- determinism.
Immanuel Kant
called it a "wretched subterfuge" and "word
jugglery". Kant's
argument turns on the view that,
while all
empirical phenomena...
-
Ancient Gr**** word γοητεία (goēteía)
meaning "charm", "witchcraft", or "
jugglery". In
medieval and
Renaissance Europe,
goetia was
generally considered evil...
- that
means Indra's net, magic, deception, fraud, illusion, conjuring,
jugglery,
sorcery etc. In
Hinduism the
first creator of maya in this
universe was...
-
translates as "eel-wrigglers,"
probably in
reference to
their "verbal
jugglery." They are
collectively spoken of as "some
recluse and
brahmins who wriggle...
- expression. M. L.
Rosenthal wrote that: The
chief effect of ****mings'
jugglery with syntax, grammar, and
diction was to blow open
otherwise trite and...
- 18th century,
verbally tricky Odia
became the
order of the day.
Verbal jugglery and
eroticism characterise the
period between 1700 and 1850, particularly...
- no
appreciation of a
fixed habitat and are
given to mimicry, begging,
jugglery, dancing, etc.
Communities consisting largely of
agricultural and landless...
- Uruzgan,
Bamiyan and Dai
Kundi peddling bangles,
cloth or haberdashery;
jugglery and
snake charming Inku ****
Baloch northern,
western and
southern Afghanistan...
- drummers, and are a
strictly endogamous group. The
dholi are also
involved in
jugglery, palmistry, and
fortune telling. Historically, they were also the sellers...
-
metaphysical treatises.
There is
nothing but an
endless round of
verbal jugglery there. Read
Rousseau and Voltaire,
Plato and Aristotle,
Haeckel and Spencer...