Sentences with phrase «decisive points»

Rapidly placed forces at tactically decisive points in the battle area.
This is certainly one of the two totally decisive points in understanding the radiative balance of the surface.
In particular the S - Models represent the most attractive offer in the competitive segment and score decisive points with a significant improvement in their price - performance ratio: The most power and the highest torque in the segment, the new performance - oriented AMG all wheel - drive system, the new design and a significantly more extensive standard - equipment package are among the outstanding strengths of the new high - performance automobiles from Affalterbach.
I have no worry about Liverpool n City their weakness in defence ll always mean Arsenal ll still top them but Chelsea however, they top us with 9points which is huge n the big question isn't if Chelsea ll drop points, cos they ll, they cnt go on 32games - winning streak, but will Arsenal capitalize on the dropped points n if they manage to won't they also still drop points at decisive points.
We were in front for half a year, but dropped decisive points against Chelsea, Manchester City and Liverpool towards the end.
In a great example of a cup final, it was Huddersfield who were able to break through by the end of the game, after scoring some quick, decisive points.
In his highly influential Introduction to Christianity Joseph Ratzinger found great value in this creed, which he called «at all decisive points an accurate echo of the ancient Church's faith... in its kernel, the true echo of the New Testament message» (Ignatius Press, 1990 edition, p54).
Three decisive points are made in the three images here: the heavens are opened; the Spirit descends, giving Jesus power to perform his work; and the voice of God speaks, defining Jesus as a unique Son of God.
The film explains this through flash - backs suggesting that at decisive points in his subsequent life he vividly recalled the acutely painful experiences endured in the camp.
«I'm getting to what I think is the decisive point,» Jones shot back.
When Catholics want to make a decisive point, they often will say, «The church teaches.»
This generalization indicates the decisive point at which Whitehead's transformed understanding of nature breaks with that of the ancients: the word that sums it up is «Evolution.»
When Aristotle deliberately expresses the commonality of energeia and entelecheia, and when he further asserts that energeia, as the efficacy of the actual, strives toward entelecheia as toward its fulfillment, 19 it seems to us that the decisive point of convergence between these concepts and Whiteheadian thought has been hit upon.
Martin Buber states the decisive point in the Hebraic view of sex:
I shall amplify this decisive point in the text at the end.
Yet in the widest survey of history Western civilization is now at a decisive point in its development.»
But as we attempt to understand the character of Christian existence in the primitive community, the decisive point is that the personal God was known as inwardly present without loss of the sense of responsible personhood.
If a happening is genuinely paradigmatic, constituting the decisive point of reference for interpreting the totality of experience, the reality it discloses in some sense encompasses the reality of all things.
«The decisive point is not that someone or something assembles; it is who or what assembles.
William Ernest Hocking stated this truth in his Human Nature and Its Remaking.26 It is the decisive point in a theological anthropology.
The theological tradition which tries to separate the suffering of Jesus» humanity from his divinity simply misses the decisive point about the atonement.
If Whitehead and Aristotle are at one on this decisive point, Whitehead nevertheless puts a great deal more weight on it.
The decisive point concerning freedom is that if in love we will to be loved by another, then we must will the other's freedom to love or not to love.
The decisive point is that there are several types of causality in interpersonal relations, and that there are unique aspects of causality between persons which reveal both the efficacy of love and its distortions.
based on a fundamental presupposition that there is a metaphysical - moral realm that is real, transcendent to the empirical world, and simultaneously sufficiently present to human reflection and experience that it can be taken as the decisive point of reference for the understanding and guidance of empirical life and historical existence.
It is not simply that poets must work with ordinary words to say their new thing, but some poets are what Paul Van Buren calls «strange ones» for whom the ordinary things of life strike them as wonderful: «the decisive point to be made is that some men are struck by the ordinary, whereas most find it only ordinary.»
The decisive point, we repeat, is the call to «understanding.»
Always a decisive point for the speakers: The different testing principles and their advantages and disadvantages for the user.
The decisive point is the separation of less and more heavily contaminated wastewater already in the household (gray / black water).
I could totally imagine wearing heels with this jumpsuit, too — but I knew we would walk a lot on that day in a natural reserve, so comfortability would be the decisive point.
Apparently, the decisive point is to be sensible of those two character traits.
Moriyama's use of a small hand - held automatic camera gives his images a loose and casual aesthetic, undermined by a forceful and decisive point of view.
WASHINGTON, DC (December 1, 2017)-- On December 4 - 5, former US Vice President Al Gore will host The Climate Reality Project's seventh - annual 24 Hours of Reality broadcast — 24 Hours of Reality: Be the Voice of Reality — a 24 - hour live event, empowering millions watching worldwide to use their voices to speak up for solutions, science, and truth at this decisive point in history.
Nowadays all these old contract provisions are invalid and the specific condition of the flat after some years is the decisive point.
Considering the amount of resumes an average employer seeking employees read on daily basis, the objective section is usually the decisive point for them to read on or pick the next.

Not exact matches

The BMG Research poll shows Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party with a decisive lead on the Tories, gaining 4 points to reach a 42 % approval rating.
«Secret polls» show the momentum trending towards him, but nobody thinks he has a decisive lead... only perhaps 2 or 3 points, and there's a large undecided bloc of voters that remains.
This is a critical time for the British, European and global economies; a decisive period for reform of the global financial system including its leading financial centre, the City of London; and a crucial point in the Bank of England's history as it accepts vital new responsibilities.»
All evidence points to a lack of a will of God that could be decisive, to chose to make truth false.
Protestants should, from this point of view, read it to be led into an otherwise often closed but nonetheless decisive discussion by a guide who is himself not Catholic but who knows the history and is sympathetic to the problems and proffered solutions.
The point of interest, however, is the road that opened at a decisive moment in time between Augustine and that specific line of Scripture, just as one had opened between Frankl and the Fourth Commandment.
It was a decisive turning point.
At one point, while acknowledging Schleiermacher's decisive break with the past, he states that «it is nonetheless true that it involves a genuine extension of the Origenist tradition as mediated by Augustine.»
The starting point must be the decisive event: Christ's Resurrection.
It is indeed the focal point where that eternal attitude of love comes to a decisive and unique expression in the act of the Incarnate Son.
But it is the decisive event in the history of the world: the focal point in God's dealings with his creation.
The prophet continues, prophet to king, defining another decisive turning point of history:
Alschuler points out that the «bad man» whose perspective was decisive for Holmes does not really care about predicting judicial decisions as much as he cares about what the law enforcement agencies will do if he tries to get away with a crime.
While decisive steps have been taken at several points in your history to place limits on the exercise of power, the nation's political institutions have been able to evolve with a remarkable degree of stability.
In the official citation read before Pope Francis presented the prize, Cardinal Camillo Ruini pointed to Burridge's «great contribution in that decisive area of the historical and theological recognition of the Gospels» inseparable connection to Jesus of Nazareth,» a contribution that resolves the problem identified by Pope Benedict.
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