This new wave of bloodlust, it occurred to me, is more a result of feeling helpless, than of anything rational or reasonable. |
|
To use myself as a counterexample, in psychological tests I always score off the charts in the rational measures. |
|
History is certainly not a rational process nor is it a progressive march towards a harmonious consummation. |
|
A rational approach and a balanced perspective is needed to resolve conflicts with logic and clarity rather than with an emotional approach. |
|
His concluding paragraph is illustrative of his straightforward and rational approach. |
|
This simple truth lies at the core of the need for fair and rational government regulation of industry. |
|
Only a tiny percentage of laws are struck down when rational review is applied. |
|
Indeed, he asks, does the state expand in rational and sensible ways to meet real policy needs, or rather in response to fevered moral panics? |
|
Striving in a law-bound, seemingly rational universe made success more thinkable, possibly more doable. |
|
Turning children at the threshold of their teens into rational thinking beings is clearly not their credo. |
|
At this time, we need considered, rational responses to the recent tragic events, and sensible, clear-headed discussion about what happens next. |
|
The care and concern they have for each other comes from the affection that arises from their sharing in each other's rational activity. |
|
That rational part of me says, it's just another wave, what's the matter with you? |
|
It is part of the sincerity of rational arguments that they are never knowingly glosses for partisan prejudices. |
|
This seems reasonable but I just don't think that it works in a world of human beings who are not perfectly rational value maximisers. |
|
I am pleased that we are able to undertake a polite, civilised and rational exchange of views. |
|
We have to take this decision on a rational basis, not in a climate of fear. |
|
There is also a failure to provide a rational basis for the decision as to the amount of respite to provided. |
|
The rational approach you would think is to stop all further introductions of alien fish species like trout, bass etc into water environs. |
|
Bonnet also published on cartography, algebra, rational mechanics and mathematical physics. |
|
|
With consciousness come moral beliefs, rational arguments and self-awareness. |
|
It comes from a perfectly rational conviction that great powers never act out of pure altruism. |
|
This is not to argue that everything about modernity is rational or desirable. |
|
In Hegel's syllogisms of the idea, objectivity attained rational form, while the concept acquired an explicit, material existence. |
|
We should not conclude that pity or other instinctual affections, or even rational self-love, are bad. |
|
In my analysis of this tripartite division I shall identify the rational soul with the ego, or self-obsessed reactive mind of Buddhism. |
|
If you sum a thousand terms, the result is vanishingly close to 2, but the exact rational representation fills two thousand binary digits. |
|
Beneath the postmodern gloss of its bright shiny surfaces lies a cleverly disguised core of rational modernity. |
|
The notion that marriage was to be based on romantic rather than rational love indicates a transvaluation of human sentiments. |
|
Whether or not there is a rational basis for their sense of humiliation is irrelevant. |
|
Appealing to one's rational sense in their moment of deep anguish and distress is indeed a difficult task. |
|
Alas, all of what you're saying makes rational sense, but I think it may be totally beside the point. |
|
If they will continue on that line, they will not be passing any law that has any rational sense. |
|
Ethical living is promoted not because it makes rational sense, but because it offers a guide for personal behaviour. |
|
Unfortunately, myself and the board are charged with making rational sense of all this. |
|
Of course, that was ridiculous, but to her nothing made much rational sense. |
|
He reasoned that humans are more rational than the beasts because, among other reasons, they have a larger brain to cool their hot-bloodedness. |
|
Science, by which he meant rational inquiry, would eventually supplant religion, he maintained, and guide the direction of human progress. |
|
The discomfort with using rational self-interest as an underlying principle is understandable, to a degree. |
|
Such homologous series can provide the basis for a rational classification of sulfosalts. |
|
|
I am generally a rational person, and could tick off many a reason why dashing my body against a rock club's begrimed floor isn't a good idea. |
|
It is the overweening ambition of the theory to explain or explain away rational thought, including philosophy. |
|
However, on that occasion, for the first time, we were informed of the decision and the rational behind it. |
|
Now, we have to have a rational relationship between the railway system, and the air transport system. |
|
Why would any rational cement mixer driver stop for someone flagging them down? |
|
Again, no rational person could view such transparent nonsense as genuine apologies. |
|
Stories travel through the minds of those who receive them, and follow traceless, timeless paths unaccountable to rational means. |
|
Men were bellowing and roaring as they charged, lost to all rational thought. |
|
Links do require little more work to update, but, on the plus side, a more rational navigational structure is sometimes possible. |
|
The reality is that any corrupt regime overthrown by moral and rational forces would immediately be targeted for destruction. |
|
We believe that a more rational approach requires the reorganisation or overt restriction of services. |
|
Under hypnosis, the rational brain is bypassed, and suggestions are made directly to the subconscious mind. |
|
The change to recommended international non-proprietary names is rational and we should not resist it chauvinistically. |
|
Prosecutors normally try to insist that someone was rational when they did the crime, is this a change of tack? |
|
There are chamchas all around who don't seem to follow any logic in giving rational advice to her on issues confronting the party. |
|
Lewis and his co-authors tend to unnecessarily bifurcate explicit rational insight and experiential learning. |
|
Psychoanalysis disrupts notions of a unitary, centred and rational self by its emphasis on an inner world permeated by desire and fantasy. |
|
Under the rational basis test, there is a high degree of presumption in favor of the law's validity and against striking it down. |
|
Given these giant loopholes, the judge struck the law down as serving no rational purpose. |
|
But this would not be a rational procedure and would not produce an optimally coherent system of beliefs. |
|
|
It is neither rational nor reasonable to expect those who can opt out to opt in. |
|
Among the ancients, she begins, the oppositions to rational truth were error, ignorance and, most of all, opinion. |
|
It grants clarity to chaos and provides rational justification for decisions taken in the heat and anger of the moment. |
|
This can lead to an information cascade that can go against rational self-informed decision making. |
|
It spread through her head, like a thick, heavy haze that blocked out all reasoning and attempts at rational thought. |
|
He's a bit of a Cartesian because he knows Descartes, they were friends, and he has understood what was new in Cartesianism, the rational mind. |
|
In place of imposing rational discovery, the hard-boiled hero experiences bewildering initiation into the violence just under an urbane surface. |
|
Maybe if you step back from the situation and see it from a rational point of view you might see that things are not as bad as they seem. |
|
But Descartes insists that a rational distinction also obtains between any two attributes of a substance. |
|
Death goes hand in hand with another tenet of the rational faith, the knowledge of impermanence. |
|
No great surprises here either, but grounds for rational hope at the voting booth. |
|
When someone has said those words to you, not in anger but in a calm rational manner, they never leave you. |
|
We remain passive spectators, rational contemplators, reflecting on our experience. |
|
Many of the physical theories and cosmologies of the Greeks read like rational revisions of the early myths. |
|
My wife, rational in most other things, adamantly refused to admit that her beautiful baby son would stoop to pushing her buttons. |
|
At its deepest a renewal of these ideals involves an integration of rational and non-rational values. |
|
In modern drama there is no such thing as the rational counter to wildfire popular beliefs. |
|
It is a reprehensible practice that corrodes our ability to make rational decisions. |
|
Any finite segment can be continued to produce a rational and any finite segment can be continued to produce an irrational. |
|
If we chop off an infinite cfe after a finite number of steps then we will create a rational approximation to the original irrational. |
|
|
But in a subtle way, these non-rational taboos could discredit and pre-empt the application of rational criteria in other spheres. |
|
Surely it is better to choose on the basis of rational or humanitarian reasons, rather than for non-rational reasons? |
|
In other words, a number is rational if we can write it as a fraction where the numerator and denominator are both integers. |
|
Any rational analysis would suggest that the bull market was over and prices had peaked. |
|
The irony of that situation was that Stalin judged Hitler to be more rational than in fact he was. |
|
Now, usually, people with rational views of the world are able to prevent policy from degenerating into such suicidally savage behavior. |
|
It assumes that citizens are rational and aware of all possible alternatives. |
|
The biblical, theological and rational case against Calvinism has never been stated more clearly, concisely, irenically or convincingly. |
|
But it is the grievance of a people who turn their own misdeeds into their own victimology, thus making rational discourse all but impossible. |
|
The whole point of the new system was to maximize the lord's profits, and to do so in as rational a way as possible. |
|
Milton had become too rational and believed in a fiery jealous God rather than the forgiving Holy Spirit. |
|
It was more economically rational to employ forces as and when required on a contractual basis. |
|
Duhamel worked on partial differential equations and applied his methods to the theory of heat, to rational mechanics and to acoustics. |
|
Further, the rational soul does not depend for its operation on the sense-organs, for it is only contingently connected to a body. |
|
This approach is rational and time-saving for both readers and reporters who want to avoid being sucked down political rabbit holes. |
|
The fundamental actors in international politics are rational individuals and private groups. |
|
But not even the badgering from the rational side of her mind was helping to shake her feeling of contentedness. |
|
Emergent norm theory describes a rational process of social and psychological adaptation to a truly novel circumstance. |
|
Now foundationalism is best construed, I think, as a thesis about rational noetic structures. |
|
They're calm and rational at times, but they may explode into inappropriate anger or rage at some perceived rejection or criticism. |
|
|
The principles governing the research process are clean, well-ordered, and rational when they appear on crisp white paper in black text. |
|
I might be guilty of nit-picking there, but read the final paragraph, which comes close to a rational conclusion, then veers wildly. |
|
We assume that the object of the rational individual person is to maximize utility given the choices and constraints facing the person. |
|
As any economist will tell you, a market is based on rational individuals maximizing their utility through economic exchange. |
|
It appears to us quite as rational and philosophical to suppose, that a queen bee could be converted into a neuter. |
|
Boutroux's topics range from rational numbers to an analysis of the notion of a function. |
|
Certainly neither rational choice nor neo-realism migrated north to any appreciable degree. |
|
Some people are clearly sociopaths while others are so delusional that it is clearly unfair to expect them to behave in a rational manner. |
|
He had a neoclassical French eye, a certain feeling for the rational and geometric that he adapted to the machine age. |
|
Rather, such deviation should be preceded by an exposition of the untenability of traditional claims, and be based on good rational argument. |
|
The medieval holy wars in the Middle East could not be solved by rational treatises or neat territorial solutions. |
|
Hopefully, my rantings will at least vaguely interest those of you who crave rational discourse. |
|
All good teenage rebellion rejects rational thought but needs an excuse for that rage. |
|
These interior dimensions of the soul live within us at depths that are not accessible to the rational mind. |
|
It implies that rational inquiry and religious doctrine cannot consist with one another. |
|
Our capacity for savagery grows as rational thought is overwhelmed by fear, despair, and anger. |
|
The ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity proved inadequate as bases for a fully rational society. |
|
He was a dualistic interactionist, who thought that the rational soul and the body have a causal influence on each other. |
|
But for many people, their faith isn't based around an irrational fervour, and it isn't based around rational logic. |
|
Nor does it simply rest on the naive distinction between feeling and rational calculation. |
|
|
Hegel develops his rational ontology of gender within a logic of oppositions. |
|
He also helped to establish the Roman Empire on a much more rational basis. |
|
Purely rational arguments often fail to capture potential political audiences, so appeals to emotion are extremely useful. |
|
But it does not, by itself, make it rational to believe there is any such a connection. |
|
Breton suggested that rational thought repressed the powers of creativity and imagination and thus was a hindrance to artistic expression. |
|
The key to ideological commitment is emotional intensity, not rational thought. |
|
He sounded like he thought that was a complete, perfectly rational explanation. |
|
Because these choices seem rational in the circumstances does not remove the fact that decisions have been made. |
|
It seems to me that philosophers are often criticized for always demanding rational explanations. |
|
Maybe it is simply so beyond our knowing that rational thinking breaks down. |
|
When persons achieve perfect rationality, they accord with the rational order of a universe ruled by divine reason. |
|
The pivot of this change was the Enlightenment, a time when the rational took ascendance over the mystical. |
|
Unlike the first two, Proviesque rarely displays a logical structure that can be followed by sensible rational people. |
|
I have a friend, a sensible, rational creature, not outwardly generous, but happy to share a garibaldi if pressed. |
|
The Don's barely understood emotional meandering is the counterpoise and counterpoint to Kitri's rational love for Basilo. |
|
However, he isn't entirely rational either according to our understanding of the term. |
|
Sarah had always been so sensible and rational and now she actually sounded as if she believed what she was saying. |
|
Interestingly, even the mentally deranged humans are rational if not sensible. |
|
This is obviously a desperate attempt at rational thought by a deeply conflicted individual. |
|
Rationality in creation is a logical consequence of a rational God, who speaks to man through his Son. |
|
|
Under the conventional interpretation, what he considers conditionally rational is actually irrational or euphoric. |
|
Where humour and rational explanations do not produce concord about judicial activism, a parable may make the point. |
|
Since men are rational and egoistic, endowed with the right of property, the composition of output should be determined by consumer sovereignty. |
|
Term formalism can perhaps be extended to the integers and rational numbers, but what are the real numbers supposed to be? |
|
All that liberal democracy requires is a rational attitude, that is, a readiness to listen to critical arguments and to learn from experience. |
|
It is certainly possible for a rational agnostic to be a highly moral and responsible person. |
|
Maximizing their gains demands a disciplined and rational investment strategy that is truly national in its scope. |
|
The decision not to delay further was, however, a reasoned and rational decision. |
|
But what rational student would study computer science when there are no jobs to be had? |
|
This paper develops a rational choice model of the fertility of single women in the presence of government transfers. |
|
Sometimes, the most rational interpretation of someone's behaviour is that they are nasty, sadistic or cruel. |
|
The composed and rational side of their personality vanishes and is replaced by rage, aggression or whining. |
|
Neither panic nor complacency is a rational response to contemporary fascism. |
|
The tendency of rational progress to become irrational regress arises much earlier. |
|
Value for money is associated with rational allocation of existing or given resources. |
|
Consequently, the logical and rational response to a new paradigm by most people is rejection. |
|
But this is the conclusion reached by each and every rational herdsman sharing a commons. |
|
Instead of having a calm, rational debate about legitimate issues, he started name-calling and casting insults. |
|
No fully rational man would try to pass there, particularly on the final lap of the final race of the season. |
|
And, in this place of judgement, love is its own lapsed religion, it feeds off of faith rather than rational thought. |
|
|
Like the sequential model of decision making, power is depicted as cold, rational and analytical. |
|
You are older, wiser, more mature, and more rational then your feather-brained students. |
|
A physically unlikely but formally rational connection can be made, joining an assembly of body parts into a single image. |
|
Each time these arguments against have been countered with rational retort only for the excuse to be replaced by an incredulous one. |
|
It leads to the incommensurable relations, which cannot be represented in a rational form. |
|
At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. |
|
More importantly, rationale policies are urgently needed to promote rational use of antibiotics in poultry, animal husbandry and agriculture. |
|
Your purchase is rational in the normal, colloquial sense of the word but not necessarily in the social science meaning. |
|
It is rare to find an anti-racist who believes that racist feelings can never be changed by any process of rational therapy. |
|
Discourse ethics tries to explain the internal relation between rational acceptability and moral rightness. |
|
The contrast between the rational and mystical aspects of life is often epitomized as the conflict between the Apollonian and the Dionysian. |
|
Faced with a wholly unknowable threat, the rational thing to do is to compare those outcomes we can predict, and ignore those we cannot. |
|
While they may slow or impede the process of change, in the long run they are slower than a rational approach. |
|
Consider as a definiendum a universal, such as man, and its definiens, rational animal. |
|
They are a model of rational discourse, replete with references to the Federalist Papers and other similarly unimpeachable authorities. |
|
The above of course is all thoroughly rational and gets nowhere near the point that arachnophobia is a disproportionately prevalent fear. |
|
It was a supremely rational column that made it sound like I had it all together, unflappable in the face of grief. |
|
States are rational or instrumental actors, always seeking to maximize their interests in all issue areas. |
|
Its mix of rational deduction and wild credulity, coupled with recklessness and topped with a dollop of sheer perversity, captivated her. |
|
The person faithful to God makes judgments that the rational but unfaithful person would never make. |
|
|
But they were very far from being calm, rational or undistracted at the relevant time. |
|
It seems that this uncritical acceptance of the paranormal is a step beyond Ms. Rehm's expertise and rational judgment. |
|
The study suggests unconsidered responses could be more important to some voters than a rational study of a candidate's merits. |
|
If we perturb a system that has a rational frequency ratio, then it can easily be shifted into a chaotic situation with irrational frequencies. |
|
This debate is not a round-table among rational people who respect each other. |
|
Psychologists have long noted that rational debate seldom convinces people of the truth of an argument, unless they enter the debate uncommitted. |
|
Thinking in the intuitive mode is swift, effortless, and associative, whereas thinking in the rational mode takes time and effort. |
|
A similar algorithm was later developed which allowed rational approximation of continuous functions defined on an interval. |
|
She turns out to have immaculate manners, a perfectly adequate sense of humour and an entirely rational fear of what we Brits will make of her. |
|
Indulging your atavistic selfish-gene impulse to replicate is neither rational nor moral. |
|
Thanks for the most rational and lucid exposition on the subject of contemporary feminism I have read. |
|
Being torn between careers on the day you graduate is every bit as rational as knowing what you want to be from the age of six. |
|
Further, it is not that economists are not cognizant of the restrictive nature of rational self-interest. |
|
Fast forward eight months, and rational or not, consumer confidence is taking a dive. |
|
The Cartesian cogito played a major part in promoting the scientific and rational development of the Enlightenment in the 18th century. |
|
And the answer that a rational mind then says, well, he is in the midst of this and he is just blotting this out of his brain. |
|
Even a sanguine complexion, therefore, did not guarantee rational capacity in a man. |
|
While she tries to use rational persuasion, her two henchwomen can hardly wait to tar and feather the mutinous victim. |
|
I have to say, if the idea was to persuade any of us that her followers are sane and rational people, the plan backfired in spectacular fashion. |
|
No, I'm not saying that the very air of the region makes rational decent people feel stabby. |
|
|
They also help me forget about rational things like computer backup and backup software. |
|
For Max Weber, the creation of consonant harmony was a rational product of Western scientism. |
|
And this is a matter about which there can be sensible debate based on a scientific or at least rational understanding of the world. |
|
Postmodernists prefer local traditions which are not entirely led by rational and instrumental criteria, but make room for the sacred and even the irrational. |
|
But the surprising fact is that cultured and learned men not only do not notice it for themselves, but they contest every exposure of the harm and stupidity of patriotism with the greatest obstinacy and ardour, though without any rational grounds; and they continue to belaud it as beneficent and elevating. |
|
In all fairness, too, Marshall has at the ready pretty rational reasons for almost every change he made in this adaptation. |
|
We should know by now that a rational argument never can touch an affair of the heart. |
|
Of course, this call for hip-hop artists to speak out comes from a completely sincere and rational place. |
|
First, laws that treat people differently from one another without a rational justification are unconstitutional. |
|
The fact that the virus is still alive has sustained many safety concerns, both rational and irrational, about its use. |
|
Americans are can-do people who will quickly fix their problems if allowed to do so in a rational context. |
|
For understandable reasons we prefer to think of ourselves as rational agents who live meaningful lives rather than as muddled actors in a theatre of the absurd. |
|
This hypothesis is in accord with rational choice theory, which suggests that criminals think rationally and strategically to accrue the benefits of their crime. |
|
Philosophy will never quell the conflict between competing ways of life, but it can at least point the way towards values on which all rational people might agree. |
|
The balance of rational decision-making seems to point against the link. |
|
Her image glittered in his mind, a radiant light that would guide him back out of the terror of his dreams and into the sane, rational world of the living. |
|
If, however, more companies opt for no guidance, the Street may inadvertently become more rational and therefore stop whipsawing stock prices for miniscule variances. |
|
Since this nature is rational and spiritual, reason is understood to be both ratiocinative and contemplative, but contemplation is the most sublime function of the soul. |
|
Are you suggesting that rational arguments are not very important? |
|
Issues such as these are difficult to resolve on a purely rational basis. |
|
|
On behalf of all dog owners and all sensible, rational people who still have common sense in this country, we say that this is bad legislation and that we are against it. |
|
Anyway, enough of the justification of why a supposedly logical and rational person such as myself could take interest in something as supposedly trivial as astrology. |
|
He saw Man as essentially rational and able to see right from wrong. |
|
There is implanted in every rational being the capacity to distinguish the true from the false, to weigh the evidence, and to confront the world without illusions. |
|
As rational beings, then we are duty bound to be morally upright. |
|
Descriptions about religions throughout the book are invariably ahistorical, fail to inculcate any rational enquiry and singularly ignore the time and space contexts. |
|
For their part, landlords resented the tendency of British governments and rational commentators to fail to recognize the difficulties they encountered. |
|
This world-soul makes the cosmos a living rational being, a god. |
|
After all, after the second world war, Harry S. Truman was very concerned about re-establishing a rational pattern of economic relations through Europe. |
|
It was a self-fulfilling prophecy, a feedback loop of rational and irrational fears. |
|
Their analysis, therefore, focuses on ways of deterring competitive strategies that are otherwise seen to be the rational response within an anarchically structured system. |
|
Exchange theory, which focuses on rational self-interest as the basis for relatedness, has been particularly criticized by feminist writers as androcentric. |
|
In this paper, it is demonstrated, via a counterexample, that E-stability generally does not imply learnability of rational expectations equilibria. |
|
My learned friend's submission seems to be premised on the submission that it can only be rational to change one's mind if there is a rational reason for doing so. |
|
Well, speaking as a college instructor, my entire work rests upon the illusion that students are adults, capable of rational thought and analysis of the world around them. |
|
Only this is to be reverenced in the rational being, that he feels and acts as a member of a transcendental realm, while recognizing that he can know only the world of nature. |
|
Facts about the direction of one's attention occupy a curiously liminal position in respect to the divide between the rational and the non-rational in our psychological lives. |
|
On the other hand, suspending all rational powers of disbelief and gasping out loud in glee can be great fun, and livens up a mundane weekday evening. |
|
Like logocentrism, the Atonist order is rational and linear. |
|
Far from being atavistic, anti-progressive protectionists, Luddites were logical, rational people who saw financial ruin staring down the barrel at them. |
|
|
It was a gutsy call that overrode rational hesitation born of his 2008 loss to Mike Huckabee. |
|
Tooker took the floor and began talking about environmental issues in cities, about conservation, cars, smog, and rational transportation systems. |
|
Either Moscow was implacably belligerent or shared the same rational interests as the United States. |
|
Rather, there is a constant back-and-forth between the conscious and the unconscious, between the rational and the instinctual. |
|
This is an insult to educated and rational thinking people of this nation. |
|
The act itself is grounded in irrationality, so it often defies rational explanations. |
|
Rational choice theory views actors as rational insofar as they act instrumentally, are utility maximizers, possess stable and exogenous preferences, and are self-interested. |
|
A rational and practical management of energy resources is imperative. |
|
In a similar manner if there be some truth which has no sensuous or rational relation to human mind, it will ever remain as nothing so long as we remain human beings. |
|
Not surprisingly, this laid-back ball of nerves is also both intensely rational and explosively emotional. |
|
Cantor published a paper on trigonometric series in 1872 in which he defined irrational numbers in terms of convergent sequences of rational numbers. |
|
After all, in the great scheme of things, few rational people are going to begrudge someone with a handicap a nice space near the door to the supermarket. |
|
I know of no rational argument which convinces me that plays that are enjoyed and discussed by intellectuals are any better than plays which entertain a middlebrow audience. |
|
Rather than continue with an artificial confederation established by the British, the Biafrans sought to form a smaller state with rational borders. |
|
And so he had that rational side to him, and then he had the transcendental side. |
|
An example of a law that would flunk the rational basis test is one that prohibits people born on Tuesdays from driving. |
|
These considerations are important to keep in mind in the rational design of biomaterials for applications in tissue engineering and wound healing. |
|
The empirical debates have to do with such topics as monetarism, Keynesianism, inflation, market structure, rational expectations, and efficient institutions. |
|
Both Milton Friedman's theory of monetarism and the rational expectations school of macroeconomics challenged the effectiveness of activist monetary policy. |
|
This is because the behaviour of a rational monopolist will be to market the goods at a price which is higher than that prevailing under ordinary competitive conditions. |
|
|
If we try and expunge all the bits that don't fit with a controlled or rational model of the mind, we end up with something that's bleached of interest. |
|
Is this wickedness of the first order or rational economic behaviour? |
|
The main line of its improvement should be a rational integration of munition factories and a reduction in their total number through conversion and restructuring. |
|
On the face of it, it is a little undiplomatic for a Foreign Office Minister to suggest that the British have a monopoly on rational and civilised behaviour. |
|
Instead, she says, the advice would be to help your child to bed, let them sleep it off, then discuss things in a rational way once you have calmed down. |
|
From there on rational thought was lost in a fug of unfounded speculation. |
|
Enlightenment values are in peril not because these mad beliefs are really growing but because too many rational people seek to appease and understand unreason. |
|
The ACA and every wonk assumes rational people who can make good financial decisions. |
|
Given the essentially rational nature of the human soul and the rational nature of the Neoplatonic ontology, there is nonetheless room for optimism. |
|
Alan Irwin alludes to the public non-acceptance of nuclear technology, and argues that this conclusion is justified by a careful, rational cost-benefit analysis. |
|
The endless possibilities of the city could pose moral dangers of temptation and vice, of prostitution and degeneration, as well as rational recreation. |
|
Though virtues of character are acquired from habitual practice and intellectual virtues through rational exercise, the two kinds are yet closely related. |
|
Premier Chang Chun-hsiung also appealed yesterday to participants to remain calm in their campaign for a nuclear-free homeland and to be rational in their endeavors. |
|
Legal experts equate obligatory drug testing to suspicionless searches, and doubt any rational court would allow for the testing of entire student bodies. |
|
Cannabis use in young people remains a controversial area, and absence of good data has handicapped the development of rational public health policies. |
|
The opposing sizzle may be more captivating then rational discourse. |
|
These environmental stewards manage the forests with love for the environment and rational science to provide wood for our nation and a future for their children. |
|
This superb insight into the heart of science includes a look at the world of the subatomic physicist, that most rational and reductionist of breeds. |
|
It subdues their emotional force by assigning rational meaning to them, however irrational or incomprehensible the impressions might originally have been. |
|
This theory supposes that each offender in his true nature, a kind of rational or moral nature, sees that punishment is right in certain circumstances. |
|
|
There are regularly held international and national assemblies, conferences and symposia devoted to the problem of rational use of the frequency resource. |
|
Not everyone can have my cool clear-headed rational brain I guess. |
|
Humane and rational reform of the penal system is needed urgently. |
|
No decent, rational individual would ever choose war over peace, he added. |
|
If the third party is an infant or is mentally disordered, this lack of rational capacity may be regarded as sufficient to discount the third party's act in causal terms. |
|
Deterrence and punishment are not rational options, and politicians who seek to inflame public feeling in these distressing cases are being forced to recognise this. |
|
Yet there are times when a rogue state is so caught up in its own propaganda and inflated glory that even a military threat cannot bring it to rational discussion. |
|
Hence the conceivability of an autonomously operating rational soul. |
|
Clearly, UK media coverage of protestors offers a set of binary oppositions that are inimical to seeing young people as part of an informed, rational and democratic citizenry. |
|
Quite a number of useful industrially manufactured everyday objects have been given functional, rational and therefore beautiful forms in the spirit of concretism. |
|
As a dedicated contrarian I'm always uneasy with the way in which people, who are as individuals rational and intelligent, can be transformed into scarily conformist drones. |
|
It is important to understand, however, that the rational part of the soul is not to be identified with what Hume called Reason and contradistinguished from the Passions. |
|
Various theories propose that it was the product of paranoid madness, the involuted working of kinship-based rivalries, or a reasoned, rational punishment of treachery. |
|
Prior to Senmed, he was President and CEO of the Marlstone Corporation, a rational drug design firm. |
|
Michael Gove, who pontificates about purer and more rational politics, likes to play to the gallery. |
|
We will take into account the exact solution of equation by using the technique basing on the expansion of the rational function method. |
|
As long as no rational person dares utter it people will go on imagining it means stoning us all to death, and the yellow press will have won. |
|
Perhaps, once in awhile, scarcity will breed rational thinking, too. |
|
From the Hobbesian perspective, trusting agents are not rational if their makeup discourages advantageous defection. |
|
Emotivists also argue that there is no rational way to conclusively end a dispute. |
|