Sentences with phrase «from factual errors»

Apart from the factual errors, clear misleading, and (deliberate?)

Not exact matches

Third, the Book of Mormon abounds in textual errors, factual errors, and outright plagiarisms from other works.
CAMBRIDGE, MA — A new analysis of two recent reports, one by a committee of the National Academy of Science's National Research Council (NRC), the other by Alan Ginsburg, a former director of Policy and Program Studies in the U. S. Department of Education, finds that both reports made factual and analytical errors in their examination of the record of Michelle Rhee as Chancellor of Schools for the District of Columbia from 2007 - 2010.
One of my beta readers kept me from making a factual error that would have, if my reader knew anything about pharmacology, made my books seem like a mess of intestines too.
(1) A credit services organization, its salespersons, agents, and representatives, and independent contractors who sell or attempt to sell the services of a credit services organization may not do any of the following: (a) conduct any business regulated by this chapter without first: (i) securing a certificate of registration from the division; and (ii) unless exempted under Section 13 -21-4, posting a bond, letter of credit, or certificate of deposit with the division in the amount of $ 100,000; (b) make a false statement, or fail to state a material fact, in connection with an application for registration with the division; (c) charge or receive any money or other valuable consideration prior to full and complete performance of the services the credit services organization has agreed to perform for the buyer; (d) dispute or challenge, or assist a person in disputing or challenging an entry in a credit report prepared by a consumer reporting agency without a factual basis for believing and obtaining a written statement for each entry from the person stating that that person believes that the entry contains a material error or omission, outdated information, inaccurate information, or unverifiable information; (e) charge or receive any money or other valuable consideration solely for referral of the buyer to a retail seller who will or may extend credit to the buyer, if the credit that is or will be extended to the buyer is upon substantially the same terms as those available to the general public; (f) make, or counsel or advise any buyer to make, any statement that is untrue or misleading and that is known, or that by the exercise of reasonable care should be known, to be untrue or misleading, to a credit reporting agency or to any person who has extended credit to a buyer or to whom a buyer is applying for an extension of credit, with respect to a buyer's creditworthiness, credit standing, or credit capacity; (g) make or use any untrue or misleading representations in the offer or sale of the services of a credit services organization or engage, directly or indirectly, in any act, practice, or course of business that operates or would operate as fraud or deception upon any person in connection with the offer or sale of the services of a credit services organization; and (h) transact any business as a credit services organization, as defined in Section 13 -21-2, without first having registered with the division by paying an annual fee set pursuant to Section 63J -1-504 and filing proof that it has obtained a bond or letter of credit as required by Subsection (2).
Consumers have a better chance at getting inaccurate items deleted from credit report when disputes are based on factual errors.
Their comments, which bring context and insights from the latest research, and point out factual and logical errors where they exist, remain layered over the target article in the public domain.
As the neuroscientist Antonio D'Amasio made clear in 1994 in «Descartes Error, Emotion, Reason, and The Human Brain» (review by Daniel Dennett here), the «thinking» cognitive cortex needs input from the limbic «feeling» parts of the brain to make sense of any factual information.
no, wait... let me count the factual errors in this one news story on My Way News from AP writers Seth Borenstein and Dina Capiello.
That's because the ISO's study, which focused on potential fuel security concerns in 2024 and 2025, contained clear factual errors as well other assumptions that are highly unlikely and, in some cases, contrary to state laws that help customers reduce their electricity use and bills through energy efficiency and that require a growing percentage of electricity to come from renewable resources.
Apart from the worrying lack of understanding of the way global anomalies are calculated, something of a prerequisite, one would have thought, this document is littered with factual errors... here are three I found on a cursory readthrough..
This term, which is very probably American in origin, referred directly to the fact that no - one could prevent you from replying and correcting a factual error.
Giving judgment in R (on the application of Dimmock) v Secretary of State for Education and Skills [2007] EWHC 2288 (Admin), [2007] All ER (D) 117 (Oct) Mr Justice Burton said the DVD contained many factual and scientific errors, but that the guidance notes (in their amended version) could shift the perceived motive for the distribution of the DVD from its original objective of «influenc [ing] the opinions of children» to a new objective of «stimulat [ing] children into discussing climate change and global warming in school classes».
This will ensure that that your document is free from any factual, grammatical or punctuation error possible.
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