Not exact matches
And indeed he cautions against any
subjective judgments being made by or about individuals - «humble spouses follow the Lamb
more easily than proud virgins».
This
judgment no doubt is also
subjective, but it is on every count a
more dependable
judgment than that which exercises exclusively alien criteria.
More subjective is the
judgment that the approaches to both philosophy and theology that have been dominant in recent decades and that have militated against attention to the work of both Whitehead and Hartshorne are running dry and that new vitality can be attained best in both disciplines by serious dialogue with Whitehead.
More often than not, the case for the Common Core's superiority rests on the
subjective judgment of four evaluators hired by the avidly pro — Common Core Thomas B. Fordham Institute.
These studies suggest that black teachers are powerful role models, particularly for black boys; that they are
more likely than white teachers to recognize competence in their black students; and that
subjective judgments by teachers play a vital role in determining success at school.
More often than not, the case rests on the
subjective judgment of four evaluators hired by the pro-Common Core Thomas B. Fordham Institute in 2010, who opined that the new standards were better than about three - quarters of existing state standards.
Portfolio construction Successful portfolio construction is the result of properly managing and integrating the desired portfolio characteristics and the
more subjective relative value
judgments.
It would not replace the IPCC process entirely, but it would offer a great deal
more transparency to the
subjective probability
judgments that are the flashpoint for these debates.
But
more salient is IPCC's reluctance to fully couple the inevitable process of
subjective judgment in a coherent way into its assessments of uncertainty and, absent this coupling, IPCC's tendency, particularly in SPMs, to resort to emphasizing ensemble means rather than fully describing the range of views.
Instead, this message is just another warning, in a growing series of cautionary tales, that the particular application of CBAs or IAMs to climate change seems
more inherently prone to being dependent on
subjective judgments about structural uncertainties than most other,
more ordinary, applications of CBAs or IAMs.
Therefore they have decided to support the application of the precautionary principle by stating the uncertainties as less than any objective systematic analysis can support and using
subjective judgments as a
more reliable basis for quantitative conclusions than they really are.
These
judgment calls are invariably
subjective and inherently dangerous; they tend to be
more personal than rule - based,
more intuitive than empirical.