitatory
effects
of
the T
-
element
cells
and
the
inhibitory
effects
of...
... set of people who allegedly desire bad things, the masochists of (e). In
short, the function of the passage is conclusively to eliminate one of the last two
sets of people from the class of those ... The main point is
that given the doxastic base of conventional or traditional belief of the dialogues,
22 trials of reason
In view of the dichotomy of philosophy and antiphilosophy, in the early
dialogues ... objects of desire may have. Quite the reverse of Meno, then, Socrates
understands fineness in terms of his, that is, Socrates’, conception of goodness.
17
Following the redescription of fine...
... constitutes the other sense of ‘the retreat ofreason ,
namely that ofreason retreating (from the ruling position in one’s personality). The
extent of this withdrawal ofreason will vary in relation ... of ‘a sensation of pain’. A description like ‘the type of sensation that is
an effect of cause C and that causes behaviour B’ can be used to fix the reference or denota-
tion of ‘a sensation of ... sums of fulfilment
against degrees of inequality in the distribution of it. The point is just to bring out that, if
an egalitarian maximization to the effect of all being as equally well off as...
... modes of understanding and reason. Most of Kant’s initial
30 THE GATHERING OF REASON
xii THE GATHERING OF REASON
B
ut is it merely a matter of restoring the issue, of reopening the question
of ... problem of reason
back into the original issue of ó␥o as gathering, of uncovering those
traces of the original sense which continue to operate, subliminally,
within the concept of reason. It ... the present instance,
the reflection of the Kantian concept ofreason back into its Greek ori-
gin, the translation ofreason into ó␥o, the posing ofreason as
gathering. But the horizon...
... The
work, as well as the play, ofreason takes place at the intersection of
what is ofreason s own making and what is not of its own making—
even when the exercise ofreason enables humanity to ... relationship ofreason in its practical employment (i.e., freedom)
to nature is at the heart of the enterprise of critique. Once reason has
learned the first lesson of self-discipline ofreason to ... use—the ambition of providing an account of the work-
ings of the world of nature articulated in terms of a set of unconditioned
principles—the first Critique deals with only one of the activities...