Sentences with phrase «repugnance for»

I hated myself a lot back then, but even the unbearable sense of self - loathing I felt back then was nothing compared to my utmost repugnance for Entourage, the film - adaptation of the popular HBO series created by Doug Ellin, which debuted back in 2004.
If Behrani had been made merely a «garden variety» Iranian or Arab bourgeois down on his luck, with the same determination to restore his family's previous social standing and the same repugnance for Americans» supposed slothfulness and irresponsibility, the story would have been significantly strengthened.
People (like myself) may discount your assertions entirely, based solely on their repugnance for bigotry.
There will always be a strong opposition front in America, because we have a repugnance for totalitarian systems.
It is the leitmotif of his whole article, including his repugnance for the very idea of Dabru Emet as proposed by Jews.
There is evidence, for example, that toilet training based on repugnance for excretory products may result in psychological damage.
Woodfinden highlights two tenets of modern culture: a moral repugnance for Christianity and a love for human rights.
It's repugnance for things Catholic, both real and imagined.
Holmes» official biographers have not been able to complete their task, at least partly because those who look too closely at the man feel more repugnance for their subject than official biographers are allowed to feel.

Not exact matches

For reasons such as the latter even Simpson, in 1911, declared that continuing insistence for the traditional materialistic view of resurrection «accounts for much repugnance to the Christian truth»For reasons such as the latter even Simpson, in 1911, declared that continuing insistence for the traditional materialistic view of resurrection «accounts for much repugnance to the Christian truth»for the traditional materialistic view of resurrection «accounts for much repugnance to the Christian truth»for much repugnance to the Christian truth».21
Prof. Levenson was certainly not advocating «mutual repugnance,» or any hostility for that matter, between Christians and Jews.
On top of that is the more universal repugnance heterosexuals tend to feel for acts and orientations foreign to them.
Responding to the Gosnell case, Kass has argued for seeing the wisdom in the very sensation of repugnance that we feel towards such activities.
But if, when you give up your cell, or yield possession of this or that object or exchange it for another, you feel repugnance and are not like a statue, that shows that you view these things as if they were your private property.»
I share Father Berrigan's repugnance toward those in high intellectual and religious places who apologize for or ignore gross historical evil, and I have insisted that Auschwitz bears a commandment to Jews also not to destroy their fellow human beings, that the necessity for Jewish survival, illuminated and commanded by the Holocaust, can not justify the principle that it is better to do than to suffer injustice — that this goes completely counter to the spirit and teaching of the Jewish religio - ethical tradition.
The physician Leon Kass, who was chairman of George W. Bush's bioethics council from 2001 to 2005, has made the case for the «wisdom of repugnance».
The HFEA report had the same reason for opposing the use of fetuses, albeit in less emotive language: «The public... may feel an instinctive repugnance to the use of ovarian tissue from these sources for research or fertility treatment.»
He loses his intellectual block and chooses an existential act which despite its repugnance to society does a world of good for the college teacher.
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