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Part 5 of today's quote
Answer for the clue "Part 5 of today's quote ", 7 letters:
teaches
Alternative clues for the word teaches
Word definitions for teaches in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. (en-third-person singular of: teach )
Usage examples of teaches.
But the history of science - by far the most successful claim to knowledge accessible to humans - teaches that the most we can hope for is successive improvement in our understanding, learning from our mistakes, an asymptotic approach to the Universe, but with the proviso that absolute certainty will always elude us.
Shall it find its old place on the shores of the Gulf of Salerno, or shall it mingle its rays with the northern aurora up among the fiords of Norway,--or shall it be borne across the Atlantic and reach the banks of the Charles, where Agassiz and Wyman have taught, where Hagen still teaches, glowing like his own Lampyris splendidula, with enthusiasm, where the first of American botanists and the ablest of American surgeons are still counted in the roll of honor of our great University?
After all, if true, either hypothesis - invasion by sexually manipulative extraterrestrials or an epidemic of hallucinations - teaches us something we certainly ought to know about.
Science teaches us about the deepest issues of origins, natures and fates-of our species, of life, of our planet, of the Universe.
Our imagination and our needs require more, they feel, than the comparatively little that science teaches we may be reasonably sure of.
Is the Eucharist, as the Church teaches, in fact and not just as productive metaphor, the flesh of Jesus Christ, or is it, chemically, microscopically and in other ways, just a wafer handed to you by a priest?
The best part of our knowledge is that which teaches us where knowledge leaves off and ignorance begins.
And this, again, teaches us that we should be like the Messiah in this also, not to judge after the sight of our eyes, nor to reprove after the hearing of our ears.
Quintilian teaches us in his Institutes that it is only a good man who can be a really great orator.
A humble-minded man may not have learning enough to know the etymology of the name which best describes his character, but the divine nature which is in him teaches him to look down, to walk meekly and softly, and to speak seldom, and always in love.
From the array of books covering one wall of the breakfast room, Martin deduces that she teaches sociology, though he is hazy about what this means.