Sentences with phrase «usual senses»

But when a massive change of behavioral habit has taken place, and this is sufficient to constitute a change of personal identity — as, for example, in the case of insanity — then on the view here proposed, there is no responsibility and guilt in the usual senses of those words.
It can be made plausible if the more usual senses of truth can be shown to follow from it.
These sorts of special companies are rare enough that I truly don't understand why people aren't chomping at the bit to get their hands on some, not in the usual sense of «picking stocks», but as a permanent addition to the family's collection of assets that throw off passive income.
The confusion on these matters, writes Zinsmeister, may have less to do with economics in the usual sense of the term than with psychology.
As physics Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek notes, however, Einstein's theory is «not «simple» in the usual sense of the word.»
Our relationship is therefore more than «interreligious» in the usual sense of that term.
No one argument formulated from any set of premises can constitute a proof of the existence of God in the usual sense.
While the clergy staff person represents the religious dimension of living, he is not a pastor in the usual sense of the word.
Science in the usual sense does not deal adequately with the factor of coded sequence; it does not often even advert to it, though the use of computer models is beginning to enhance our understanding of the many possible patterns of information at every level of matter and life.
To say that the general backgrounds, the local color, the atmosphere of the environment, and even the existence of the patriarchs — to say that this is to the best of our knowledge true is not, on the other hand, to say that the stories are, in the usual sense of the word, history.
Creative action, we reiterate, is not limited to works of art in the usual sense Any subject or endeavor may be regarded as beautiful if its definition is broad enough.
Liberal education — in contrast to vocational education, in the usual sense of that term — is fundamental in that it is concerned with the ends of all living, toward which both labor and leisure are aimed.
This awareness can not be objectified or known in the usual sense, and various religious traditions present varying descriptions of it.
Whenever we use a word, there are three possibilities: (1) we use it in its usual sense, the meaning you would find in a dictionary; or (2) we use it in a way that is an analogy to its normal sense, an analogy that is clearly understood; or (3) we use it in a way that has no meaning at all, or — what is the same to everyone else — we use it in a sense that is known only to us.
To say that God knows what we are doing is to use the word «know» in its usual sense: God is cognizant of what we are doing, through whatever processes God (as opposed to you and me) comes to know such things.
While no Christian disagrees with these efforts, some Catholic, Orthodox, liberationist and ecumenical Christians tend to reject these emphases because they fail to evoke direct social action in the more usual sense.
The 2010 campaign was also highly personalized, although not in the usual sense of focusing mainly on the President's character attributes, as was the case in the Clinton «impeachment» mid-term election of 1998.
The ideal of moderation was not more» moral in our usual sense than was heroism.
One is precisely this «answering back» or response in the usual sense; another, which in common usage becomes «responsibility,» is our human accountability for what we do (or fail to do) in making just such a response.
As to what he did say — that is, as to his positive teaching about the will of God — it seems likely that although it was related closely to his thinking about the coming kingdom, it was not in the usual sense eschatologically conditioned; indeed, quite the contrary.
In Jesus» case, it has close connection with the moral character to which we have referred and shall refer again, but it indubitably consisted also in the genuineness, completeness, depth and ardor of his humanity, in the most usual sense of that term.
Two items from Wiesel's biography, neither of them intellectual or theological in the usual sense of the term, may provide useful illustration.
Communication in the usual sense requires the use of objective signs or symbols and a medium through which the transfer of information proceeds.
At least in the instance of the living cell, Whitehead believed that the constitutive entities are not all physical in the usual sense.
In the usual sense of the term, a human community is a group of people living together on the basis of some principles of order.
It is not in the usual sense an abstraction, (At times Whitehead makes statements that seem to imply that creativity is an abstraction [e.g., PR 30.]
In the case of the descriptive laws, there is no question of «obedience» in the usual sense.
Doing a long series of arithmetical calculations or working all day entering data at a computer terminal may result in almost total «an - aesthesia,» while proving a new mathematical theorem or writing a complex computer program may bring about intense involvement and the enjoyment of vivid immediate experience.8 «Aesthetic» experience in the more usual sense of tile term can also y ~ ry fi - om trivial to highly intense, even when it relates to a single object; one is reminded of the cliche situation in which one member of a couple listens in rapture to a concert while the other writhes in boredom.
This isn't so much a coloring book in the usual sense as simply a book of reproducible coloring pages, which feature intricate stained - glass - effect images of saints for every month of the....
This isn't so much a coloring book in the usual sense as simply a book of reproducible coloring pages, which feature intricate stained - glass - effect images of saints for every month of the year.
So long as we speak of an ethic of Jesus in the usual sense, we can not understand how the teacher of a system of ethics can at the same time preach the imminent end of everything in the world.
Not in the usual sense since this appreciation was to take in the «wonder» of London's harbors, warehouses, and places of trade.
I think he's half right: Intelligent Design is not science, at least not in the usual sense, but neither is it religion.
They are, therefore, to be judged not simply by standards of truth in the usual sense, but by much broader criteria of qualitative worth.
The process in God can not be conceived of as a process between occasions (which is a transition or «external supersession»), nor can it be conceived of as that type of process which occurs within an occasion as an «internal supersession» of phases of indeterminateness finishing in a final satisfaction («concrescence» in the usual sense of the word).
On its deeper side, it has something to do with his sense of the sacred, which persisted despite a lifelong inability to believe in the usual sense of the word, and infused his work with larger dimensions than most of the literature of his time.
Indeed, the new Chairman of the Republican National Committee is very considerably more anti-life, even in the usual sense of the term, than is the new Chairman of the Democratic National Committee.
It is not easy to know, from the evidence of the final two volumes, just what this means, and whether it produces history in the usual sense of the term.
Chickpea flour is a great alternative to grain flours, though it doesn't «behave» like grain in the usual sense.
Sure, it's not «classic» in the usual sense, but the 2007 championship - winning machine is certainly one of the most famous and well - known cars in recent F1 history.
E.g. a multi-million dollar cruise missile doesn't offer any return on investment (in the usual sense).
Literally speaking, yes, it is a kind of discrimination, although not in the usual sense of the word.
Not in the usual sense.
While there is little to «see» in the usual sense of that word, our galactic centre is home to a black hole more than...
Most of these have little to do with geography in the usual sense; they're more like road maps to our everyday surroundings, enabling us to recognize the places we know and navigate between them.
The «Great Courses» are not academic courses in the usual sense, but are intended to provide a college - level view of a subject for those outside the field, with no homework or tests.
Most of these have little to do with geography in the usual sense; they're more like road maps to our everyday surroundings.
Dr. Slavin pointed out that fiber is not a nutrient in the usual sense.
I'm a fairly young 47 curvy Italian / Irish smart ass with the usual sense of the ridiculous that anyone in Emergency Services develops over the years... Would love to meet...
New characters are added to fill the character void but how those voids were created... It's not a «fun» experience in the usual sense, but it certainly is gripping to the point where there's only one thing left to say.
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