Sentences with phrase «virtues when»

Physical stamina and patience are considered virtues when working at this position.
So, patience and persistence are virtues when you are trying to land a job.
Most Japanese singles still hold very high virtues when it comes to sex and relationships.
I was quickly introduced to a wide variety of parenting styles, along with their pros, cons, and virtues when I fell down the rabbit hole of online parenting message boards and Facebook groups.
But I prefer these virtues when their exercise doesn't involve killing other people.
We practice these virtues when we interact with students, both the tender and the recalcitrant.
Also remember patience is a virtue when it comes to your online marketing campaign.
St. Francis de Sales is quite definite: «Fasting is only virtue when it is accompanied by conditions which render it pleasing to God... without humility it is worth nothing.»
The position taken in this book is that such a democracy is inherently self - defeating, in part because the unrestrained pursuit of satisfaction tends to breed conflict rather than harmony, but more importantly because human nature is such that persons and cultures do not grow in beauty, strength, and virtue when people strive only to get what they want.
We need the virtue of public - spiritedness, and we need to honor that virtue when we find it.
Patience is a virtue when housebreaking the Afghan hound and a persuasive treat couldn't hurt either.
While it's frustrating to see tactics that used to work become less effective, or experiment with new things that fail, it's imperative to understand that patience really is a virtue when it comes to doing content right for the long - haul.
Honesty is a virtue when it comes to answering those questions truthfully.
The former view is taken by Goldman Sachs, not exactly a paragon of virtue when it comes to the financial sector.
Confidence is a virtue when treated delicately.
Straightforwardness is a virtue when it comes to operations representative cover letter writing.
Patience is a virtue when investing in commercial real estate.

Not exact matches

The author also suggests that when forced to choose between experience and character, those seeking talent would do better to look for defining virtues like confidence, patience and the ability to stay calm.
Although many leaders who have switched from a traditional workplace extol the virtues of the ROWE, this type of management strategy probably works best when it's incorporated into corporate culture from the beginning.
I didn't attend the speech, but to judge from the PowerPoint slides that accompanied it, he began by extolling the virtues of the law he enacted in the Bay State when he was governor — market reforms coupled with mandates and a subsidy for premiums.
Patience is virtue, especially when selling.
You're going to prove that you can be empathetic and professional at the same time, which is a combination of virtues one should display at all times, not just when things are emotionally intense.
So, for example, the police can ask to see your driver's license when they pull you over because, by virtue of having engaged in a regulated activity you have implicitly accepted a reduced expectation of privacy.
Thriftiness is a virtue because costs are one of the few things that investors can control in their portfolios, particularly when stocks and bonds...
When Kalafar looks at his unsold TDI clean diesels, he finds it ironic Volkswagen spent years preaching the virtues of clean diesel engines.
When used effectively, sales intelligence dramatically enhances the power of the rest of your sales and marketing tech stack — accelerating your pipeline and revenue growth, not just by virtue of the data it delivers but because it makes all of our other tools and programs that much more effective.
Silver lining: by virtue of having renters in place before the local market went further south (when hospital closed), we were able to take a substantial ordinary loss on last year's tax return.
While the people are virtuous they can not be subdued; but when once they lose their virtue then will be ready to surrender their liberties to the first external or internal invader.
In fact, just as they benefit from the bullish case for gold that results in funds continuing to flow onto the Gold Looting Field, they also benefit when commentators speak about the virtues of personally owned physical gold.
We ask too much of the Constitution, and too little of ourselves, when we view it as the wellspring from which to draw comprehensive notions of public virtue or when we project onto it our aspirations as a national community.
We've criticized porchers and other placists for lacking realism when it comes to describing the virtues and vices of the South (rural and otherwise) as it actually is these days.
Self - respect is not a virtue held in much esteem when it comes to moving on.»
On that day the interior motions of the soul and the motions of the body will course as one fluid movement when virtue begets beauty and beauty reveals virtue.
These are impressive virtues, reeking of Greece and Rome, and self - consciously invoked by the founding generation in the pseudonyms they chose when they published political pamphlets --- Publius, Pacificus, Helvetius, Agrippa, Cato, Brutus, and so on.
I agreed with the minister when he stated in a way which downplayed any notion that this man ever thought he was distinctively representative of virtue (as this man would have always denied for himself) that nonetheless «maybe there was a saint amongst us.»
No people will tamely surrender their Liberties, nor can any be easily subdued, when knowledge is diffused and virtue is preserved.
Further, doing what one has always done is no virtue, except for hardline conservatives that long for the good old days when men were men and sheep were scared.
When this move is made, the whole vocabulary of moral discourse concerning love and other virtues may look the same as it has always done but conceptually it has been fundamentally transformed into something very different.
From the earliest weeks of life, when an infant is taught to control hunger in order to meet the sleeping needs of parents and to fit into a social pattern in which people do not eat during the night; through babyhood, where etiquette skills include learning conventional greetings such as morning kisses and waving bye - bye; to toddler training in such concepts as sharing toys with a guest, refraining from hitting, and expressing gratitude for presents, manners are used to establish a basis for other virtues.
So discipleship is learning the virtues of Jesus so that when the time comes that we are called to act then we can act out of our second nature to do what King Jesus tells us to do.
The hint of an answer is provided a few lines later when he says: «Thus a set of entities is a society (i) in virtue of a «defining characteristic» shared by its members, and (ii) in virtue of the presence of the defining characteristic being due to the environment provided by the society itself» (PR 89/137).
Nonetheless, human beings are naturally religious when by that we mean that they possess, by virtue of their given ontological being, a complex set of innate features, capacities, powers, limitations, and tendencies that give them the capacity to think, perceive, feel, imagine, desire, and act religiously and that under the right conditions tend to predispose and direct them toward religion.
He claimed Christians should be extreme when it comes to «charity, of virtue, of grace, of unswerving adherence to goodness and truth, to the high goal of holiness in which lies our ultimate happiness».
When you make the greatest virtue of «standing up for your faith,» people judge their faithfulness by using conflict as a measuring stick.
However, those of us concerned to find such relationships between distinct fields should heed the cautious word of Cambridge physicist Sir Brian Pippard when he says that each field thrives by virtue of its own methods and not by aping those of others: «The fabric of knowledge has not been woven as a seamless robe but pieced together like a patchwork quilt, and we are still in the position of being able to appreciate the design in individual pieces much more clearly than the way they are put together» (Pippard, 95 - 96).
In upholding beauty, we prepare the way of a renaissance when civilization will center its reflexion, far from the explicit principles and degraded values of history, on this living virtue upon which is founded the common dignity of the world and man, and which we have to define now in the face of a world that insults it.
It was James Madison's view that religion and virtue flourish more when they are not propped up by the government.
After «almost thirty years of the greatest prosperity the world has ever known,» after an extended period when hard work and sacrifice have paid off and when private goals have resonated with public virtues, there has been a shift inward, especially among the younger, better - educated members of the population.
I was with you on this one, David, till the end when you turned the blame as - if on your self for not «conforming like a good soldier,» when in fact your non-conforming is the virtue of your integrity, some what tarnished by your irony: faux blame.
The dissolution of this opposition takes place only when each form of the Godhead, by virtue of its inherent independence, dissolves itself in itself: «Therefore that element which has for its essence, not independent self - existence but simple being, is what empties and abandons itself, gives itself unto death, and so reconciles Absolute Being with its own self.»
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