| James Thomas Young - 1915 - 726 páginas
...continuous and connected operation of the whole. This is no denial of the mathematical proposition that the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts, because there is a value created by and resulting from the combined operation of all its parts as one... | |
| Homer Bews Vanderblue - 1917 - 250 páginas
...continuous and connected operation of the whole. This is no denial of the mathematical proposition that the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts, because there is a value created by and resulting from the combined operation of all its parts as one... | |
| Homer Bews Vanderblue - 1917 - 248 páginas
...continuous and connected operation of the whole. This is no denial of the mathematical proposition that the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts, because there is a value created by and resulting from the combined operation of all its parts as one... | |
| Helen Thomas Follett, Wilson Follett - 1918 - 388 páginas
...us in great segments and slabs of actuality. Both writers stand as exponents of the artistic theorem that the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts ; Tono-Bungay and Marriage, Clayhanger and The Old Wives' Tale mean simply what they are. The worth... | |
| Walter Hines Page, Arthur Wilson Page - 1920 - 962 páginas
...thus to delude himself and others, for, as long as two and two make four and it continue to be true that the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts, it will remain perfectly plain that $1,500,000,000 can not be got out of the air, and that if it is... | |
| 1916 - 856 páginas
...plants we would expect in the case of belladonna to find, in accordance with the mathematical principle that "the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts", that the existing records of the action of atropin, plus the existing records of the action of hyoscyamin,... | |
| Arnon Wallace Welch - 1924 - 230 páginas
...necessary divisions of labor and specialized activities with common democratic ideals, and realize that "the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts," we shall see that real progress of the whole nation requires the symmetrical development of all its... | |
| Hiram Thompson Scovill - 1926 - 480 páginas
...the general ledger trial balance is completed. count is found principally in the old geometric truth that " the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts." Applying this to the Accounts Receivable account illustrated on page 49 it is observed first that the... | |
| William Beaty Lawrence - 1925 - 552 páginas
...in a subsidiary record or ledger. The mathematical principle which governs controlling accounts is that the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts. In accounting this principle is applied by making one posting to the controlling account which is equal... | |
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