It argued that the more probable response in any pair of responses could reinforce the less probable response demonstrating that reinforcement is a relative, not an absolute property.
12.
Dolaucothi was presented to the National Trust in 1941 subject to the life interest of the owner, Mr Lloyd-Johnes, on whose death in 1956, it became the absolute property of the trust.
13.
Any property possessed by a Hindu female is to be held by her absolute property and she is given full power to deal with it and dispose it of by will as she likes.
14.
According to the relational approach, the assumption that objects possess absolute properties ( such as an absolute particle, independent of any detection frame ) inevitably leads to ambiguities and paradoxes when these objects are studied closely.
15.
From their point of view, Skolem's paradox simply shows that countability is not an absolute property in first order logic . ( Kunen 1980 p . 141; Enderton 2001 p . 152; Burgess 1977 p . 406 ).
16.
The trophy became an absolute property to JS Kabylie who have won it outright following their third successive win in 2002 being the one and only team in Africa who is able to show the trophy in his trophy room.
17.
The case exemplifies a tradition in early 19th century United States patent caselaw in which patents were regarded specifically as an absolute property right to exclusive use of the invention, rather than requiring a balancing between public and private interests.
18.
Crutchfield's explanation reverses the argument by saying that C minor and F major do not have absolute properties in themselves, but those properties arise instead from our reaction to Beethoven's reaction to music he wrote in three flats or one flat.
19.
In the letter, King named the university " the Repository of my correspondence " and wrote : " In the event of my death, all such material deposited with the University shall become from that date the absolute property of Boston University ."
20.
That the finder of a jewel, though he does not by such finding acquire an absolute property or ownership, yet he has such a property as will enable him to keep it against all but the rightful owner, and subsequently may maintain trover.