The so-called primacy of conscience offers no useful way forward in our current dilemmas. |
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If your conscience won't allow you to fight for your country you can now apply for permission not to perform military or combatant duties. |
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These facts he could deliver with a clear conscience and a straight face, and he did. |
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Video has always articulated itself as the negative inverse of television, the conscience of television, as Avital Ronell once put it. |
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It is customary for artists to perceive themselves as the conscience of society. |
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The call of conscience is ontologically possible only because the very basis of Dasein's Being is care. |
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The call of conscience is the call of care, and it comes from Dasein itself. |
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I'm talking about people with manipulative skills, person skills, and a conscience getting in there and pressing the flesh. |
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In January 2003 Human Rights Watch reported 7,000 prisoners of conscience in Uzbek jails. |
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For a prisoner of conscience to feel free behind bars was too much for the prison employee. |
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Rossendale campaigners have helped secure the release of a prisoner of conscience from a notorious Tibetan prison. |
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The Irish Constitution guarantees freedom of conscience and the free profession and practice of religion. |
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A bound conscience is a sense of being formed by a double-bind or a series of double binds. |
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This is a struggle that people of conscience cannot responsibly step down from. |
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The resulting television pictures of hungry children in his arms shocked the conscience of the nation. |
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Corporate complicity, the tribunal's jury of conscience learned, was extensive. |
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Yet conscience continues to prod us over past unreconciled differences, and memories betray our self-assured surface. |
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Pangs of conscience are, of course, a natural reaction to the taking of an innocent life. |
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The lesson I learned, with apologies to Hamlet, is that the play's not the thing wherein we'll catch the conscience of a prosecutor. |
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The impromptu funeral rites she performs are her amateurish attempts to clear her conscience of this terrible burden. |
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What made religious toleration and later freedom of conscience possible in England was not theoretical argument but political necessity. |
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Ask any Australian who hasn't had their conscience lobotomized by the Right Wing Death Beasts. |
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If the poem doesn't work for me then I can't in conscience try to fob it off on anyone else. |
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Bit late, this one, because this is usually a Christmas conscience thing, but the tsunami benefit concert handily brings it into topicality. |
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I also wish to thank those Honourable members who in all conscience could not find it in their hearts to vote against the motion. |
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The matter weighed on his conscience heavily, but he knew no other way of dealing with it. |
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If he did, he's got enough to weigh on his conscience for another quarter of a century. |
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The whole idea of paying conscience money isn't the way to save the environment. |
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Moreover, for him, many Hollywood liberals don't donate anything more than conscience money to their cause. |
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I couldn't bushrange or anything with a clear conscience in the future if I had a thing like this hanging over me. |
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In short, they are not squeamish or unduly troubled by conscience when it comes to hurting us two-legged animals. |
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The issue is considered one of conscience at Westminster, where MPs of all parties are given a free vote. |
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The Furies represent a guilty conscience and Medusa represents stubbornness that turns the heart to stone. |
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His political conscience is pricked into life by his friendship with black school caretaker Gordon. |
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Her conscience pricked as she took one of the seats near the very back corner. |
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The cities had also acquired a political conscience to protect themselves from prying princes. |
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On the contrary, precisely because they are iniquitous the Church makes an urgent call for freedom of conscience and the duty to oppose. |
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It came as a relief to his conscience as Jake moved, trying to get back on his feet. |
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Approximately 65 political prisoners, including five prisoners of conscience detained since 1973, were released. |
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From time to time it initiates its own letter writing actions, as for instance just now in regard to the 22 prisoners of conscience in Wamena. |
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These low-lifers work, drive and shop among us without conscience, in every area of the judicial system. |
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In fact, the only voice you might reasonably expect to rise in protest on your touching a painting or statue is that of your own conscience. |
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Can the receiver of a benefit in all conscience hang on to it without paying? |
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Sanctions are a salve for our conscience, not a serious attempt to stop the murders. |
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He felt it was the least he could do, and secretly hoped it would somehow salve his conscience. |
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I might even claim that welfare-state-ism can be traced to a desire to simply salve one's conscience. |
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Some players do write and try to justify their dirty deeds, maybe to salve their own guilty conscience. |
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Maybe if I got out of my house and increased my footprint locally, I could salve my consumerist conscience. |
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Surely Claybourn isn't thinking of voting for a third-party candidate in order to salve his own political conscience. |
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Since then we've donated to various causes to salve our guilt or conscience or out of sympathy. |
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Bravo to the captain of the ship for acting on his good conscience when his distress signals fell on deaf ears. |
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Perhaps the book helped him to relieve a conscience burdened by the knowledge that he was not carrying out the pastoral duties of his benefice. |
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Everything else is of little import, of little weight on the human conscience and pales in significance. |
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As someone with body-image issues of my own, I can't in good conscience send innocent women into the buzz saw that is your cruel gaze. |
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Who will follow their conscience when it conflicts with the demands of an amoral authority? |
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Repent if there is anything on your conscience and rededicate yourself to the Lord. |
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Your class gave me the tools to understand the forces at work upon my conscience and to make a reasoned decision. |
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Are misery and decadence the consequences of maldistribution of property, or of moral depravity, the lack of moral conscience? |
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Freedom of religion and conscience certainly entails accepting proselytism, even where it is not respectable. |
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Although Article 13 of the Constitution protects freedom of religious conscience and worship for known religions, proselytism is prohibited. |
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Of course, he has given himself some time to have a wrestle with his political conscience before the big day when he joins the party. |
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My conscience is clear as I know we gave her the best we could with what we had available to us. |
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Although people have deep religious beliefs, they follow the dictates of their own conscience in church matters. |
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The new technology will anesthetize the public conscience along with the condemned man. |
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It argues over the ethics of non-involvement, and scoffs at those who would rationalize the repugnant for the sake of a settled conscience. |
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So, too, is David trapped when the prophet Nathan uses a story to catch his king's conscience. |
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One of the first documentaries with a strong social conscience, it illustrates the social impact of shipbuilding on the depressed local economy. |
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For a man of honour, a guilty conscience must be a dreadful, perhaps unbearable burden. |
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Is a global social conscience a luxury only the pampered scions of the middle classes can afford? |
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He would have a cleaner conscience than the homeopaths and other quacks who currently prey on the terminally sick. |
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Mayer has published a bibliotheca of casuists, containing an account of all the writers on cases of conscience. |
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It observes that the disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts that have outraged the conscience of mankind. |
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But error is a normal part of science, skepticism is its conscience, and control experiments uncover flaws in reasoning or measurement. |
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However, it does reveal the underlying mindset that allowed these budding war criminals to seize the day without any obvious conscience. |
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During the next ten years, my conscience was formed by this courageous song, which was banned and yet remained a national rallying cry. |
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What kind of president will be elected by the new generation that has effectively discarded conscience as old junk? |
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It is never easy in Parliament when we have to deal with these serious and thought provoking, conscience provoking, issues. |
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The criminal subculture was completely destroyed and the prisoner was thrown back on his own conscience to feel guilt, repent, and reform. |
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He introduces tools for examining conscience and includes a collection of confession stories, a sermon, and related psalms. |
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And your conscience would be to vote against whosoever needs to pay for your vote. |
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He combines the skills of a master dramatist with a social conscience and a tremendous sense of how to engage young people in live theatre. |
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She fell asleep in the dying light of sunset, sad and with a death on her conscience. |
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If one doesn't have a political conscience and if one has the material or physical means, it's easy to be egocentric. |
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I have fretted that some journalists might take it upon themselves to spread the vile contagion of conscience. |
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When my boy grows to become a thinking person, with conscience and sensibility, am I the man I want him to see me as? |
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Political allegiance is a matter of conscience, and if people cannot be held to that, where is morality? |
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They are supposed to be the conscience of the government and the ombudsmen of the people. |
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He talks constantly about his conscience but fails to recognise that the still small voice does not speak to him alone. |
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Her hair is short and neat, her smile beatific, and her conscience troubled. |
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What seemed an easy task becomes complicated by locals' objections and, ultimately, the landman's own crisis of conscience. |
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The film, a story of a contract killer fighting his conscience more often than his bullet-laden opponents, makes some brave new noises. |
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Slowly she got behind him, glad that he was too busy pondering his conscience and enjoying the ocean to notice her. |
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When Rahouf sat, he made a choice of conscience that directly impacted no one but sure said a mouthful. |
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On some issues of conscience it is six of one and half a dozen of the other. |
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But another early casualty is conscience, routinely smothered in the national media echo chamber. |
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The way it performs its function unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality. |
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In choosing duty to the party over loyalty to his conscience, he has only succeeded in corking and blunting his own pen. |
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I will ask them to search their conscience and to contact the police with any information that will assist this investigation. |
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An information blackout imposed on the government's actions was indicative of a disturbed conscience. |
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The conscience always is pricked to some degree in the presence of the pure expression of the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. |
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This unconscionable scandal must kindle the moral imagination and stir the conscience of the American public. |
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You'd think some shred of conscience, honesty or shame would at least limit the pure blatantness. |
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The propensity to seek wealth and power has led persons of conscience to inveigh against the maldistribution of income for a long time. |
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He said in the 1960s the main focus of campaign was for the release of political prisoners and prisoners of conscience. |
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Furthermore, his 1839 statement reflected a greater concern about the conscience of the slave owner than the physical bondage of the slave. |
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With its unforgiving machine memory, the Internet might turn out to be the unlikely conscience of the world. |
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Have we as a people had our conscience so seared that atrocities such as this cause not an eyebrow to even raise? |
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A person with a seared conscience no longer has feelings toward God or His eternal laws. |
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We are removed from our sense of self, conscience, purpose, but it isn't the fault of the body, slowly starting to slip away into death. |
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One thing this seems to imply is that that soul is not the mystical animating spirit of the person, so much as their conscience. |
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The fictitious hedgie broke no laws, although he might suffer pangs of conscience for profiting while his clients suffered. |
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Some evangelical ordinands are questioning whether they can in good conscience go forward to ordination in the current crisis. |
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Self-obsessed and self-possessed, you are a strong woman with a social conscience, who centers her life around her art. |
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Therefore, it is necessary to submit to the authorities, not only because of possible punishment but also because of conscience. |
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By this time the beliefs were given even more high-sounding names such as ideals, freedom, conscience, God, country, sacred path. |
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This is an infusion of pop, rock and trip-hop that is easy on the ears, but not on the musical conscience. |
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He is a successful entrepreneur businessman who has never had a social conscience. |
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But those who do not have a peaceful conscience, dread death even though life means nothing but physical torment. |
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Clearly, his conscience was clean, but he wanted to make sure that the Corinthians understood that he was not a fake. |
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Besides evangelizing the lost and edifying the saved, shouldn't the church also be the conscience for the community? |
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I normally refrain from chiming in to an editor, but this story piqued my civic conscience. |
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We see the emergence of these men and women of conscience as a positive and hopeful sign. |
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It is film-making in bad faith, film-making with a guilty conscience, and no work can gracefully sustain such a weight. |
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The political chameleon changes its colors according to pressure, not conscience. |
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Then there's the 2003 champ, Matthias, from Switzerland, who mounts fish and is starting to struggle with his conscience. |
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They woulde percase say the same of Scotland but that their conscience told them contrary. |
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Guilt, selfishness, deep sorrow and frustration all mingled together in my conscience like a deadly cocktail. |
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We certainly enjoy our freedom, perhaps even taking a bit of pride in our defence of the right of conscience. |
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He eventually grows a conscience, to the point of sacrificing his fortune for every last human life he can save. |
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The last time I checked, puppets do not suddenly come to life and grow a conscience unless a fairy godmother and Jiminy the Cricket are involved. |
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It seems the time has come for military personnel to be given the right of conscience. |
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They did not favor a monarchically structured Church that could limit the rights of individual conscience so dear to them. |
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The 1994 genocide in Rwanda is a monstrous atrocity hanging over the conscience of the world. |
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Can chefs serve swordfish, bluefin tuna or Chilean seabass in good conscience? |
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My conscience is clear, but I now dread having anything to do with reporting anything to the authorities. |
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He's proved his point long ago and could pack it in tomorrow if he wanted with a clear conscience. |
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I would like to remind the Cabinet Ministers that a clear conscience is a soft pillow. |
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If I woke up some morning and said it was not for me, I'd have an absolutely clear conscience. |
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He was trying to convince himself that he had not cheated, which showed he didn't have a clear conscience. |
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Only then can we carry out the third and final step with a clear conscience. |
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Earlier in the week she had appeared before MPs to say she did not intend to resign because she had a clear conscience. |
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When I went to prison I had a clear conscience and when I got out I had a clear conscience. |
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Anyway, I was glad to help and can now return to California with a clear conscience. |
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My conscience is clear and if I had to make the same decisions again, I would. |
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For our part we have a clear conscience, as we will not accept donations from such companies. |
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When it came, she was armed with tissues and a clear conscience for what she knew had to be done. |
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Politics, in many ways, does not delight in a clear conscience and clean hands. |
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My conscience is clear and I wish to help the inquiry in any way that I can. |
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The answer is now less impressive, but it can be given with certainty and with a clear conscience. |
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When these disappeared, she fought and won a brief skirmish with her conscience. |
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In what may be the ultimate feat of subtlety and indirection, they want to control the behemoth by appealing to its conscience. |
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You have no conscience, no sense of responsibility, and I am sick unto death of picking up after you! |
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Mary Ellen Thomas, for example, found a unique way of communicating the idea that she's a candidate with a heart, and a strong social conscience. |
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But, at some point, each individual is still a human being and has to answer to his conscience. |
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Thereafter, my conscience is so laden with guilt that sleep continues to elude me for a further six weeks. |
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Most attacks of remorse or conscience in their strongest form emanates from that source. |
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But I could not bear to have the weight of your most gruesome death on my conscience. |
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The final stage of post-conventional morality sees behavior and conscience as guided by loftier universal principles. |
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We rarely realise here in Great Britain how lucky we to lack a guilty national conscience. |
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Seemingly, I would alleviate my guilty conscience by showering him with presents. |
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Now Lenny is a reformed alcoholic with a white wife, a thriving writing career and a guilty conscience. |
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Soon all that was left was nothing more than a ghostly echo of a guilty conscience. |
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In all likelihood, he was not plagued by a guilty conscience at the time of the killings. |
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Your guilty conscience is a testament to your unfailing virtue, of which you should be proud. |
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Do you think he had a guilty conscience from abusing me, and he really loved me? |
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There is no pain like that of a guilty conscience, and bigots hate to admit they're wrong. |
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Part of him, the public servant, knows that he is acting dishonourably, but his conscience tells him that he has no other option. |
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That kind of perspective teaches me the need to respect dissent, nonconformity, and liberty of conscience as priority Baptist values. |
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Vegetarianism is cool IF you have personal, religious or conscience reasons for being a Vego. |
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This is a traditional and fun race meeting and we shouldn't feel guilt ridden by social conscience and all wear dungarees and cloth caps. |
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A heartbeat, a voice, and a burr of conscience I continue to gratefully hear. |
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Black portrays Roosevelt as a patrician country squire who harbored a strong social conscience and a prejudice against the new industrial rich. |
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A person who through pious living has acquired an unaccusing conscience is known as a saint. |
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Few widows, after so vast a lapse of years, could have gazed with so unaccusing a conscience on the resemblance of their husband. |
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They should be sternly tried by human conscience for having slandered us with all sorts of lies and plots. |
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The essays he wrote in his old age put him in the role of the nation's conscience. |
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My social conscience prevented me from abandoning it in the produce section where some little old lady would be blocked off from the lemons. |
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He recognises the mythical, Orphean role that poetry has played in our national conscience and the sense of identity. |
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Universities have traditionally been hotbeds of public debate, with both students and their lecturers stirring the national conscience. |
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There is, however, a further problem which is best described as a problem of conscience. |
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The consequences of her actions weighed heavily on her conscience, but she refused to feel guilty. |
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I have come to realise that he was born entirely without a conscience or a sense of remorse. |
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I hope the burglar will have a conscience and return these tapes, which are of no value to anybody else. |
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Sweden is often held up as being a model of a democratic European country with a moral conscience. |
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He could touch if he wanted to, and he did want to, so badly, but his conscience knew it was wrong. |
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Does God create human beings with a conscience and moral reasoning powers and then leave them alone? |
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They saw themselves as well-born and bred men who out of loyalty and conscience had chosen to defend their king. |
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Give your conscience a break and spend the money on some new Manolo Blahnik shoes instead. |
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According to Stankushev the ratio between the number of votes and abstentions showed the ratio between fear and conscience. |
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Many of his supporters were anguished by the political cost of their votes of conscience. |
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The United States, particularly the left wing of the Democratic Party, also lives with a guilty conscience. |
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The Levellers developed from a demand for individual freedom of conscience, to demand a comparable political liberty for the individual. |
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When we follow our conscience, we weigh the arguments and do what we recognise to be right. |
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Of course, they do it because of their conscience, because of their aroha, and because of their concern for the broader social good. |
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Through daily ascesis, even in periods of no external persecution, the monastics testify to the martyrdom of conscience. |
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Within this new legal framework, Spaniards could in good conscience punish the bodies of indigenes as harshly and theatrically as former conquistadors. |
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From there, I had to wonder if the mathematics of games force a conscience to develop in any suitable civilization in any compossible world invented by God. |
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Then, the emotions of conscience belong to tertiary elaborations discovered in those inner-directed formations of the person constituted as a divided self. |
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Besides, the rule prevents the sacrifice of life to which filial affection might expose a generous youth, who in his conscience may condemn his father's conduct. |
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He angrily denied the claims, saying his conscience was clear. |
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Without a secret ballot, many people did not have the opportunity to vote their conscience. |
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Every renunciation of instinct now becomes a dynamic source of conscience and every fresh renunciation increases the latter's severity and intolerance. |
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Amnesty International has compiled records of 33 prisoners of conscience who have been detained for using the Internet to circulate or download information. |
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What else is summer good for but using all of one's magical powers to levitate out of the city for as long as the sober judges of one's conscience will allow? |
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He said he will put the story right in time and he has a clear conscience. |
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He did without conscience and without remorse. |
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It is obvious that he would not have lived as long as he did if he had taken up public office and conducted himself in accordance with his conscience. |
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In the 1980s and early 1990s, acid rain was at the top of the environmental agenda, with images of dying forests and lakes firmly lodged in the public conscience. |
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Fenner excelled as a casuist examining cases of troubled conscience. |
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His conscience flounders in inchoate confusion as he tries to decide what his surface actions should accomplish instead of asking how their long-term consequences will unfold. |
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Not a great opera, perhaps, but nevertheless a very interesting one, its disturbing theme clinging naggingly to the conscience in a way than more sumptuous fare rarely does. |
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There are many people who do many right things under the influence of sickness, affliction, death in the family, public calamities or a sudden qualm of conscience. |
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It is unusual in our time to hear or read someone declare that conscience tells them to change their strongest beliefs and sacrifice their most pressing desires. |
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The physicist Joseph Rotblat was the only scientist to leave the project that developed the atom bomb, the Manhattan Project, for reasons of personal conscience. |
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This man, perhaps, may have an easy conscience and a good digestion. |
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Compare the X3 with the Mini Cooper S, popularly viewed as a small, modern, hip and city-friendly runaround you can drive with a clear environmental conscience. |
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Those of a delicate conscience may be offended by the movie, but the images it conjures in the mind are more disturbing than those depicted on screen. |
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Black people of Birmingham, Alabama aroused the conscience of this nation and brought into being the Civil Rights Bill. |
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It is very well to say that the respondent ought not in conscience to retain this money and that that consideration is enough to found an action for money had and received. |
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In the end I could not in conscience take another appointment. |
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The document has not been cast as a statement under oath or as a solemn affirmation or made in a similar manner as to bind the conscience of the author of the document. |
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Most people would not suspect Robert Mugabe of harboring a guilty conscience. |
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He has a baby's death on his conscience for the rest of his days. |
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If it was conscience money, then it was fortunate for the couple that the cost of assuaging their guilt was measured in the national currency of a poor country. |
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One of the saving graces of the Lords, for me, is the fact that over one third of peers are cross benchers, freeing them to vote on conscience over party lines. |
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Then, as now, serving the Law and your conscience is a difficult business. |
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But, as a record of George Eliot's unrealized intention, I would rather like the anomalous punch-ladle to remain as a mark of her artistic, unsleeping, conscience. |
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Reason, conscience and common sense demand that there be a Creator. |
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His conscience pricked him as he cleaned and dressed himself. |
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It was about five years ago that my eco conscience began to form. |
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Her conscience pricked her every time she thought of how mad she had gotten at Kirby before The Christmas Concert and had nearly deserted her friend. |
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The late-life Vidal presented himself as a national conscience, a vindicator of small r-republican ideals against imperial excess. |
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Instead of appealing to our higher faculties and social conscience, the campaigns have grubbed about in our pockets, offering a little bit more here, a little bit less there. |
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She received numerous prestigious humanitarian and freedom-of-thought awards, and she was adopted as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International. |
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We cannot, in conscience, ignore these facts or disclaim responsibility. |
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One way to lose friends but perhaps gain wider influence is to blow the whistle on what your conscience tells you is sharp practice, by government or employer. |
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As long as he does nothing wilfully provocative, he has considerable freedom to redefine his personal position on matters of faith and conscience. |
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But I can say with a good conscience and an airy wave of the hand that if you have a different opinion we can all just try our best and in time the truth will emerge. |
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This man, your oppressor, is automatically morally defeated, and if he has any conscience, he is ashamed. |
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Thank God for post-modernism, the salve of the intellectual conscience. |
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It doesn't take book learning to acquire a conscience, and although guidance helps, there are always going to be moral invalids who just can't develop one. |
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Making it an official day off salved my conscience a little. |
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At this period of our life, he would say at the high tide of Victorianism, we need less harping on conscience and more appeals to critical intelligence. |
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It is as if their role in life is to appease, and even buttress, the white liberal conscience while naturally continuing to do all the dirty work. |
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Barnard concluded by stating that any man who engaged his conscience in scriptural study would come to the unquestionable conclusion that Jesus Christ was the messiah. |
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Capitalism has neither conscience nor morality when it is brought to bay. |
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Why are we not then guiltless if we thwart conscience and reason too? |
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Fellow Kurdish prisoners of conscience in other cities across Iran have followed suit. |
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At Big Apple Circus, a set of camels is as exotic as it gets, so your conscience can remain unsullied. |
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You know, troubled and certainly having a different kind of wiring that lends itself to conscience and consequential behavior. |
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A peaceful death betokened a serene conscience, a life well lived. |
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There is hardly any sane human being who can respect and cherish a social union in which his right to freedom of speech and conscience is scoffed at. |
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As for Simmons, he gets to ease his conscience while also burnishing his personal brand of savvy fandom. |
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This is the source of the schizophrenia that the South will suffer until it goes through its crisis of conscience. |
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Implementation of such steps will leave ministers the leisure time to go yachting with a clear conscience, and not worry about any photographs which could damage their images. |
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But why would a group of hackers who pride themselves on dissidence develop such a conscience? |
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A dramatised sequence shows a malingering worker suffering from a bad conscience as the radio relays Harris' request for one last spurt of effort. |
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I cannot and I will not retract anything, since it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. |
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Penniless and without protection, Pamela is pursued by Mr B., Lady B.'s son, but she repulses him and remains determined to retain her chastity and her unsullied conscience. |
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Did the author have a guilty conscience about tricking everyone? |
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I don't support censorship or rooting out the Commies, but I do think it means that mainstream organizers and people of conscience have to take a more active leadership role. |
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Does the fact that Cary is embroiled in all of this now spark any sort of crisis of conscience? |
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I can't in good conscience recommend the hand rolls tonight. |
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At one extreme, imagine genetically engineered minds devoid of conscience or empathy and at the same time highly calculating and ruthless in the pursuit of their own desires. |
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A couple of attempts by isolated guerilla groups around the stadium to greet the haka with boos were hushed by the greater conscience of the crowd. |
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What then must be the pangs inflicted by a gnawing conscience in eternity? |
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But the guilt has been creeping up on me, grasping at my skin, gnawing away at my bones, chewing on my heart, mauling my conscience, and spitting out my toenails one by one. |
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I would define Rockefeller Republican in the classic sense as a combination of fiscal responsibility and social conscience. |
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It sparks a comedic crisis of cultural conscience, which will presumably play out across the series. |
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The defendants various attempts to disvirgin the peaceful conscience of the plaintiff makes him to become a hawker to bring his problem to the open through writing. |
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A career in advertising can be pursued with good conscience when the good internal to the practice of advertising is creating these positive exchanges. |
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Meanwhile France, the white knight of peace and conscience of Europe, has only very recently ceased its overt efforts at trying to protect the Sudanese government. |
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He loves the pleasures of old Paris and could be content to be like any other Euro idler, but events beckon his conscience to undertake a mission in counterespionage. |
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So it fell that Mistress Anne could go to London without pangs of conscience at leaving her sister in the country and alone. |
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Using his social conscience, Brandeis became a leader of the Progressive movement, and used the law as the instrument for social change. |
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Let us draw with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience. |
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Confronted with a decision that could change the Daleks forever he is forced to examine his conscience. |
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Rather than force a man's conscience, government should recognise the persuasive force of the gospel. |
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Indeed, there was some danger that Sangma's appeal to MPs on a conscience vote could backfire on him if he pushed his case too far. |
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He wonders at my extreme prodigality of credit, and searedness of conscience, in citing an epistle so convicted by Bellarmine! |
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An excellent chapter relates synderesis, conscience, natural law, knowledge, and the responsibility of forming conscience in truth. |
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Holding faith and a good conscience, which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwreck. |
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The nonconformist conscience, as it was called, was repeatedly called upon by Gladstone for support for his moralistic foreign policy. |
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Instead, straighten your civic backbone and push back in clear conscience. |
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The persecuted Anabaptists and Huguenots demanded freedom of conscience, and they practised separation of church and state. |
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Yet, the text balances its moral tone as an appeal to one's conscience, states Olivelle. |
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Like Ames, Hale elsewhere labels the acts of conscience as synteresis, syneidesis, epicrisis. |
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He lay down, cuddled the blankets up to his ears, closed his eyes and composed himself to sleep, at peace with his conscience and the world. |
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It behooves every man who values liberty of conscience for himself, to resist invasions of it in the case of others. |
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Politically, nothing is a more powerful distraction from the female conscience than focusing on bodyism. |
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Newman once said that he would raise a toast to the Pope, but to conscience first. |
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The authority of conscience stands founded upon its vicegerency and deputation under God. |
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Nor will my conscience permit me to fard or daub over the causes of divine wrath. |
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He aimed to restore liberty of conscience and promote both outward and inward godliness throughout England. |
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Votes relating to issues of conscience such as abortion and capital punishment are typically free votes. |
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The Nonconformist conscience was the moralistic influence of the Nonconformist churches in British politics in the 19th and early 20th centuries. |
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Education and religion, in particular, he maintained, were matters of private conscience and should not be administered by the state. |
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This intensified opposition, and the 1898 Vaccination Act introduced a conscience clause. |
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By 1914 the conscience was weakening and by the 1920s it was virtually dead politically. |
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In 1745 Wesley wrote that he would make any concession which his conscience permitted, in order to live in peace with the clergy. |
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