The mere fact of their existence is very good.
But of course they were poor, at least compared to their friends, and no amount of suave English, the sort that issued uncontrollably from their mouths, could change that; no amount of sobbing in Victorian sentences or chest beating before the Oxonian anchors on The News Tonight, who interviewed them, who stoked their outrage, could drape them or their dead children in the glow of foregone success: Mr. and Mrs. Khurana were forty and forty, and they had suffered the defining tragedy of their lives, and so all other competing tragedies were relegated to
mere facts of existence.
Not exact matches
But what was real was the
existence of sensible
facts, and the intelligible things were
mere categories and names
of things.
We don't need anymore fodder to deny the
existence of god Davie, everyday we get more evidence by the
mere fact that another 24 hours goes by without the slightest bit
of proof that god exists.
The
mere fact of this film's
existence sounds like the plot
of a never - made episode
of «Columbo,» the great TV series starring Peter Falk as a rumpled, working class detective.
The great obstacle to such assimilation lies in that opposition to the
mere sequence
of feelings which causation as «matter
of fact» — as that in discovering which we «discover the real
existence and relations
of objects» — purports to carry with it.
While the condition may not manifest until about adulthood, the
mere fact that you can actually monitor the progression
of your pooch's symptoms is one good way to identify the
existence of the condition.
So the
existence of a nuisance, the unsoundness
of a horse, the unseaworthiness
of a ship, the competency
of a testator, or the subjection to undue influence are (questions
of fact for the jury), or whether a card game is a game
of mere skill; as also whether an agent's act was within the scope
of his authority.»
2) apart from the
fact that CJEU stated that even before EU exercising its power, the MS must still act - when they have the power to do so - in a matter which does not jeopardise or prejudice the EU, so that the
mere «potential» competence does have an effect, limitating the MS action, the parallel is that a negative rule is still a rule, so that the
existence of the rule makes the matter «regulated»: - as for the JHA, I must say that whilst I agree with you on the merits, I can see the issue raised by the CJEU, since it is quite the same raised by some national Constitutional Courts, i.e. that ECHR standards may be in conflict with national standards and formally speaking the ECHR is a treaty and therefore has a lower rank that national Constititions, and the decision
of the ECHR on the interpretation
of such standards within the context
of the Convention does not bind the national Constitutional Court in interpreting the national Constitution standards: e.g..