Splitting rural health off may be a good thing for the Nationals, I suppose, but makes little
prima facie sense, at least to me, so I hope that works out.
All I can say here is that such a hypothesis regarding the New Testament, which makes such nonsense of its soteriology (a man who merely reveals God can not save us in the way the text says he can and does) and which goes against
the prima facie sense of such texts as Philippians 2:6 - 9 and John 20:28, can not long succeed whatever luminaries put their names to it.
Not exact matches
In terms of this principle, I expect, one might speak of the
prima facie «rights» of nonhuman animals, at least of those that are conscious, and in a more extended
sense of the term, the
prima facie «right» of the natural order to its own diversity
The point I am trying to make is this: on the basis of a
prima facie examination of human experience, it would seem that there is a basic
sense of wonder with regard to there being anything at all.
Rather, the main point I want to make, which is to my mind following a Peircean line, is that intuitions are not explicitly cognitive in the
sense of exemplifying
prima facie rationality; yet they may and should contribute to explicitly cognitive levels of experience.
Prima facie, it makes little
sense.
In my view, it would make little
sense to require proof of a
prima facie case at the stage of the present proceeding.
7 Over time, liability was expanded to situations where a defendant's conduct was not
prima facie «tortious» in the traditional
sense (i.e., the conduct would not support an independent basis of tort liability, such as for defamation or copyright infringement), but it nevertheless resulted in economic harm to a plaintiff.