Sentences with phrase «very narrow definition»

The US SEC (Securities Exchange Commission) has fixated on the «key question» of whether a token is a security or a utility, but they appear to be taking a very narrow definition of utility token.
Our brief overview of the vocabulary associated with A.I. also serves to demonstrate that those who claim that artificial intelligence will not be useful for lawyers for a few years are using a very narrow definition of the term.
They began with a very narrow definition of climate change as only those changes caused by humans.
It's a very narrow definition of harm, convenient to the industry's agenda of grabbing subsidies for construction projects.
************** Since I (and most skeptics on the whole CAGW hypothesis) agree with Mears that the climate models are certainly wrong on many levels, Meres is left with only a very narrow definition for those he calls «deniers» (apparently a mandatory insertion for publishing mainstream climate fantasies):
It's not like there's a very narrow definition of Tekken that the team follows, they're actually quite open to new ideas.
Fact # 1: Connecticut law has a very narrow definition of what is legally a «conflict of interest».
While Connecticut law has a very narrow definition of what is considered a direct conflict of interest, it fails to provide any meaningful definition of what creates the appearance of a conflict of interest.
It's no secret that women (especially in Hollywood) are under extreme pressure to exemplify a very narrow definition of beauty, and that being pretty or sexy often overshadows any attention paid to accomplishments.
As a society, we have a very narrow definition of what happiness is: fame, wealth, power, and prestige.
This constant and very narrow definition of a woman's role in society has a negative impact on women's and girls» aspirations, effectively warning them that they will get disregarded and dismissed or reprimanded if they do not conform to stereotypes.
It merely reveals that they have a very narrow definition of religion, such as «going to church» or «believing in God.»
In general discussions of energy issues, we commonly find a very narrow definition of human concern.

Not exact matches

However, a more narrow definition of the target market might have yielded a very different answer.
But some definitions of «religion» are very broad and some are very narrow, and no definition is correct, of course.
So I think that's a big issue, as well, this narrow definition of success stresses our most academically talented kids in very dangerous ways and, I think, marginalizes a whole bunch of other kids who have talents in other areas.
Education reformers who are reflexively critical of DeVos are framing a narrow set of policies — the ones they prefer — as the very definition of «school choice,» «justice,» «morality,» or «accountability.»
The research, however, is very narrow and based on a narrow «instructivist» definition of teaching as a form of instruction to produce content recall.
What you haven't spelled out is the way that ISBNs are still being used as a gatekeeping mechanism that narrows readers» access to the very best, most groundbreaking literature because many of the leading literary prizes define possession of an ISBN as their definition of publication for eligibility purposes.
In fact, I would speculate that besides you and Pat, almost no one else on earth has this very extremely narrow definition of science.
The very narrow exception for medical emergency leaves many scenarios where a woman's health may be at risk, but where a doctor, for fear of being prosecuted or simply because the health crisis does not rise to the definition of medical emergency, would not be able to offer her care.
It is important to note that our sibling definition targets a very narrow conceptualization of a family relationship marginalizing a great proportion of family constellations (e.g., reconstituted, blended, foster, and adopted).
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