Sentences with phrase «of meaningful distinctions»

Wealth disparities are not a bad thing when they are the result of meaningful distinctions.
Bluntly stated, yet with great respect; the law has spent more than forty years looking for the true jurisdictional question, twenty years trying to assess the relative expertise of tribunals, ten years trying to convince everyone of a meaningful distinction between two deferential standards of review and now another possible lifetime wandering the administrative galaxy looking for questions of law of central importance to the legal system.

Not exact matches

Unless we're talking about what most people think of as «cults,» I think this distinction, in practice, is one without a meaningful difference.
Moreover, he regards this as a self - evident truth, since total domination of the part by the whole would erase all meaningful distinctions between them.
«We do not view the use of this lipoderm base to be a meaningful distinction between your product and the FDA - approved product with which it competes.
A UNC Kenan - Flagler study points out a critical distinction between millennials and the older generations — while high pay was the most important factor for the older workforce, 30 % of millennials considered «meaningful work» as the most important job factor.
We find that only 36 percent of Virginia high school seniors are likely to be able to use program - level earnings data to make a meaningful distinction between programs of study at two or more institutions.
The two cars you are referring to are so mechanically similar that there is no meaningful distinction, going forward, as to cost of repair or expected remaining service life.
Is it possible in this age of instant imaging that we remain challenged to view realist painting as serious, meaningful work, or have former lines of distinction been blurred in the face of ever - increasing visual access?
Thanks to over a century of tireless efforts by heroic avant - garde artists and their supporters, no meaningful distinction exists today between contemporary artworks and the ordinary objects that surround them.
This distinction, the artists have said, also highlights the divisive and irrelevant use of the word «gay» — as a meaningful adjective.
And I would offer a similar criticism of that as well, as IMO, you neither ground that form of analogizing in a scientific manner; as I have told you, I think that your inclusion and exclusion criteria selection process is quite arbitrary, and I don't think that it is coincidence that it confirms your distinction of a group you belong to («skeptics») from a group you criticize («realists») in ways that (1) reaffirm a superiority in the group you belong to and, (2) I consider to be superficial and not meaningful as compared to the vastly more important underlying similarities (e.g., the tendency toward identity protective behavior, motivated reasoning, cultural cognition, confirmation bias, emotively - influenced reasoning, etc.)...
In reality, meaningful distinctions among wetlands, rivers and lakes may not be possible in some regions and / or seasons which complicates the development of techniques to monitor these environments.
The linkages between philosophy of science and psychology in context of epistemology is articulated in this statement by Quine: epistemology itself «falls into place as a chapter of psychology and hence of natural science»: the point is not that epistemology should simply be abandoned in favor of psychology, but instead that there is ultimately no way to draw a meaningful distinction between the two.
And, from the text of this speech, I see Howard drawing no meaningful distinction between climate activism and climate science.
Possibly, the role of a government actor engaging in law enforcement activity might sometimes be a meaningful distinction for the treatment of disclosures under European privacy law: It surely represents a different kind of litigation scenario from one in which there is no government actor, and no law enforcement involvement.
Is there a useful or meaningful distinction any more between a signature and an act of assent (at least when the signature is intended to show assent)?
But a growing number of industry experts are observing that a new generation of technology has arrived to make the EDA / ECA distinction meaningful at last.
Building upon the technical / substantive distinction, the Committee avers that Parliament should identify for more detailed scrutiny those statutory instruments that involve matters of significant policy interest or principle and should develop mechanisms to ensure meaningful scrutiny for these measures.
Based on this preliminary assessment, there may be no meaningful distinction between the cases of encephalopathy and residual seizure disorder that the VICP compensated over the last twenty years and the cases of «autism» that the VICP has denied.
As shown in the data below, it is this decision which emerges as the most meaningful distinction between fathers; on nearly every measure of relationship quality and prenatal involvement, fathers who attend the birth are far more similar to each other — regardless of whether or not they sign the AOP — than either group is to fathers who never show up.
Also with regard to emotional problems the distinction between direct and indirect victimization seems to be equally meaningful as the corresponding distinction between direct and indirect aggression — more of emotional problems is associated specifically with more of indirect aggression towards others and more of indirect aggression from others.
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