Sentences with phrase «equate such»

Indeed it does, but one ought not equate such a «self - repairing system», with a «save the humans» system.
«Climate scientists and their media champions equate such scepticism with scepticism about, say, the theory of evolution.
If you want to equate such ent «ities to vital, mentally sharp elderly people who happen to need help due to parkinsons that's you, but it's pretty twisted.
Instead, almost everybody, even people who are not Christians, equate such things with Christianity.
Despite all of the hope for an economic recovery, and the willingness to equate such hope with a positive investment outlook, I continue to view the major indices as steeply overvalued.
After you run a billboard equating all such people to mass murders, part of a planned series that would also include terrorists, you can't be surprised that the people you're attacking don't want to visit you.

Not exact matches

So buyers adopt and rely upon shorthand references such as your brand equity and the length of time you've been around and equate these aspects of your reputation with quality and stability.
Weingarten cautions against equating R&D spending too closely with innovation, noting that many oil and gas companies fare poorly under such measurements because of Statistics Canada's criteria for research spending, but still frequently develop new methods and ideas.
Such funds generally target 8 - 15 % annual returns, which equates to a need for $ 83,000 — $ 125,000 in capital.
This changing tone is unlikely to equate to an immediate acceleration in growth, and some big developing countries such as Brazil are tightening their belts.
As such, shareholders should expect LUV's ROIC to improve moving forward, which directly equates to growing shareholder value.
One can literally find hundreds of such statements online by dozens of different analysts in recent years that falsely equate gold as a dead asset, that are in turn, literally accepted and parroted by thousands, if not millions, of other people without any further confirming research.
One secure way to deliver such services to users at scale is by utilizing consensus algorithms to computationally equate proof of sale (POS) with proof of stake on the blockchain, then integrating existing POS solutions with proprietary software to enable merchants to process payments in cryptocurrency.
Accordingly, a year - over-year increase in new claims of about 20 % (which would currently equate to a level of about 340,000 weekly new claims) would create a significant concern of a new recession in progress, particularly if coupled with other evidence such as equity market weakness and slowing growth in real personal income.
That equates to a little more than $ 60 per hour, and most teachers will only give young children half hour lessons, meaning that such a rate would equate to over $ 120 per lesson.
The popular view, according to which banks can expand credit all they like so long as they expand it in unison, incorrectly equates a bank's demand for reserves with its net demand for such — that is, with its need for reserves to cover expected or deterministic outflows.
They say further that even if one does not equate a fetus with a child, as long as one attributes some value to the fetus» and they demonstrate how economists routinely make such outrageous calculations in insurance claims for loss of body parts» and put the value as low as one hundredth of a human being, the lowered crime rate would not come near justifying the number of abortions.
Perhaps the lyrics apply to the last one, if we equate land - hunger with the desire for «gold,» but political history accounts of why «such - and - such a President or Congress eventually entered us into such - and - such a war» reveal time and again that a motivation of economic interest was not the reason, and seldom even the second or third reason, offered or discussed (even in the secret discussions hence uncovered by historians).
Although some theologians have equated the sin of Sodom with homosexuality, a careful look at Scripture corrects such ignorance.
Companies like Hobby Lobby and the Catholic - run hospitals and such that are screaming about their religious rights are forgetting the fact that providing employment to people doesn't equate to some moral mandate to play God and give or deny those employees their right to a legal drug or procedure.
However, we and others so often invest our ecclesiastical call with such meaning, importance and commitment that we equate calling and ecclesiastical call.
While acknowledging a debt of inspiration to the British author, he insists that it is «silly» to equate his work with the apologetic genius of Lewis, and that such comparisons owe more to overenthusiastic book cover publicity than reality.
Equating modern churches, pastors and practices with ancient Jewish synagogues, temples and priests and practices (such as tithing to the Levites) seems to be done primarily for the purpose of raising money.
But people such as yourself equate religion with God and reject God because of religion.
While some philosophers, acclaiming human reason's inability to know reality, equate freedom with arbitrary choice, urging others to «create their own values», such immorality soon runs into contradictions.
Surely Fr Holloway is mistaken to equate Godwith asexual angels and the human soul with such.
You last equated the fine tuning of the universe to saying we should expect it this way and some such nonsense about a fish expecting water.
When I hear «Evangelical» or «Born Again», based on my personal experience with those that identify themselves as such, I can't help but to equate those terms with «ignorant, intolerant bigot».
It entailed that bodies, equated with «matter,» must be derivative from the ultimate psychical constituents as composites of them, all the characteristics of «body» (extension, impenetrability, mobility, etc.) as well as the passivity of «matter» being analyzable as features displayed by composites of such psychical existents in relation.7 Apart from the particular difficulties in which Leibniz's theory is involved, such as that it has the consequence that all relations must be phenomenal (thus necessitating his recourse to God as the principle of pre-established harmony), the doctrine of panpsychism has a paradoxical consequence.
One can not, therefore, judge ordinary folk who equate unchristian and unamerican sentiments, or what they hear as such.
In such societies political submission to the divine king is often equated with entry into the realm of cosmic order, and political opposition is equated with alliance with the demonic forces of cosmic chaos.
The idea of coming home after such an experience will mean that home is different even though it hasn't changed, you see relationships differently, you experience love differently and in many ways that equates to still being out there — you bring out there back home with you and no - one is ever the same again.
The inclination Pat Robertson and the religious right have to equate themselves with such important and intelligent Americans as Thomas Jefferson is obvious to anyone who has glanced through any of Pat's numerous books.
«Act» here must not be equated with «action»; rather, «act» refers to the intrinsic quality, as it were, that determines the potency of matter to be such and such, in the way that the shape of a piece of clay determines its potentiality to be a certain shape.
When such schools are located in a cultural context marked by the «triumph of the therapeutic,» [19] there is a strong tendency, to construe those conditions in psychological and sociological categories and to equate the requisite knowledgeabilitv with counseling skills and related psychoanalytical and social - psychological theory.
The difficulty of such a position is that it equates the vocation of celibacy with the condition of homosexuality without any clear basis for doing so.
Augustine's formulation of original sin was popular among Reformers, such as Martin Luther and John Calvin who equated original sin with concupiscence, affirming that it persisted even after baptism and completely destroyed freedom.
Pastors such as T.D. Jakes, Dollar and Joel Osteen have become the Prosperity Gospel's most well known preachers, building megachurches and business empires with a message equating piety with prosperity.
It is obvious that many sentences function in such a way that meanings are communicated, although such meanings can not be equated with a hard - nosed empiricism.
When it comes to sustainability, factors such as responsible sourcing and ethical farming practices were just as important as environmental factors to consumers, while some also equated organic and non-GMO with health, added Kerry.
It says the 40 kg per square metre stocking density - which equates to as many as 20 birds per square metre - permitted under the code «precludes such movement».
Giroud hasn't come close, and sitting here trying to equate them both based on a mundane statistical outlook such as a tally of goals means diddly.
It is a recurring and terrifying trope of such matters that «the real problem is false allegations of racism, rather than racism» (see also: every other kind of discrimination, rape), and so to equate a lack of proof with falsehood.
But this is such an odd figure that it must equate to an amount in the currency of his current employers, Sporting Club de Portugal.
The latter should equate to another thoroughly entertaining fixture in Manchester, while a wide - open affair will definitely favour the hosts, but defensively United have been ragged and disjointed of late and, honestly, I can't trust them to deliver at such uninspiring odds.
Some people get hung up on the fact that breast milk came out of our body and it becomes equated with waste products we produce, such as urine.
The Scottish Government has a duty to control the overall yield of local taxation, as it is responsible for balancing the government budget overall, and also for any controls such as those suggested above to equate the yield of the new taxes in year 1 with the yield of the old taxes in year 0;
Such a takeover would collectively save the other 57 counties $ 2.3 billion a year, which equates to 41 percent of their collective property tax revenue (including payments in lieu of taxes, or PILOTs).
Commentators sympathetic to Labour have come out almost unanimously to warn party members that such an outcome would equate to political suicide.
With over $ 21 million in the bank (and counting) and deep independent expenditure pockets supporting him, Brown and his allies will have ample resources to equate every Republican running with such a candidacy.
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