His chief book was " Undesigned Coincidences in the Writings both of the Old and New Testaments " ( 1833; fuller edition, 1847 ).
12.
Jonathan Morr, a New York restaurateur who owns Bond Street and Republic, asked her to create an " undesigned " hotel in Miami, called Townhouse.
13.
The project that gave the first impetus to my inquiry has been dissipated into mist, and a new one, undesigned by me, has been accomplished in its place ."
14.
He was Cavour, the other on " Essays and Reviews ", which had the probably undesigned effect of stimulating the attack on the book, attracted especial notice.
15.
Hayek points out that much of science involves the explanation of complex multivariable and nonlinear phenomena, and the social science of economics and undesigned order compares favourably with such complex sciences as Darwinian biology.
16.
It would preserve part of the pit that was the foundation of the twin towers for an as-yet undesigned memorial to the nearly 2, 800 people who died there Sept . 11, 2001.
17.
They typically lack the courage to welcome the same undesigned change from which new tools of human endeavors will emerge . " Still, Hayek's " Road to Serfdom " is used by conservatives to support their economic arguments.
18.
From August 1992 to December 1994 about 105 brigades were formed or reformed in the 1-527 series : 48 infantry or undesigned, 41 mountain, 10 motorized and 6 light, but not all brigades existed at the same time.
19.
In his memoir, Sloan ( who would freely acknowledge that he was not a trained accountant ) said that the system that he implemented in the early 1920s was far better than what it replaced ( which was, in so many words, an undesigned cacophony in which financial controls mostly didn't exist ).
20.
In some European cities, such as Amsterdam and Paris, destruction of parts of the city by fire, warfare and other calamities offered an opportunity for the grid system to be used to replace more evolutionary street layouts, especially in outlying areas, while the central city, often sheltered behind medieval walls, remained organic and undesigned.