Sentences with phrase «potential fact patterns»

[3] There may be exceptions to this rule as well under the tolling statutes and various other potential fact patterns.

Not exact matches

To recapitulate: the two subjects embraced by the proposition, the logical subject in a potential predicative pattern and the prehending, e.g., entertaining subject; the two correlative conditions for the truth and falsity of propositions, the fact that they both «can» and «must» be true or false; the fact that a proposition is a «real possibility» for an «entertaining subject,» gives to the proposition its fundamental trait: according to Whitehead, a proposition is a lure for feeling.3
Aside from the disturbing fact that over 90 % of the soy available in the United States is genetically modified, soy has been found to contain questionable hormone - mimicking isoflavones, which have the potential to disrupt endocrine function and alter growth patterns.
A forensic audit also would be nice, although its potential usefulness has been questioned by some, the fact that so many MTA capital projects run double, triple, quadruple or more the original budget, and take many years longer than originally planned, shows a clear pattern of incompetence or outright graft.
Setting the fact that the bias from big pharma (which we know include / control / owns dairy industry etc.) is real and even documented and not just potential, how can you compare the «potential» bias of somebody who has very high economic interest in having a specific result coming out of the study with that of somebody who is simply following a related social, scientific, religious, pratical etc. pattern?
A typical law school exam is as follows: You will be asked to draft several long essays based on prompts (usually fact patterns), often with the aim of «issue spotting» — facts are peppered in that raise potential legal issues, as well as some red herrings designed to throw you off.
If you recognize a potential opportunity and believe there is a repeatable fact pattern, call us.
While the concurrence may be partly attributable to rater effects as the same caregiver completed both questionnaires at the same point in time, the different patterns of association with the potential risk factors may reflect the fact that in at - risk populations the two constructs may de facto overlap more than in the general population, representing commonly co-occurring outcomes with different determinants.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z