Sentences with phrase «with some orthodoxy where»

«He wasn't afraid to maybe break with some orthodoxy where he thought it would work in his district,» Connecticut Rep. Jim Himes told Business Insider in March.
«He wasn't afraid to maybe break with some orthodoxy where he thought it would work in his district,» Connecticut Rep. Jim Himes told Business Insider.

Not exact matches

The situation is not entirely without concern — witness the article by Stan Wocial on p4 — but now numerous examples can be found in Scotland, Ireland, the United States, Canada, England, Australia and elsewhere where dioceses are meeting this challenge with orthodoxy and imagination.
Here, in rural Wiltshire, where there are no orthodoxies, I am at peace with this, as Spinoza was at peace circulating the manuscript of the Ethics among his friends.
I hope it is not only my stuffy orthodoxy that makes me more comfortable with Meier's attachment to canonical sources and (I assume) to more obvious textual parallels; but to follow Crossan is to move into territory where not many scholars have ventured before.
I think the evangelical community has gotten to a point where it is so steeped in modernism's emphasis on rationalism that it is obsessed with apologetics, emphasizing orthodoxy (right belief) over orthopraxy (right action).
All this needs to be made clear, for the word «heaven» appears a good deal more in the New Testament than in the Old Testament, and there is a strong tendency for readers to assume that it means there what later Christian orthodoxy meant by the term, namely, an eternal spiritual sphere above this world where the faithful departed live with God.
The message was spread informally, and the sel - ection was not by written proposal, but by discussions with practising scientists at the research unit, asking, for example, «Where are the departures from orthodoxy
Rather than engage the climate policy proposals I and others have put forward — like substituting prizes for subsidies, reducing regulatory barriers for alternative energies, increasing industry's carbon efficiency, and promoting efficiency gains in developing nations where such investments are most cost effective — they attack a straw man of «conservative orthodoxy that global warming can be overcome by private companies operating in free markets with little or no help from the government.»
He describes as «deplorable» the way climate change has become a gospel truth that you deny or mock at your peril, «where one side [has] the orthodoxy on its side and delegitimises the views of those who disagree, rather than engaging with them intellectually and showing them why they are wrong».
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