Some of the ideas have been dismissed
as crazy notions, but others have been taken more seriously.
Not exact matches
It is this false and extremely non-biblical (
as if that was our only authority) idea that has lead to some of the
crazy notions coming from the church of the dark ages and infiltrating many people's thought processes today.
Some people have a
crazy notion that they'll believe stuff when it's proven true, not that they'll believe it
as long
as it's not proven false.
Jane Nelsen in her book Positive Discipline A-Z describes these thoughts
as «
crazy notions» because they not only damage self esteem, but invite discouragement and even depression.
I am so happy to see a manufactuer put to rest the
crazy notion that dish detergent could be used on something
as intimate
as cloth diapers.
Peer reviewed literature also supports the
crazy notion that absorbed energy doesn't just disappear into the aether, and is just
as likely to be re-emitted in the general direction from whence it came
as it is to be spat out in roughly the same direction it was going.
Moreover, the
notion that he was trying to «bolster his image
as somewhat of a maverick» is
crazy.
The inherent contradiction is akin to so many others we see in Silicon Valley — like the illusion of transparency in an industry culture of extreme secrecy or Facebook's conviction of its own political potency in ad sales at the same time — that its chief executive waved off the
notion that his company «influenced the election in any way»
as a «
crazy idea.»