Government guidelines re: vitamin C is useless, because it's based
on wrong premise.
That the end has not arrived and Jesus has not come in some world - shattering way is proof that all such speculative prophecy has been in vain and wrong, based
on a wrong premise.
Since they are not faceless writers, their articles were well - intentioned and wakeup calls on security situation in the country though some of the assumptions on the person of the NSA were
on wrong premises.
I am perfectly fine with people not liking the film, it just bothers me when people tell me,
on wrong premises, that I shouldn't like the film either.
Not exact matches
If you maintain a contrarian mindset, and start with the
premise that most investors do the
wrong thing at the
wrong time, you are less likely to be panicked and act
on emotion when others do.
Earl Dreeshen, the first Conservative to speak to the motion, objected
on the grounds that the
premise of the motion is
wrong — that the money is not, as the NDP motion puts it, «missing.»
Brown's conclusion is based
on this
premise and it is here that Brown has gone
wrong in his argument.
He based his theory of motion
on false
premises, and so the results are absurdly
wrong.
The pundit's remarks were
premised on a number of very
wrong assumptions and assessment of the situation.
I'm not saying spending
on the OL is a bad idea, or that you are
wrong at all, because I do agree with your basic
premise.
But since the one statement of fact in the entire article is
wrong, and the whole analysis is built
on an erroneous
premise, I'm not enormously interested in the policy recommendations.
While I'm not surprised that you got a ton of upvotes
on here, this answer is full of
premises that are just
wrong.
As it stands, it is clear that the court below
premised its decision
on this issue
on a
wrong appreciation of the claim of the appellants before the trial Federal High Court.
What is more likely, I ask: that every scientist
on the planet who has a different view than RC is
wrong, or that RC makes its «mind» up a-priori, and then proceeds from that
premise?
It would be one thing if the McTeigue and screenwriter Ryan Engle sold the audience
on the
premise of «What if a bunch of criminals messed with the
wrong mom?
It's a fun
premise, don't get me
wrong, but there's an overwhelming amount of info to take
on board.
Based
on a popular Japanese manga series, this live - action version gets almost everything
wrong, despite an intriguing
premise.
If the
premise makes it sound like Glazer's sold out and made a commercial horror / sci - fi genre picture, you couldn't be more
wrong — this is the filmmaker at his most experimental and unfiltered, with stunning images that of all three of his films to date, is most reminiscent of his unforgettable commercials work (more
on this below).
Though the
premise has the makings of a reasonable sci - fi movie — two guys stranded
on earth years after civilization — somewhere along the line something has gone very, very
wrong.
The
premise, which pits crooks
on both sides of the law against each other in the aftermath of a heist gone
wrong, might bring to mind the foul - mouthed Tarantino imitations of yesteryear, but this style-less Take Your Daughter To Work Day release doesn't even have the personality of a knock - off.
I also very much appreciated [Lecturer] Rick Weissbourd's class
on Moral Education, whose central
premise is that moral education is more than a matter of moral literacy, of helping children to determine right from
wrong.
The
premise of the game is simple: a math equation (always addition) pops up
on your screen and you have 2 seconds to decide whether it is right or
wrong (and try to get as many right as you can in a row).
The record run - up in equity markets since then doesn't mean he's
wrong — it just means that he will have had to be very patient for any investments based
on this
premise to pan out.
By presenting Boress's installation together with Mousavi's paintings and ephemera, For All the
Wrong Reasons examines the possibilities of a reflection
on political context within the
premise of an art exhibit.
They start with a
premise of proving the overwhelming consensus
on climate science
wrong, whereas the real IPCC simply summarizes the best science to date
on climate change.
And, as Matt Yglesias points out, one of Dubner and Levitt's arguments rests
on the (demonstrably
wrong and in any case wildly irrelevant)
premise that solar panels are always black.
This entire article is based
on a few absurdly
wrong premises.
At most, you have built an argument in which one of the
premises is
wrong (# 3, and I'm not sure if your characterization of aerosol inverse modelling is specific enough to help people understand) and therefore it casts doubt
on the conclusion.
In each case their arguments have been proven demonstrably
wrong, and yet they keep coming up with new variations
on the same fundamentally flawed
premise.
Predicting the future may be «an inescapable task for decisionmakers,» but it is not the only task and it is
wrong to plan solely
on predictive
premises.
Long - term strategies should be built not
on «visions» of the future but instead
on the
premise that longer term predictions (that is, forecasts of situations years and decades out), however presently credible, will probably prove
wrong.
It's an interesting enough paper, but the argument ultimately depends
on the
premise that the model is fundamentally correct, so if the natural - only control run doesn't look like the real world, then the natural - only assumption must be
wrong.
They are willing to cause mass starvation of folks
on the other side of the world, rather than acknowledge that their original
premise has been proven to be completely
wrong.
No they are not shrinking and as far as AGW the basic
premises this theory has been based
on are all
wrong.
Moreover, Malthus was
wrong on population increase
on other important aspects, just as Garrett Hardin was proven
wrong by last year Nobel price winner Elinor Ostrom, exactly because his
premises did not correspond very less to empirical reality.
A necessary
premise of Thomson's argument is that the court will,
on the merits, decide that Thomson committed no legal
wrong and that its Litigator service is not an infringement of copyright or a violation of individual class members» moral rights.
The statute also is based
on the
premise that it is
wrong to presume a person to be more dangerous because of race or sex or religion or nationality or place of birth or place of residence.
Doug Brackmann: One of the basic
premises of the book is that being driven, having this reward deficiency, we essentially have to develop something called insight, you know, the ability to look into our inner world and really question what is our central nervous system telling us about what's going
on around us, and if we're feeling like there's always something missing or
wrong, you'll find it.
In short, this means that if you were doing nothing
wrong and you were lawfully
on a
premises you can recover for damages caused by a dog, even if the dog has never attacked anyone else before.
Indeed, PJ O'Rourke recently make a brilliant amicus brief to the US Supreme Court
on the constitutional merit of false political speech (http://object.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/pubs/pdf/sba-list-merits-filed-brief.pdf) Mind you, not all untruths are defamatory (and, indeed, PJ O'Rourke's submission is based
on the
premise that while the state can't / shouldn't ban untruthful political speech,
wronged politicians can nevertheless seek the remedy of a defamation suit).
(She would be
wrong if interpretive formalism is illusory, but she would be right
on her own
premises.)
While it was considered acceptable to express personal sorrow and to sympathise with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people for their evident pain, such responses were basically
premised on a denial that Australia's Indigenous peoples were
wronged in any way which gives rise to contemporary liability, either moral or legal.
Still, the fundamental
premise on which it was based - that children were better off away from their black families - was
wrong, indeed repugnant.