Sentences with phrase «by the consequences seems»

The duty of the individual to determine his own conduct and profit or suffer by the consequences seems, on the contrary, to be one of our best rooted contemporary Protestant social ideals.

Not exact matches

Thus, if we recognize this part of human nature, we can avoid falling victim to the negative consequences of embracing false beliefs by actively researching topics that may seem preposterous to us if we have no direct experience with such topics.
It seems more logical to see the debt buildups decried by Rogoff as not simply exogenous events but rather the consequence of a growing excess of saving over investment and the easy monetary policies necessary to maintain full employment.
The volatility seems to be a consequence of a world in which prices are being driven by the money - printing, or lack thereof, by central bankers.
To the German people, stunned by the war and the consequences of defeat, their former optimism shattered and spent, shuddering to contemplate the debt - darkened years of the future, Barth in the phase of his dreadful insight into the futility of all search for security must seem a veritable Jeremiah, and his teaching an evilly perfect rationalization of their indigence and perplexity.
His basic argument seems to be that although the people from Adam to Moses did not sin by breaking a command (as Adam did), they still suffered the consequences of sin (death).
You admit that you made a bad decision by choosing to read them and now you're living with the consequences but they seem a bit too harsh in your soul.
It would seem that creeds should be judged by their truth value and codes by their social consequences.
And it seems to me certain, on the other hand, that by the very fact of making this simple readjustment in our «eschatological» vision we shall have performed an operation having incalculable consequences.
As a cultural conservative, I am inclined to deeply regret the corrosive, dissolving consequences of our mobile, ever - changing society, as much destroyed by economic vitality, it seems, as enriched.
It may seem that to emphasize the pervasive operation of the Holy Spirit, as well as to stress the Spirit's focal action in the life of Jesus and its consequences, will in the end reduce men and women to mere automatons used by God with no respect for their freedom, their dignity, and their own responsible decisions, without any personal or social human contribution to the process.
If God were to try to stop me sinning, how many thoughts, impulses, initiatives, which seem to us good, innocent, harmless pleasures etc., would have to be forbidden in their first movements by a «good angel» who would know the ultimate consequences.
Yet, when judged by biblical and religious insight, such consequences seem patently false or absurd.
Discussing the language of war, Aldous Huxley focused on the word «force»: «The attempt to secure justice, peace and democracy by «force» seems reasonable enough until we realize, first, that this non-committal word stands, in the circumstances of our age, for activities which can hardly fail to result in social chaos; and second, that the consequences of social chaos are injustice, chronic warfare and tyranny» (The Olive Tree [Harper & Row, 1937]-RRB-.
Suffice it to say that the conceptuality which I accept — and accept because it seems to do justice to deep analysis of human experience and observation, as well as to the knowledge we now have of the way «things go» in the world — lays stress on the dynamic «event» character of that world; on the inter-relationships which exist in what is a societal universe, on the inadequacy of «substance» thinking to describe such a universe of «becoming» and «belonging», on the place of decisions in freedom by the creatures with the consequences which such decisions bring about, and on the central importance of persuasion rather than coercive force as a clue to the «going» of things in that universe.
The attitude in both camps seems to be: You stick by your guy, we'll stick by our guy, regardless of the consequences.
A squad player for County the following two seasons, he chipped in with a few goals, including a brace in the vital win over Grimsby in 2005/6 to stave off the spectre of successive relegations, but never made it into double figures and also had something of an attitude problem — probably the consequence of being worshipped by a family for whom he could, it seemed, do no wrong.
For many parents, it seems almost instinctive to respond to a child's uncooperative behavior by imposing (or threatening) a consequence.
In fact, it seems that Similac confuses the concept of mothers supporting and respecting one another, a practice much favored by our own LLLI, with the idea that feeding choices have equal consequences.10
Today, again, Europe has become enthralled by «the bull» and it seems the consequences are equally unfavorable.
The Ben & Jerry's decision, unless (as my NMS colleague Soren Dayton pointed out) it's being driven by some kind of U.K. - specific restrictions that make email marketing less effective, seems to reflect one of two things: either a bean - counter followed the instinct to cut costs in the short term regardless of the long - term consequences, or a marketing executive took a big drink of the social media Kool Aid.
Seems to me, Spain and Portugal are much more «Catholic» than the US and they have not experienced any «unintended consequences» by having marriage equality.
He put it like this: «It seems to me that, if the matter of our sun and planets, and all the matter of the Universe, were evenly scattered throughout all the heavens, and every particle had an innate gravity towards all the rest, and the whole space throughout which this matter was scattered, was finite, the matter on the outside of this space would by its gravity tend towards all the matter on the inside, and by consequence fall down into the middle of the whole space, and there compose one spherical mass.
While parents certainly seem to shape child behavior, parenting also is influenced by the child's behavior — in other words, parenting is both a cause and a consequence of child behavior.
The characters specifically Diane Kruger is brilliant with a portrayal of obsessive sometimes funny cop who is hell - bent on solving the any case she gets with worrying of consequences, the character played by of Marco Ruiz is quite different from Diane's character but the chemistry or sometimes no chemistry between the character keeps it fun to watch The underline script of tv series seems to be quite strong sometimes it surpasses most of the good detective novels i have read.
What isn't strange, however, is that the resulting film, directed by Peyton Reed, seems weaker as a consequence of Wright's departure.
And there are sobering moments of significant contemplation, such as the dire consequences of reporting regarding the fate of a man Kim specifically references in her first segment (a detail which seems horribly illogical in the first place) but these are followed by bits of absurdity, such as Kim becoming the conduit for a group of Afghan women who keep blowing up a well the marines keep digging for their benefit (shades of Fernando Leon de Aranoa's A Perfect Day here).
by Ian Pugh After decades of legal wrangling, producer Kevin McClory had finally won the right to make an autonomous James Bond flick out of Ian Fleming's Thunderball, and 1983 seemed like the perfect time to capitalize on it, what with resident Bond Roger Moore's age catching up with him and the original series running out of steam as a consequence.
The plot of this film seems to mirror the plot of the original movie: a group of med students attempt to discover the secrets of death by killing themselves and then bringing themselves back to life which, of course, has unintended supernatural consequences.
They seemed equally troubled by the potential consequences of changing course, worrying that a higher standard would impose unreasonable costs on school districts.
One of the unwitting consequences of focusing on single parts is the seeming failure by many to see the fundamental change occurring outside the school walls; the impact of digital normalisation on the young, their parents and society, and the dramatic transformation that has been occurring in schools operating on a digital base (Lee & Broadie, 2014).
Whatever the case, Harkin and his colleagues don't seem like they are going to ask any hard questions about the efficacy of the process by which the Obama administration is granting the waivers, the consequences of the gambit on the systemic reforms needed to help all children get high - quality education, or whether the waiver gambit is legal in the first place.
It seems to me an escapist story and this is one of the themes of the book: how culture and especially western litterature becomes a way of escaping the surrounding materialist and oppressed by the mao dictature daily life... magic escape and its consequences... a story that when begun cant be stopped
The consensus opinion seems to be that ETN gains (or losses) will be treated as capital gains (or losses) but the tax consequences are by no means settled.
Unfortunately, the company seems oblivious to the consequences of their actions, not realizing the perceived victory it handed to the online hate groups who are now pursuing the dismissal of other women game developers by derision and defamation to their companies.
Having read other material on the consequences and relationships of CCN's and lifetimes regarding papers that have been written, it seems that a lot of the papers coming from the Svensmark angle, so to speak, are not conclusive enough of definitive impact in the impact potentials for global warming, to jsutify the claims made by Svensmark, or the press about his, or similar, work.
To be fair there are also good things happening (innovations, new determinations followed by effective actions to «do good,» etc), but it seems with all the negative consequences (for humans and other living things), an honest forecast bringining in everything conceivalbe would probably be much much worse than a climate change scenario.....
By the way, Gavin Schmidt seems clueless about Kyoto and the consequences of the US withdrawal back then.
This reasoning is mirrored in the cognitive laboratory, where people's responses are also often informed by the consequences associated with competing paths of action (the data are quite complex but it seems safe to conclude that most people are sensitive to weighting the outcomes of competing actions rather than being exclusively entrenched in immutable moral rules).
And it's downright deceitful to focus on this minucia while ignoring the bigger picture of a warming globe and increasingly stressful extreme weather events that will continue inflicting greater damage on a complex society that seems to be committed to ignoring the consequences of increasing our planet's atmosphere's insulating medium (GHGs) by a third.
Also, the rise in CO2 seems to proceed temp rise by hundreds of years (figure 2), but we are currently supposed to be experiencing CO2 rise with near immediate consequences.
Even subsidies that seem quite good at first usually later turn out to be bad (corn ethanol) because of the law of unintended consequences, and governments are very bad at picking the right technologies because of political interference, pressure by special interests and multi-year lag in decision - making.
As the rate of growth of this technology seems to be outstripping the rate at which people are thinking about the consequences, it is good news that Carnegie Mellon University just received a $ 10 million gift dedicated to studying the ethical issues posed by artificial intelligence.
Based on discussions with my colleagues Rong Zhang and Mike Winton, this seems to be a consequence of an AMOC (Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation) which builds in strength when the aerosol cooling is strong, trying to balance a part of the cooling at the surface with warm waters advected in from the tropics, but also — by a process that is not particularly straightforward — cools the subsurface waters.
What Article 28 (3) with its omission of public policy grounds seems to suggest in my view is that — to a certain extent — the mere fact of a 10 years residence has created a link between the EU citizen and the host Member State that is similar to the link between a national and its state; as a consequence expulsion can only be a valid means if this link is deliberately destroyed by the EU citizen; this would be the case of a serious security threat, i.e. an individual determined to engage in actions that jeopardize the security of the host Member State's society at large, which could indeed be the case of organized crime.
The requirement that a filing include the label «prepared by a lawyer» may seem insignificant, but forgetting that designation can result in substantial consequences — including suspension.
Since A's spouse seems to know about the relationship and is unaffected by the information, giving over the thumb drive would not have any of the consequences outlined under the definition of «threat» in the law, such as revealing secrets, or harming a relationship.
Additionally, the existence in the news of several high profile breaches with legal consequences seemed to emphasize the topic as ripe for discussion - and action - by the legal technology community.
A decision by the Privacy Commissioner on this question seems likely to have had few consequences for anything other than the meaning of s 56 (3) of FOIPP.
By suggesting people like the billboard models are awaiting divorcees, the divorce process is trivialized and made to seem of little consequence, since there are other fish in the sea worth pursuing.
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