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==Work Area==
 
==Work Area==
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{| width="100%"
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| width="40%" |  
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| width="60%" | ''All rising to Great Place is by a Winding Staire''
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|-
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|   || — Francis Bacon, ''Essays, Civil and Moral'' (1625)
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<br>
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{| width="100%"
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| width="40%" | &nbsp;
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| width="60%" | ''Hit's a-comin', boys.  Tell yore folks hit's a-comin'.''
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|-
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| &nbsp; || — Thomas Wolfe, ''O Lost, A Story of the Buried Life''
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<br>
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{| width="100%"
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| width="40%" | &nbsp;
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| width="60%" | Ye knowe eek, that in forme of speche is chaunge
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|-
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| &nbsp; || With-inne a thousand yeer, and wordes tho
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|-
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| &nbsp; || That hadden prys, now wonder nyce and straunge
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|-
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| &nbsp; || Us thinketh hem;  and yet they spake hem so,
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|-
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| &nbsp; || And spedde as wel in love as men now do;
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|-
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| &nbsp; || Eek for to winne love in sondry ages,
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|-
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| &nbsp; || In sondry londes, sondry been usages.
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|-
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| &nbsp; || — [[Geoffrey Chaucer]], [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Troilus_and_Criseyde ''Troilus and Criseyde'' (1385)]
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| &nbsp; || — Geoffrey Chaucer, "The Squire's Tale"
 
| &nbsp; || — Geoffrey Chaucer, "The Squire's Tale"
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<br>
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{| width="100%"
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| align="left"  | ''Stand and unfold yourself.''
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| align="right" | Hamlet: Francsico&mdash;1.1.2
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<br>
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{| align="right"
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<p>Out of the dimness opposite equals advance . . . .<br>
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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Always substance and increase,<br>
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Always a knit of identity . . . . always distinction . . . .<br>
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&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;always a breed of life.</p>
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|-
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| align="right" | &mdash; Walt Whitman, ''Leaves of Grass'', [Whi, 28]
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|}
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{{-}}
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{| width="100%"
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| width="3%"  | &nbsp;
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| width="94%" |
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<p>''Logical'', however, is used in a third sense, which is at once more vital and more practical;  to denote, namely, the systematic care, negative and positive, taken to safeguard reflection so that it may yield the best results under the given conditions.</p>
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| width="3%"  | &nbsp;
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|-
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| align="right" colspan="3" | &mdash; John Dewey, ''How We Think'', [Dew, 56]
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