Not exact matches
Spurred by findings of a paper by Sabrino Kornrich, Julie Brines and Katarina Leupp published in the American Sociological Review, the
article argues that, «too much similarity in egalitarian marriages
leads to boredom and decreased sexual frequency».
One of them — in fact, the
lead one in the
article arguing for the soul's subsistence — is quite inextricably bound up in Aristotle's very crude physiology of perception.
In this
article, I
argue that the unrest in North Africa is far from North Africa - bound and that the failure of governments and sopra state bodies to coordinate will
lead to an expansion of the chaos.
In a
leading article The Independent
argues that «Conservative messages have become increasingly contradictory».
Dr. Robert Lustig, one of the
leading experts on childhood obesity, and arguably the number one enemy of the sugar lobby, has published a well written
article in the prestigious scientific journal Nature
arguing that sugar is a poison.1
Those cited in the
article who criticize those in favor of upgrading technology first and asking questions later about how it will impact student achievement are exactly right, as Bror Saxberg — one of the
leading thinkers in understanding how to use technology to bolster learning —
argues here.
This
article argues that a fund may not provide the greatest current yield (usually, this implies less risk) but if the fund holds quality holdings, it will provide a more stable income stream and potentially
lead to more capital growth in the longer term.
Zero Hedge has an
article Buy Cash At A Discount: These Companies Have Negative Enterprise Value in which Tyler Durden
argues that stock market manipulation has
led to valuation dislocations, and gives as evidence the phenomenon of stocks trading with a negative enterprise value (EV):
Zero Hedge has an
article Buy Cash At A Discount: These Companies Have Negative Enterprise Value in which Tyler Durden
argues that stock market manipulation has
led to valuation dislocations, and g...
In a 2002 Science
article by New York University physicist Martin Hoffert and 16 other
leading energy experts, Hoffert et al.
argued that, «although regulation can play a role, the fossil fuel greenhouse effect is an energy problem that can not be simply regulated away.»
In this
Article I will
argue that, even if legal educators wish to embrace a more progressive vision of the profession, and even if we agree that legal education should take the
lead in bringing it about, the Carnegie Report's perspective is far too narrow.
The Commission, however,
argues that EU competition law seeks to bring about equal conditions of competition,
leading to the conclusion that just maintaining inequality in the conditions of competition suffices for a violation of
Article 106 (1) in connection with 102 TFEU.
This
article on the KevinMD blog
argued that pay - for - performance schemes can
lead to overdiagnosis and overtreatment, using the example of antibiotic prescribing.
A 2016 CNBC
article argues that Snapchat offers potential buyers a «behind - the - scenes» view of properties for sale or rent and allows brokers and their agents to interact with
leads through private messages to offer more information and arrange viewings.