He tests his theory of exploitation using game theory to construct'contingently feasible alternative states'where the exploited agents could improve their welfare by'withdrawing'with their share of society's alienable and inalienable assets.
12.
The other major option is to assert that mental events are either ( at least contingently ) identical to physical events, or functionalism, claims that mental events are individuated ( or constituted by ) the causal role they play.
13.
The empirical part of physics deals with contingently true phenomena, like what kind of physical entities there are and the relations in which they stand; the non-empirical part deals with fundamental concepts like space, time, and matter.
14.
On 11 April, as they were in the town of Toguchi, they received further orders to push all the way to the tip of Motobu along the coastal road and secure the town of Bise and as contingently guard against any Japanese forces concluding to counter-attack from seaward.
15.
At the penultimate stage the plaintiffs'money was represented by an indistinguishable part of a different chose in action, viz . the debt prospectively and contingently due from an insurance company to its policyholders, being the trustees of a settlement made by Mr . Murphy for the benefit of his children.
16.
On the basis of his knowledge of such counterfactuals of free will and his knowledge of his own decree to create certain creatures in certain circumstances, along with his own decision how he himself shall act, God automatically knows everything that will actually and contingently happen, without any perception of the world.
17.
Early works of Mihovil Logar, conceived in Prague and upon his return from the Conservatory feature bold musical language, expanded tonality that often crosses into atonality, and rhapsodic, contingently free form, qualifying this period of the composer s work to often be labeled as expressionistic ( Peri i, Masnikosa ).
18.
Aristotle's " Prior Analytics " did not, however, incorporate such a comprehensive theory on the " modal syllogism " a syllogism that has at least one modalized premise ( that is, a premise containing the modal words'necessarily','possibly', or'contingently').
19.
Any combination of scaffolding means with scaffolding intention can be construed as a scaffolding strategy, however, whether a teaching strategy qualifies as good scaffolding generally depends upon its enactment in actual practice and more specifically upon whether the strategy is applied contingently and whether it is also part of a process of fading and transfer of responsibility.
20.
In daily life it is never so used, and one scarcely ever speaks of space-time points . " Carnap then puts forward that an exact artificial language ought to clarify the problem by defining'green'( or its synonym ) as something that is either necessarily or contingently not applied to space-time points.