Sentences with phrase «whom have no sympathy»

Difficult though it is for humans with imperfect love, the demands of perfect love may, nonetheless, require that we kill an oppressor with whom we have sympathy.

Not exact matches

The trick when it comes to increasing your empathy is to challenge yourself to see the perspective of those with whom you have less natural sympathy — perhaps even with your enemies.
Abbey's doggy step - sister Marley, whom we have the priviledge of owning, sends her sympathys.
Thirty years later — after Mary Ann Evans had come to London and become Marian Evans, then (in her mind, though not in English law, since the man with whom she lived was married to another) Marian Lewes, and ultimately the great and famous novelist George Eliot» she wrote in very similar terms to Harriet Beecher Stowe: for the good of humankind, orthodox Christianity must be replaced by an ethical religion that would instill in us «a more deeply awing sense of responsibility to man, springing from sympathy with the difficulty of the human lot.»
He did not simply absorb the liberalism of Berlin, nor did he become a true follower of the theologian Karl Barth, with whom he had many sympathies.
The writer could, of course, have learned this attitude from his study of Spinoza, the philosopher for whom he expresses greatest sympathy.
That being said, it would never occur to me to post anything other than an expression of sympathy regarding the death of his son (if I were moved to post anything at all regarding the tragic death of a young man whom I never knew but must have been in incredible pain).
Benjamin Disraeli could have been commenting on the referendum when he wrote in Sybil that we are «two nations; between whom there is no intercourse and no sympathy; who are as ignorant of each other's habits, thoughts, and feelings, as if they were dwellers in different zones, or inhabitants of different planets».
This is enough to recommend the production to all players who have grown up between bandicoot and dragons, for whom «platform» is also synonymous of «color» and «sympathy
Ruth Hassey is another from whom director George Cukor has milked maximum results to get a neat blend of sympathy - winning softness under a python - tongued smartaleckness.
There isn't a single character in it for whom it builds up the slightest sympathy — and there isn't a great deal else in it for which you're likely to have the least regard.
There's a section of the movie that abandons its hackneyed romances and roundabout chases to force us to confront a potential conflict of sympathies for the well - intentioned aliens and flawed human beings, for whom we have an obvious and engrained affinity.
He was replaced by Keifer Sutherland, for whom he had a rather arch statement of «sympathy» when Fox revealed plans to reboot the TV action show 24 with an all - new cast.
This isn't a film trying to convert you to knocking down borders or embracing anyone and everyone who crosses the border illegally; this is a film that wants you to have some sympathy and understanding that the person being shot at is a real human being, just like you and me, who has a family whom they love and who needs them.
That's a point made by Doug Berman at the Sentencing Law Blog («Rather, I wish primarily to urge anyone and everyone defending President Bush's sentencing determination in the Libby case to explain why all these less prominent defendants — most of whom are now locked in a cell while Libby now makes plans for the paid lecture circuit — don't also merit some executive sympathy»); Ellen Pogdor at White Collar Crime Blog («But what is bothersome here is that one elite individual is receiving this benefit while others with comparable circumstances will not have this benefit — it all comes down to who has access to the President.
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