Sentences with phrase «decisions on the beliefs»

To be sure, compensation committee members base their decisions on the beliefs and desires of others, and that leaves a wide range of possible outcomes.
If you have no reli gous beli efs you will make your decisions on those beliefs outside of religion.
Minardo based his decision on his belief that the plaintiffs didn't have standing, a statement the Assembly members disagree with.
In finding that the APIs were entitled to protection, the Oracle court based its decision on the belief that the Ninth Circuit would find the APIs copyrightable, because there was more than one way to express them.

Not exact matches

The two - page document, marked «Top Secret,» mentions a draft decision paper that focuses on the «relative merits of retaining [deleted in document] as a high - priority secret national security installation versus the merits of the NASA belief that there would be domestic and foreign problems created by withholding the photograph.»
«Part of our decision rests on our belief that it would not be in your best interests to purchase a meaningful position in corporate debt in this vehicle, which traditionally has been a very important part of our investment mandate.
Michael Bloomberg's decision to endorse Hillary Clinton for the presidency very much reflects his belief — first articulated in a Bloomberg View column earlier this year — that Donald Trump «has run the most divisive and demagogic presidential campaign» the former New York mayor can remember, «preying on people's prejudices and fears.»
His decision to sell out in May was based on a belief that oil prices had gone too far too fast, not that the bull market for oil - or for that matter, commodities of all kinds - has ended.
In essence, a prevailing belief B2B buying decisions were exclusively very rational and based on comparative options.
I don't just deny a belief in a God (s), but oppose those that do and vigorously oppose those that seek to impose their religious dogma on our political decision making.
Why is it so hard for some of you to actually respect another person's beliefs and his decision based on those beliefs?
Because political and social decisions are regularly made that affect us based on these religious beliefs.
She even wrote, in her official decision, that it is based on her religious beliefs, and for that alone it should be overturned.
Justin, as much as this would be a completely black & white, rational decision for you on the subject, the majority of humanity floats in a gray area on this, drifting back and forth between atheism and strong spiritual beliefs (usually rooted in the culture they were raised in).
have you seen Obama make any decisions that rested only on his religious beliefs?
Beliefs that hinge on a guess can't be taken lightly, but we have a lot of people making their own bad decisions that are based on their treating their religious path as fashion or a trend rather than something to be lived.
No matter what activity was actually going on in the Corinthian church regarding «the dead», why is the discussion / controversy about baptism and not the «true» means of salvation according to Baptists and evangelicals: an internal belief in Christ; an internal «decision» for Christ?
Believe what you like but when you start making decisions and taking actions that affect other people based on beliefs that have zero evidence to back it up there's a problem.
Rather, we make decisions on the basis of beliefs about what sorts of virtues seem important, what sort of human life we believe to be good.
Beliefs on how the world began are irrelevant to most people's decisions, and completely irrelevant to kids.
I think the reason why agnostic / atheist did better on the test is because they did more research to come to their decisions about their beliefs.
I made my decision based on my assessment of the facts I gathered and understanding of my own need for a belief system.
Some how it's felt that values, morals, virtues are not there in a secular world only faceless solid lifeless laws of men rather than what has been relayed by Holy books that calls for good deeds and reject bad deeds and to build a faithful societies, communities, nations since communications among nations or even among the nations of mixed cultures and beliefs... Laws or God and universe are to be prepared by some thing that is equivalent to UN but built on nations beliefs to achieve the code of understanding among nations but as can see now it is build on groundless bases if not of words of God to faiths... in addition to those non spiritual secular beliefs to make decisions of faith but at the moment the secular world make and take the decisions while the beliefs and faiths has to pay for it when it becomes a war between all faiths or religions outside your world, it would become back into your inside among the mixed culture and beliefs of the nation or nations under one country flag...!
Left on our own, we are, in most ordinary matters, neither heroically righteous nor heroically evil nor even heroically ambiguous; we simply drift — from at least a theoretical belief in God's overriding sovereignty in our lives, to a working pragmatism which simply assumes that the little decisions are ours to make.
A person makes decisions and choices based on their values and belief.
Or to justify decisions and policy they make by giving it a rationalization based on «common beliefs» or supposed «common beliefs» that tie to religion.
In sum, because it treats belief as an atomistic decision taken piecemeal by individuals rather than a holistic response to family life, Nietzsche's madman and his offspring, secularization theory, appear to present an incomplete version of how some considerable portion of human beings actually come to think and behave about things religious — not one by one and all on their own, but rather mediated through the elemental connections of husband, wife, child, aunt, great - grandfather, and the rest.
As long as people base decisions that impact others on their religious beliefs, there is a good reason to make this part of the social dialogue.
One of our major issues in abortion and decisions on its use are not made rationally they are made by some because of religious beliefs (remember about the wars).
If someone else has to baptize me, are they doing the act and I only made the mental decision based on my belief?
Personally I don't respect religious beliefs, as I feel they are unjustified, but I respect people's decision to believe various religions, and am not going to try to impose my beliefs on others.
The only issue I have with candidates are those like George Bush the Younger, who stuck his religious beliefs into everyone's face and made disastrous decisions (like supreme court judge nominations and a «holy» war against Iraq) based solely on religion.
The belief that the fate of mankind depends on the decisions of the leaders of empire is widespread and pervasive.
The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals handed down a ruling this afternoon allowing the Christian humanitarian organization World Vision to base its hiring decisions on matters of religious belief.
(UPDATED) 5 - 4 decision on healthcare rules that the government can not require faith - based organizations to provide contraception against their owners» religious beliefs.
His decisions will be based on his religious beliefs rather than science — or at least he'll give them equal weight.
delusional thinking takes many forms, but no one wants those who hold delusional beliefs making decisions for them based on harusp ication and augury.
How can John Kerry's divergences from Vatican doctrine and difficulties with Catholic bishops anxious to deny him communion be front - page news while commentators studiously ignore the president's religious beliefs that may have influenced his decision on war?
This directly affects the atheist who often sees bad policy decisions and laws being made based on belief.
Those who use a «theistic» compass, for instance, base moral decisions and perspectives on religious belief scripture, the teaching of a religious group, or the prevailing norms of a believing community.
American judicial decisions and public conversations about religious freedom, however, tend to focus on individuals» rights, beliefs, consciences, and practices.
Moreover, the religious beliefs of government officials naturally may inform their decisions on policies.
Decisions had to be made from time to time as to where or when services of the church would be held; the church needed to be told of the impending visit of an apostle, or of some prophet or teacher from abroad; a question has been raised as to the good faith of one of these visitors, and there must be some discussion of the point and a decision on it; a fellow Christian from another church is on a journey and needs hospitality; a member of the local congregation planning to visit a church abroad needs a letter of introduction to that church, which someone must be authorized to provide; a serious dispute about property rights or some other legal matter has arisen between two of the brothers and the church must name someone to help them settle the issue or must in some other way deal with it; a new local magistrate has begun to prosecute Christians for violating the law against unlicensed assembly, and consideration must be given to ways and means of meeting this crisis; charges have been brought against one of the members by another member, and these must be investigated and perhaps some disciplinary action taken; one of the members has died, and the church is called on for some special action in behalf of his family in the emergency; differences of opinion exist in the church on certain questions of morals or belief (such as marriage and divorce, or the resurrection), differences which local prophets and teachers are apparently unable to compose, and a letter must be written to the apostle — who will write this letter and what exactly will it say?
I found the author's philosophy about ingredients and cooking very in tune with my beliefs and was immediately consumed with decisions on which recipe to attempt first.
They base everything around work — people there even told me they haven't got the ability of some of the teams in the Premier League and need to make up for that by working hard and I think that's the right attitude.As a footballer you sometimes have to make decisions, and I think going to Wolves was probably the best thing I could have done.They may not have been doing too well, but the manager [recently departed Mick McCarthy] was very good to me — I think it's very important to go to a manager who likes you, and he showed belief in me.He put me in the team, and I'm just happy that I was able to do him proud on the pitch.
I just sat down and read this entire article and all the comments that followed, I'm not here to attack anyone for their own decisions, or beliefs no matter how ignorant.I understand that research on childbirth can only be done so far back, but the truth is, women have been growing their babies without medical help and delievering them as well for.
Remember that there is no such thing as «the college of one's dreams» — college is a reality, not a dream, and it will and should take on the texture of waking life, not dream life, rich with wonderful moments and harrowing ones, feelings of rightness and feelings of wrongness, a staunch belief at times that this was the best place possible and an equally staunch belief at times that this may have been the worst decision ever made.
A program's values and beliefs are on display every day in the form of team communications, attention to detail, group dynamics, and the decisions that the coaches make.
Your final decisions should be based on your personal beliefs and also what is best for your baby.
What horrible side effects of being part of the fringe group are you alluding to - being different, making positive change in the world, being creative, living a life of making decisions based on personal beliefs and experiences?
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