Sentences with phrase «purely on considerations»

Not exact matches

This structure is based on a purely mathematical fit to price behavior, and does not reflect any valuation considerations.
If he freely admits that his participation is based not on Christian but on purely humane considerations, then I am content and have no more to say.
For as well as theoretical reflection on the moral significance of a decision, there are other ways and means by which a human being can either become clear about the rightness and conformity to God's will of a decision, or at least improve the conditions for its correct formation: the general cultivation of courage, unselfishness, self - denial, the practice of the art of making vital particular decisions which can not be deduced by purely theoretical consideration as this art is taught by the masters of the spiritual life.
The Guest Editors welcome theoretical and experimental papers on all aspects of research investigating and applying quantum correlations, quantum coherence and quantum superposition, ranging from purely abstract considerations to commercial applications.
You're also not likely to choose an eReader based purely on the price of books in its proprietary store; other considerations, including (but not limited to) quality and price of hardware and software, connectivity options, and how easy it is to transfer books between devices, will also come into play.
If you base those decisions on purely human considerations (or what you perceive to be important to your cat) then you could be making the cat's life a little less than perfect.
That's not a terrible price for a Business Class flight but price based purely on the cost of miles isn't the only thing that should be taken into consideration.
In the Roe & Baker paper, I'm not at ease with the switch between purely analytical considerations on one hand, and physical considerations on the other (and it's a quite a complex paper).
A claim to privilege can not turn on purely temporal considerations.
Interestingly, the Court compared the subject clause to the lawyer's approval condition considered by the Alberta Court of Appeal in Castledowns Law Office Management Ltd v Fastrack Technologies Inc., in which Justice Slatter (in dissent) rejected submissions that the lawyer's disapproval must be based on «purely legal considerations
In justifying this approach, the court pointed to several considerations that SCOTUS identified as benefits to merits - first: the importance and frequency of the constitutional issue, the need of police departments for guidance on the issue, the purely legal, non-fact-bound nature of the issue, and the quality of the briefing (with amicus briefs from several advocacy organizations, a group of First Amendment professors, and DOJ's Civil Rights Division).
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