Sentences with phrase «viewed as corrective»

The current exhibition, as Hurst suggests, may be viewed as a corrective to that show, and Andrew, in his catalogue essay, makes a similar allusion.
All of this may be viewed as corrective to the Reformation and something of a reversion to Catholic patterns of thought.

Not exact matches

If people are complaining on these types of sites about the cleanliness of your rooms, view it as an opportunity to swiftly respond with appropriate, corrective action and to update your brand's own website messaging to reflect your improved housekeeping standards, suggests Fertik.
Its presence there, however mistakenly justified, serves as a continuing corrective particularly to ascetic Christian tendencies, and to an otherworldly view of Scripture and biblical faith in general.
I have found that conversations with Muslim friends nearly always serve as a balancing corrective to my own views.
In 1541, the Hessian Superintendents sent the following petition to the Landgrave Philip: «In view of the fact that there are current many complaints about parsons who scandalize people by their excessive drinking and other disgraceful vices and yet remain unpunished as well as unreformed, we suggest that the jail at the cloister of Spisskoppel be restored and that the parsons who persist in their vices be given the choice either to leave their parishes or to be confined in this jail for a period of time the length of which shall depend on the nature of their offense, in order that on water and bread they may undergo corrective punishment.
Because Dr. Sass Rubin has promised two further «studies,» the NJCSA has filed this complaint today to ensure appropriate corrective action is taken before Dr. Sass Rubin releases her personal views as Rutgers research and creates further embarrassment for Rutgers University.
A much - needed corrective to our sanitized, human - centric view of animals as machines or as pets that can be trained to perform stupid tricks, Wesley the Owl reasserts the powerful and sometimes icky otherworldliness and breathtaking complexity of nature.
The NCC paper makes great play of taking a long view, putting itself forward as a necessary and clear - sighted corrective to analyses that content themselves with looking out only 85 years.
«The underlying philosophy for an ERF is the universal application of egalitarian principle to guide a distributive view that seeks to address historical, current, and potential inequities in respect of contribution to emissions, and as such is corrective in character, and distributive in approach.
A quick warning: under no circumstances should you watch the any of the made - for - tv versions of this movie, nor should you ever watch 2011's Alleged, which stars Fred Thompson (aka DA Arthur Branch from Law and Order) as Bryan and positions itself as a corrective to the Darwin - promoting views of Inherit the Wind.
Criticism of or comments on the views of Ernest Weinrib from the University of Toronto, who argues in The Idea of Private Law that corrective justice is the foundation of private law, and the late Peter Birks of Oxford University who sought in An Introduction to the Law of Restitution and in Unjust Enrichment, (both editions) to find a unified concept for the law of restitution and to reorganize private law, or at least the law of obligations as he would call it, around Romanist categories, could have been offered as a sub-title.
From the point of view of this class — a class I'll just call «lawyers» — it's too clear for argument that (i) law has things to do so that some instrumentalist theory has to be adopted; (ii) few things are simple, so that no single theory will work in every case, whether it's «wealth maximization», «corrective justice», «contract as promise», compensation or deterrence; and (iii) the demands of practice, the solicitor's need to create relations which will be projected into the (uncertain) future and to control the risks his or her client faces, the barrister's need to conduct litigation at a price the parties can afford and in the context of the adversary system, powerfully limit the consideration that a lawyer can give to theory.
No — especially not, in my view, corrective justice as explained by the source quoted by the Court.
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