Sentences with phrase «makes different arguments»

A party of government can not have a «sticking plaster» coalition that makes different arguments to each group — it must address the issues that can bind this coalition together, notably housing, support for parents and childcare, and extending educational opportunity
In the end, Morrissey's book seems to be making a different argument than he supposes.
Cornegy (D - Brooklyn) made a different argument, saying many people would not run for office if they didn't have a chance to claim full city pension benefits, which happens after ten years on the payroll.
The city lawsuit filed Dec. 15 by Miner makes a different argument: that COR officials reneged on repeated promises never to seek a PILOT for the Inner Harbor.
Weller's simulation of transition costs, also from his unpublished paper, makes a different argument.
The CCJEF case made a different argument.
Speaking for themselves, the best paintings here make a different argument: that painting is a major art, in which artists prove their own character in attempting to commit to canvas, in the language of paint, an understanding of the visual world.

Not exact matches

«Depending on how the targeting is happening, you can make potentially different sorts of arguments about whether or not Google or Facebook or LinkedIn is contributing to the development» of the ad, said Deirdre K. Mulligan, a faculty director of the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology.
Rather than taking the time to carefully consider a different perspective, they generalize anything and everything you say, making blanket statements that don't acknowledge the nuances in your argument or take into account the multiple perspectives you've paid homage to,» Thought Catalog says, summing up this behavior.
Sometimes these sources point in different directions — as when a right not recognized in the past becomes widely understood as fundamental — and a court has to make a judgment between the two lines of argument.
When this is done, no argument is needed against the real presence of a past figure, for a past figure by definition is not the present subjectivity, is not contemporary, and is precisely one no longer subject to being presented through the senses.7 The presence of a past figure can be made intelligible and justified only by a quite different notion of presence specifically appropriate to the relation of the past to the present.
That argument is no different than a creationist thinking that proving evolution false makes them right by default.
Supporting Sharia law is the same argument the catholic church is making, just from a different cult.
I understand your argument, but am making an entirely different point.
But we must take care not to bring phenomena of a different order into our argument without making the necessary adjustments.
But I don't think that undermines the argument I made above, because we're actually making slightly different points.
Changing your user ID and posting the same erroneous argument does not make it any less wrong or make the response any different.
But that is beside the point — the whole argument to be made here is that Christianity and its messengers both try to differentiate themselves from the rest when, in truth, they really are no different.
I've heard more than a handful definitions or repentance and the content of saving faith and all make pretty strong arguments to someone like me who doesn't really know a whole lot (and even though I hold to faith alone in Christ alone there's even tons of different opinions on what that even means lol).
Others — most notably Ricoeur — have made the same observation, arguing that metaphor contributes to the multivalency of biblical meaning and thus to the enduring appeal of biblical texts.8 But Frye's argument is different.
His legacy as one of the NFL's greatest ever is unquestionable and, depending upon the value you place on Super Bowl rings in a sport with 22 different starting players per team, an argument could be made that Manning is the greatest.
If you want to make an argument that Corey Nelson (or Nate Gerry or a rookie) will come in a bring everything Kendricks did - then that's a different argument.
of course no team wants to lose but I can guarantee you that the reaction by the Chelski fans after today's results are nowhere near what would have occurred if we shit the bed on opening day... the difference is they have tasted EPL success on more than one occasion recently, they have won the Champions League and they have done it with 3 different managers in the last 12 years with a similar, if not smaller, wage bill than us... in comparison, we have been experiencing our own personal Groundhog Day with nothing to show for it but a few silvery trinkets that would barely wet the appetite of a world - class club... so it's time for Wenger to stop gloating over our week one escape act and make some substantial moves before this window closes or I fear that things will take a horrible turn when the inevitable happens... living on a knife's edge is no way to go through a full season of football and regardless of what side of the argument you fall on, you could feel high levels of toxicity in the air and that was friggin week one... I would much rather someone tried their best and failed, than took half - measures and hoped for the best
Here is the argument for each of the five, made by different members of the panel.
So, if the argument is being made, that a low end NFL rookie linebacker has proved that he can play in the NFL, more so than a high end prospect, simply by getting snaps, how is that any different than with COWSER / CHUBB?
Yes Kenny, I broadly agree but would give a slightly different emphasis to the argument you make about Spurs have always been a big club.
I tried to come up with an argument for a handful of different players, but just couldn't make a strong enough case for any of them.
Was he drawing a different tradition or was he developing his ideas through his polemics, kind of making it up from whatever argument carried the day?
The office of the Queens District Attorney has been making a years - long argument to use the building to consolidate its offices which are currently split up into three different locations in Queens.
Leaving aside the argument that that role may already be played by the VAT, there are some difficulties with this, arising from the fact shown above that the profits margins that business make differ between sectors and indeed between businesses of different sizes, as economies of scale can apply.
Everybody would be angry about the drug dealer - the point I was trying to make is that the reciprocity argument applied to him is different in kind from that applied to someone for whom «unearned wealth» accumulates independent of the taxpayer.
He also repeated the argument made by a number of senior ministers and judges recently that the only way Britain would fight terrorism was by presenting an image of a different society, one where freedom and tolerance were the rule.
«That's a whole different argument to make and justify.»
The necessary communication skills, she feels, are quite different from those that journalists must possess, for, in journalism, her impression is that time constraints and the need to make stories «sexy» often take priority over objectivity and a balanced argument.
The Republican Party in particular has changed, and the moral arguments made in this Republican convention were very different.
The argument espoused by David Hambling, that having autonomous killer robots is no different to autonomous vehicles making life - and - death decisions,...
They are where different constituencies stake out territory and make their arguments in the technological drama.
2013 FT28 shows similar clustering in some of these parameters (its semi-major axis, eccentricity, inclination, and argument of perihelion angle, for angle enthusiasts out there) but one of these parameters, an angle called the longitude of perihelion, is different from that of the other extreme objects, which makes that particular clustering trend less strong.
This is an easy argument to make, as almost all cell lines are immortalised and therefore different from the original tissues patients donated, and most importantly they are anonymous, so that any data generated can not be related back to the person.
Dr. Graham also makes the argument toward protein intake for adults being likely under 10 % due to looking at what is in breast milk, however, he does not address the fact of Carbs and Fats being a much different percentage in breast milk than that of his High Fruit diet.
Based on the novel by Shûsaku Endô about a pair of 17th century Jesuit priests who travel to Japan to locate their missing mentor, «Silence» attempts to tackle big ideas like faith and sacrifice but never really makes it beyond its opening argument, like a broken record playing different variations of the same scene over and over again.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not making a «NOT MY SUPERMAN» argument here; I don't really care one way or the other what Superman is «supposed» to be like, and I welcome different interpretations of the character.
For all their arguments, Woody and Kate are also individual creatures; they don't make a great couple, and maybe if they had been raised different they would have long ago separated, but that's not in their nature.
Should the argument be made that most superhero sequels open ahead of their first installment, Deadpool 2 is different kind of movie.
As the MCU expanded, the goal became to tell different and (relatively) smaller stories, and at their best, those stories make an argument for seceding from the Union entirely.
Through experiencing everyday life in different ways, students become more conscious deliberators, pausing to see all sides of an argument before making a judgement or decision.
This is a Point - Example - Explain grid that I made containing arguments, evidence and analysis of (what I believe to be) the different themes in «Rus...
The practices represent different types of expertise students should develop in using math, from making sense of problems to reasoning abstractly and constructing viable arguments.
Pupils make notes on different types of cloning and then decide if the arguments are for and against.
If you're trying to persuade a roomful of teachers that homework is bad, for instance, you'll use a different set of arguments than you would if the audience was made up of high school students or parents.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z