Sentences with phrase «obvious harm»

'' «Our pastoral practice of demanding life - long «celibacy,» by which we meant that for the rest of your life you would not engage your sexual orientation in any way, was causing obvious harm and has not led to human flourishing,» the letter said.
The most obvious harm done by the false propaganda against saturated fats in traditional foods are with regions that relied heavily on saturated fats for centuries, especially edible tropical oils such as coconut oil prior to the lipid hypothesis or theory's dogma that permeated and replaced their traditional diets.
There is obvious harm in divulging out to strangers as you do not know the real intentions of the people who are using it.
so, other than to annoy a lot of people with his obvious inability to think for himself deeper on this subject without causing others obvious harm by his intentional shaming remarks to incite reaction — what intelligence does this article demonstrate?
For all the real freedoms and obvious social goods that social media has brought us, there are real dangers and obvious harms too.
EPA trumpets wildly exaggerated benefits its anti-fossil-fuel rules will supposedly bring but refuses to assess even obvious harm from unemployment, soaring energy costs and reduced family incomes.
But another example of clear, obvious harm is the infamous MMR - vaccine paper by Andrew Wakefield that was published in The Lancet.
Yet even my high level of DDT (and of DDE, a metabolite into which DDT breaks down in the environment) is still so minute that there has been no obvious harm to me.
Aside from the obvious harm to the dogs themselves, dog fighting is associated with or causes a number of additional negative results including:
Kafka describes the Odradek as an exceptionally mobile creature that refuses to be caught; a fugitive form with no apparent purpose that lives in familiar domestic spaces and does no obvious harm to anyone.
That would mean that the temperature change during the next century would be just a bit larger than we have seen in the past century; a change that has caused no obvious harm.
When we talk about «walled gardens,» we focus on the obvious harms: an App Store makes one company the judge, jury and executioner of whose programs you can run on your computer; apps can't be linked into and disappear from our references; platforms get to spy on you when you use them; opaque algorithms decide what you hear (and thus who gets to be heard).
One is the obvious harm that racism causes to the black and brown people who are the objects of racial discriminatory behavior, but the other part — never really talked about — is the harm that comes to white people from living in a racist society and the way in which it distorts their perspectives of themselves.
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