Sentences with phrase «guarding against the dangers»

Maximal distance is essential in guarding against the dangers of what, in 1975, we called the maximal proposition.
To guard against the dangers of concussions, by 2014, all 50 states and the District of Columbia had enacted laws to protect young athletes.
The analyst must seek to guard himself against this danger as best he can: in part, by dealing with those situations preferably which are not subject to sudden change; in part, by favoring securities in which the popular interest is keen enough to promise a fairly swift response to value elements which he is the first to recognize; in part, by tempering his activities to the general financial situation — laying more emphasis on the discovery of undervalued securities when business and market conditions are on a fairly even keel, and proceeding with greater caution in times of abnormal stress and uncertainty.»
In the end you will realize that in order to enjoy a happy and healthy marriage it is worth guarding against the dangers of emotional affairs.

Not exact matches

Of this danger I have been constantly aware and have endeavored to guard against it.
Becoming aware of the potential dangers in any belief, including those we hold dear, does not necessarily mean we must abandon that belief, but does enable us to be on guard against its distortion and misuse.
How might these dangers be guarded against?
The objectivity and universality of the good news should guard us as Christians against the dangers of privatism and individualism.
Perhaps best known for advocating that the nation guard against the potential influence of the military — industrial complex, a term he is credited with coining, the speech also expressed concerns about planning for the future and the dangers of massive spending, especially deficit spending, the prospect of the domination of science through Federal funding and, conversely, the domination of science - based public policy by what he called a «scientific - technological elite».
They «seem to be aimed at politically polarizing science and scientists, and that is the real danger we must guard against,» says Raghavendra Gadagkar, immediate past president of the Indian National Science Academy and an ecologist at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru.
And the dangers you guard against may be nothing more than distractions to lure you to greater danger.
that the precautionary principle has been recruited so politically and specifically to guard against environmentalists concerns, on such a grand scale, and so consistently and repeatedly in disregard of the real risks, costs and very dangers inherent in many of the proposed solutions (e.g. biofuels / ethanol), would seem to indicate that the precautionary principle should be applied with the greatest of caution.
For example: (1) if the mountain owner / operator does not sufficiently warn a skier of the dangers of skiing in a certain dangerous area then they can be liable for negligence if that skier injures himself owing to a dangerous condition that existed; (2) if the mountain owner / operator does not maintain a reasonable degree of security to guard against reckless skiers then the mountain can be liable; (3) if the mountain fails to maintain its equipment (lifts, gondolas, ramps, etc) in a reasonable manner and a skier is injured as a result then the mountain can be liable.
For example, a product is properly manufactured, but the design is faulty because the product does not have the appropriate safety devices or guards to protect the user against obvious dangers.
[121] Some have suggested that the best way to guard against such dangers is to entirely preclude fundraising.
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