The very basis of government after all, is subjective views on how things ought to be. |
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Moreover, even though quantitative analysis is less subjective than qualitative analysis, interpretation and bias are by no means eliminated. |
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It is an objective expression of subjective judgments concerning human wants, now and in the future. |
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I believe truth to be subjective, contingently true, not to be universally true. |
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Of course the impression the observer receives from a photograph is, in the final analysis, always subjective. |
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Evaluation may involve subjective and objective measures and qualitative and quantitative approaches. |
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No lyric poet has been her equal for the intensity and variety of subjective states dramatized. |
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Indeed, it is just these potential biases and subjective judgments being made by the sitters that obviously cries out for controlling. |
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The underwriter might also charge higher rates based upon subjective judgements and conclusions from their analysis of your property values. |
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Further, the overwhelming body of international jurisprudence favours the application of a subjective test. |
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Obviously that's a very subjective sieve to push through a juror, because the juror has to make an introspective judgment of himself. |
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Just how the economic whirligig will affect retailers' upfront buys still remains highly subjective. |
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The first important school of thought to arise out of Kantian philosophy was the subjective idealism of Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. |
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Differences in environment or health status may affect how people respond to subjective assessments. |
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It is again the same end effect, but the perspective is fundamentally different as it is based upon a subjective rather than objective reality. |
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We accept a parallel subordination of subjective appearance to objective reality in other areas. |
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The attitude of the filmmakers toward history and society is ahistorical and subjective in the extreme. |
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Inevitably, subjective evaluation became the ultimate criterion for inclusion or rejection of specific events. |
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Pluralism is a competency, not just mere subjective relativism, but ethical pluralism. |
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His private perspective on public space, though highly subjective, is not coded with any personal information. |
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The measured angle of repose increases as the subjective microscopic observation of angularity increases. |
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Rates of vegetative or subjective symptoms of depression were the same between AD patients with or without depressed mood or anhedonia. |
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But in the subjective world, I can use this magical view, and, at the very least, believe my eyes. |
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All but one of the seven patients restudied after 3 months of bosentan therapy reported subjective improvement in symptoms. |
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Others discount subjective feelings and become legalists as they observe only the letter of the law. |
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This noble mission, however, does not currently apply to people who seek only subjective perfection. |
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Students would not be selected on such subjective criteria as whether they looked friendly and approachable. |
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They become a matter of subjective and arbitrary whim if they are cut off from collective deliberations. |
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In the harsh light of a rising logical positivism, they appeared too bluntly subjective to remain science's cutting edge. |
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In the early twentieth century, logical positivism narrowed the scope of meaning in a way that made belief in God subjective by definition. |
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Because these projected experiments had never been done, assignment to a risk category was, of course, somewhat speculative and subjective. |
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That's very subjective but I believe that air power today will attrit a division at about 8 per cent per day. |
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She assumes an expressivist axiology, a subjective epistemology, an expressivist view of the composing process, and a mixed pedagogy. |
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After all, this is a area where subjective judgements are often made behind closed doors. |
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All these tattlers would do better to consider less subjective reasons for the Scotsman's sales problems. |
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They feel uncomfortable with some of the more subjective data on a scorecard. |
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During our subjective tests, we were able to see the inconsistencies using a pure-black test pattern. |
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If the assessment is subjective, the level of agreement between markers must be tested in order to validate the process of marking. |
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Hypotheses and theories are generally based on objective inferences, unlike opinions, which are generally based on subjective influences. |
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Any subjective valuation based on sentimental value does not enhance the true value. |
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Although a relatively objective metalanguage can be devised to describe and discuss poetry, individual response to it is necessarily subjective. |
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It's extremely subjective and it's extremely seductive and more often than not, it's extremely misplaced as graphic design. |
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How great a comedian he was remains a moot point, inevitably subjective, and increasingly difficult to separate from the mythology. |
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Historical facts cannot be verified, but only checked against other subjective accounts. |
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So far as subjective intentions were concerned, the directors proceeded in blithe disregard of the existence of the articles. |
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The subjective and objective yield indications are combined in a multistage process employing statistical and judgmental techniques. |
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Appearances are not a valid means of assessing someone's youth, whose favorableness or unfavorableness is a subjective, not objective, matter. |
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For some, mysticism implies that subjective knowledge of the true nature of the universe can, in fact, be obtained. |
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If the love of God were as sloppy and sentimental and subjective as our own, we could never count on him to be consistent in anything. |
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The namelessness of the lover creates heightened particularity, at the same time giving his character the edge of the purely subjective. |
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The first, encountered here already, is that meaning-claims about music are unwarrantably subjective. |
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The assessment of content validity is a subjective judgment by the investigator, observer, or groups of subject matter experts. |
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In the words of one of its founders, noetic science is concerned with subjective experience as opposed to materialistic science. |
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If it's subjective, biased, bad reporting people want, they can find that in buckets on the Net. |
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Fischer's obsequiousness is not simply, or even primarily, a reflection of his subjective cowardice and political spinelessness. |
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Previously, visual checks were carried out but this could be very subjective. |
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The concept of social persons, she argues, dialectically links subjective interiority to the social world by habituation. |
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Expressionist stagecraft and decor, both in the theater and the cinema, set out to convey the subjective mental state of the protagonist. |
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Does it even make sense to assign a numerical value to something as subjective as wine? |
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In these and other ways, care theorists distance themselves from any simple equation of subjective hurt and moral claims. |
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It must be applied from the standpoint of the community and not from the subjective viewpoint of the developer. |
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In this sense their condition is epistemologically objective but ontologically subjective. |
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Over a period of years a sympathetic observer notices marked changes, although such personal reflections are notoriously subjective. |
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To them if a practice offends their subjective sensibilities it must be unconstitutional. |
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Freedom, in short, is a subjective concept that can mean either liberation or lifelong captivity. |
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Do we need, then, to decide whether we should be ontologically and epistemologically objective or subjective? |
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In relation to the other concerns raised by the woman, he pointed these were very subjective matters and hearsay. |
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Such a cathexis of subjective viewpoints on an external event or character is, of course, common in narrative works associated with Modernism. |
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They're systematizing their fantasy lives, and thereby structuring their subjective worlds. |
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Admissions decisions are subjective because they are based on human beings that inherently possess a great deal of variability. |
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Even the Cabinet Office's own research shows that this is discriminatory, because it is based on subjective judgements carried out by managers. |
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Instead, participants used rating scales that assessed their own subjective perception of conflict in their friendship relationships. |
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Where this minimum lies, however, is based on management's subjective judgment. |
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Essays will be scored on a six-point scale for such subjective elements as voice, style, flow, and deployment of the language. |
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The value of the items on each side of the sheet are dependent upon individual subjective valuations. |
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Whatever else it may be, authority is a subjective disposition in people to regard something else as a reliable guide in thinking and doing. |
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The accuracy score for the medium is completely dependent on the subjective decisions of the sitter. |
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The farther to the right the writing slants the more subjective the person is. |
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I no longer trust my own subjective impressions, or those of other linguists, no matter how reputable. |
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Ultimately loss and gain I suppose are ultimately subjective, because each reader that reads a poem will have a different reaction to it. |
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A lot of magic and NLP plays in this area of the individual's subjective experience. |
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The scientific literature has noted some gender differences in both subjective and objective responses to cocaine. |
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There will always be debate about who deserves honours, all of it highly subjective. |
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Consciousness is about first-person, subjective experience, and there's a fundamental gap there. |
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Things are even more difficult when probabilities are subjective and individual beliefs may differ. |
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How do physical processes in the brain give rise to the subjective life the conscious mind? |
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Milan's inner world is one that mixes hallucination with reality, subjective reverie with objective perception. |
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As Beckett dramatizes, the ultimate reality of the subjective mind is beyond the spatio-temporal limits of logical meaning. |
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Intentions are influenced by attitudes toward the behavior, subjective norms and perceptions of behavioral control. |
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The basic mechanism is subsequently extended by an abductive reasoning system which is guided by subjective probability. |
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Maternal evaluations may reflect subjective perceptions rather than the child's actual behavior. |
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The genitive would function syntactically as subjective genitive with the transactional term o-pa. |
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His philosophy is a peculiar and wholly subjective patchwork of frustrated sexual fantasies, zany misanthropy, and 1960s hippy-dippy iconoclasm. |
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But it doesn't really matter in the particulars, because it's all totally, utterly subjective. |
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Kant's transcendental idealism should not be confused with subjective idealism which makes the physical dependent on the mental. |
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For any particular competency model, content and face validity are essentially subjective judgements. |
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Bernstein cautioned against facilely equating computational ability with human, subjective qualities to which rights traditionally adhere. |
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The impersonal character of these cognitional methods rules out the subjective desires or involvements that might lead us away from reality. |
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The Impressionists like Cezanne and Monet emphasized the impression a scene left on the viewer, and added a subjective tone to their paintings. |
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Quantitative researchers sometimes criticize qualitative research as being too impressionistic and subjective. |
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Some subsequent scholars have regarded such overall judgments as unduly subjective and impressionistic. |
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But mostly, that which is most personal is most common, not most subjective, esoteric, incommunicable and unique. |
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The camera still tended toward the production of noisy clusters of qualitative, subjective, illegible, and inconvertible stuff. |
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The proposal was influenced by the new interest shown by physiologists in the subjective conditions of visual perception. |
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How can this person make a subjective comparison to other similar games if they already don't like them? |
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He also argued that scientific inquiry has an ineliminable subjective edge to it that militates against the objectivity required for knowledge. |
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Facts provide information which is free from the contamination of a subjective viewpoint. |
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All concerned countries will be sucked in, regardless of their subjective wishes. |
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The web design and planning process can become incredibly subjective unless you have agreement on the goals ahead of time. |
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One of the reasons why means are more frequently analysed than ends is because ends are so subjective, contingent, and in constant flux. |
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For what is truth, but a subjective construct rendered persuasive in the moment of its construction? |
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Once this is ready, then all the regional variations and subjective interpretations can be laid to rest. |
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While the excavation component is more of a mechanical skill, the interpretive component is very subjective. |
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The problem with Lichtman's system, however, is that it's traded statistical invalidity for subjective imprecision. |
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Any system of pointing the psalms is bound to receive criticism, as, by its nature, it implies a subjective interpretation of the words. |
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It seeks to stand completely independent of subjective pointedness but remains aesthetically acute and functionally precise. |
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Let's leave aside those of us who believe that the judgment of art is irremediably subjective. |
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But post-traumatic stress disorder is especially amenable to misuse because so many of its criterial features are non-specific and subjective. |
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If reality is subjective to the observer, isn't that the ultimate confirmation of free will? |
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Such wide subjective definitions can and do easily become charters of abuse. |
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In order to support preconceived ideas and policies many subjective and false assumptions are made. |
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As an existential, mood is an aspect of the being of Dasein and as such is neither subjective nor objective. |
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When the same questions were asked projectively and subjectively, the questions alternated from projective to subjective. |
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All art criticism is necessarily subjective, but such complete empathy with an artist is rare. |
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Working in psychophysics he became concerned with the biases that occur when subjective assessments are made. |
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There will be borderline cases and, pursuantly, cases in which the actual classification is subjective. |
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In fact, similar tests of subjective validation, with identical results, have been done on astrological charts and graphological readings. |
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Kabala comes to describe God's emanations, and as such it deals with subjective reality as perceived by man. |
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The visual effect of distantiation is that you shed subjective involvement and so gain information. |
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Patients often complain of subjective swelling of hands and feet, as well as paresthesia and dysesthesia of hands and feet. |
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These questions are subjective and involve our personal and professional ethics and philosophies. |
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The subjective and unverifiable nature of pain is one of the most challenging aspects of managing it. |
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While this book reflects a fascination with how things work, it also is a memoir, replete with subjective, idiosyncratic and deeply nostalgic associations. |
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That is, reported differences in perceived stress may be due to differences in subjective perceptions or in differences in the amount of objective stressors. |
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I don't see how one can be objective about subjective matters. |
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This disappearance of objective knowledge in Western philosophy has continued in other idealist and subjective guises-positivism, materialism, psychologism and historicism. |
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Perhaps a researcher can also shield herself from sorrow by attempting to conduct objective value-free research on subjective emotion-drenched issues. |
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Subjective complaints do not always accurately reflect the chemosensory disturbance experienced by a patient. |
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However, as behaviorists are amply aware, the use of subjective reporting suffers from a tendency towards unreliability, and at worse an embrace of mentalism. |
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You can follow the software instructions to adjust your computer screen controls manually, but as you can guess, human perception is usually subjective. |
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Drama is a genre which is heavily oriented to the first person present, a narrative form associated with subjective experience and inner feelings. |
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The subjective experience of the human mind has been marginalised and the inextricable mutual dependence of body and mind within a unique individual ignored. |
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The problem is that in theory, in any given situation when someone refuses to sell we can't tell whether it is because of strategic holdout or subjective value. |
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In the Deleuzian formulation such a displacement is necessary because deterritorialization involves a collapse of the subjective enunciation and the presentation of material. |
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Taylor's picture provides a credible analysis of the vices and virtues of the modern naturalization of the cosmos and of our tendency to think that values are subjective. |
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There are all kinds of subjective factors that enter into it. |
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Some temporal errors that were observed in human-machine interaction are ascribed to misestimations of interval durations due to objective and subjective factors. |
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If subjective identification emerges from relationality, fractures and faultlines within the relational field may produce conflict and contestation within subjectivity. |
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Schuster segues into the novelist's conceit of placing herself into the subjective space of her biographees and this is both unconvincing and irritating. |
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Teaching and learning should tackle the person's subjective experience of illness as well as the bioscience underpinning its diagnosis and management. |
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In reviewing applicants, we consider both objective criteria, such as test scores, and subjective criteria, such as leadership ability. |
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Contrary to predominant opinion, this mixing is as much guided by spontaneous inspiration based on aural-reaction as it is the subjective will of the mixer. |
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Using the self-effacing formal devices associated with conceptualism and minimalism, Piper interrogates the subjective effacement of the racial stereotype. |
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With respect, I believe the trial judge erred by failing to recognize that subjective belief can be, and frequently is, proven by indirect or circumstantial evidence. |
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Various subjective measures of fatigue and sleepiness have been developed. |
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According to this view, computers might come to exhibit emotional behaviour, but they will never have that subjective feeling that constitutes the essence of true emotion. |
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Since all meditative experiences are so radically subjective, it seems difficult to find a language in which to couch an objective or value-free account of them. |
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In Latin, remember that the plural of me is us, and that the plural of us is I. So a double plural is a singular, but you go from the objective to the subjective case. |
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To that end, the employment of a first-person subjective voice is one of the most powerful literary devices that creative nonfiction writers can use. |
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Subjective insights, intuitions and hunches fall into this category of knowledge. |
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Does this term connote the subjective and self-serving claims of the mission planners, or the foreseeable objective consequences of a particular mission? |
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I remain surprised by how subjective this stuff seems to be. |
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To put it schematically, I show that the animal runs alongside and undermines the narrative belief in subjective interiority as the sole marker of historical being. |
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Of course, as my grown-up child who is obviously no longer a child pointed out, it is important to understand other people's subjective experience. |
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Round's view was largely based on a somewhat unsystematic and subjective review of the distribution of the assessments across estates, vills and the hundreds of counties. |
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Like after the statements have had their desired effect to sway opinion and to make subjective assertions become, in the public mind, objective fact. |
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Different indicators have been investigated, such as neuropsychological tests, subjective memory complaints, non-cognitive symptoms, and specific paraclinical examinations. |
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As in past years, this list remains subjective, unscientific, and somewhat mischievous in its conception. |
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While aesthetic considerations are admittedly subjective, of course, I can find little in the Olympic style that even distantly resembles actual swordplay. |
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Subjective knowledge will be inversely related to the perceived evaluation difficulty of products. |
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Autohistory, as a selective and subjective process, recognizes the constitutive function of memory work in the construction of historical narratives. |
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In other words, it produces conceptual diversity, and in doing so plays a crucial role in determining the subjective aim of a concrescent occasion. |
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It is striking to realize how much of this material is personal-not subjective, but rather framed by her own family history or immediate acquaintance. |
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For example, it would predict that women would suffer subjective biases in blind experiments where people are asked to judge work by men and women. |
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In particular, there appears to be little hope for any unitary concept of subjective well-being. |
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There is a fluidity of movement between them that enables the subjective experience of social interactions to occur in all domains simultaneously. |
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The only argument you can make is that the clone is aware of the specifics of his predestiny, and maybe that interferes with his subjective enjoyment of his life. |
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We may have our own subjective judgments about this matter, but we should at least have the honesty to recognize that they are completely irrelevant. |
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However, I firmly believe I witnessed enough to gather a subjective series of objective opinions, thereby allowing me to comment on the current state of the Inter-web. |
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The painting is both visually accurate and coloristically interesting, rendered as it is in a subjective combination of blues, greens, gold and lavender. |
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Acerbic and subjective he was, but also candid and uncompromising. |
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While reality is not so subjective as postmodern philosophers and deconstructionist literary critics would have us believe, the words we use can have a powerful effect. |
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That was always going to be subjective, a matter of opinion. |
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As I write this she's plummeting into the darkness of the West, diving head first into long denied emotions, into the unplumbed depths of subjective and global pain. |
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But science also rejects the idea that we are cut off from true reality, forever confined to superficial appearances, subjective constructs, and useful fictions. |
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Law can be maddeningly subjective. So much is left up to your own interpretation. |
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While the patient's condition is not curable, providing oxygen can relieve the patient's subjective feeling of suffocation caused by decreased levels of oxygen in the blood. |
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Their opinions over what was permissible were often highly subjective. |
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Committed to his formula, Eliot fails to acknowledge that, at its deepest, modern art, from Shakespeare on, increasingly presents subjective correlatives. |
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One of the few good ideas about consciousness that has gained some measure of agreement is that subjective feelings depend very much on the kind of body you have. |
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The trick is, of course, to distinguish between subjective criticism of US government policy and reflexive opposition to anything done by the US anywhere at any time. |
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Subjective gender identity includes all of the ways one might understand oneself to be a man or a woman. |
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Basically, a large part of the UFO lore is subjective and many alleged UFO events are actually the products of a complex hallucinatory process, particularly in the contactee. |
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Generally, less structure seems to be equated with more subjective, except in the domain of discourse markers, where the more one has the more subjective things get! |
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While it is true that prices are formed from the subjective valuations of the economic actors, we cannot suspend the laws of supply and demand whenever it suits our goals. |
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The whole goal is to create an effective experience of fear, which is subjective. |
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Unless you can find good criticism, which is hard to do, because you get too subjective. |
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While this IPC measure is subjective, it can provide useful insight in judging the results of later tests. |
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It resists any external force, which tries to schematize one's subjective individuation. |
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These results, of course, are subjective and totally unscientific. |
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Spirituality is an essential aspect of being that is existentially subjective, transrational, non-local, and non-temporal. |
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Increased subjective symptom prevalence among workers exposed to trichloroethylene at sub-oel levels. |
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Then came the great masters of Modernism, who reasserted the subjective and irrational with such devices as stream of consciousness. |
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However, LEED is subjective and a voluntary system, much of which should be codified for use in the construction of buildings. |
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No participant chose jugular venous pressure, as this is likely to be more subjective and difficult to assess. |
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The subjective verification of refraction is a must even after autorefractometry. |
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Comparison of tax rates around the world is difficult and somewhat subjective. |
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This subjective approach allows people, rather than researchers, to define their own social class. |
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However, allocating undue weight to subjective indicators and having highly fluctuating results are its major criticisms. |
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Berkeley's approach to empiricism would later come to be called subjective idealism. |
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He expressed grave suspicions of adjectives, nebulous terminology, and all language that might be subjective. |
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A list of champions for the period would be subjective and in most seasons there would be strongly competing claims. |
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National identity is a person's subjective sense of belonging to one state or to one nation. |
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Deciding whether poetry, especially freeform poetry, is good is so subjective. |
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Physiologic, subjective, and behavioral effects of amphetamine, methamphetamine, ephedrine, phenmetrazine, and methylphenidate in man. |
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Wollstonecraft promotes subjective experience, particularly in relation to nature, exploring the connections between the sublime and sensibility. |
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Words are the furnace by means of which merely subjective connections made by individual human beings are converted into noematic meanings. |
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Reputation and General considers more subjective aspects such as innovation, brand appeal, cultural diversity and competitive positioning. |
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However, the two systems measure mastery of different sets of skills and any comparison can be subjective and therefore meaningless. |
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It was based on visual and subjective observation of a ship and of the sea. |
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The three common popular classifications of volcanoes can be subjective and some volcanoes thought to have been extinct have erupted again. |
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The interpretation of shoreline position is subjective given the dynamic nature of the coastal environment. |
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The Richter scale built on the previous, more subjective Mercalli intensity scale by offering a quantifiable measure of an earthquake's size. |
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At the most basic level, the distinction is perceived as one of dedication or intensity, though this is a subjective differentiation. |
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As does English, the Danish pronominal system retains a distinction between subjective and oblique case. |
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Comparison of tax rates around the world is a difficult and somewhat subjective enterprise. |
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The distinction is therefore subjective and depends upon the user's frame of reference. |
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Dyspnea is the subjective experience of breathing discomfort that consists of qualitatively distinct sensations that vary in intensity. |
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Temperature is a physical quantity expressing the subjective perceptions of hot and cold. |
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According to him, to belong to a nation is a subjective act which always has to be repeated, as it is not assured by objective criteria. |
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For example, the crime of murder must include a mental requirement of at least subjective foresight of death. |
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In such a situation, the motive may become subjective evidence that the accused did not intend, but was reckless or willfully blind. |
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In such cases, there is clear subjective evidence that the accused foresaw but did not desire the particular outcome. |
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It is distinguished from recklessness because, on a subjective basis, there is foresight but no desire to produce the consequences. |
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The most culpable mens rea elements will have both foresight and desire on a subjective basis. |
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Inadvertence to risk is no less a subjective state of mind than is disregard of a recognised risk. |
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The parties were responding to continuous pain over a period of time and, in any event, pain is too subjective to qualify as an external threat. |
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Statements in a contract may not be upheld if the court finds that the statements are subjective or promotional puffery. |
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Hadley v Baxendale established that the test of foreseeability is both objective or subjective. |
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However, whether the test is objective or subjective may depend upon the particular case involved. |
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For example, the Civil Liability Act in Queensland outlines a statutory test incorporating both objective and subjective elements. |
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However, since happiness is subjective and difficult to measure, other measures are generally given priority. |
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It's far easier to see if an overvote was marked more than once, while an undervote is more subjective. |
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Gross national happiness and other subjective measures of happiness are being used by the governments of Bhutan and the United Kingdom. |
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Determining the extent of the contributory negligence is subjective and heavily dependent on the evidence available. |
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Such statements only explain the subjective experiences of investors and ignore the objective realities which would influence such opinions. |
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Objectivity was a primary goal for him, wanting to be rid as much as possible of the subjective element in public affairs. |
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A judge that has to rely on his subjective wisdom, in the form of judicious weighing, relies on Ch'uan. |
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In theory, the use of techniques requires the ruler not engage in any interference or subjective consideration. |
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In sustained elegiacal rhyme she paints a methodically wrought landscape that is beautifully subjective yet utterly universal. |
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Are these metaphorical descriptions just the subjective waxings of the critic or are they aesthetic properties really true of the wine? |
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The 10 patients had memory loss related to Alzheimer's disease, amnestic mild cognitive impairment, or subjective cognitive impairment. |
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Although, ethics creates a mental picture of 'equity or equitableness,' ethics is subjective and subject to interpretation. |
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Though this procedure is subjective, the distinction between clusters in this analysis is quite clear from the dendrogram. |
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It excluded from the subjective realm entities related to local government, except interlibrary loan service that they provide. |
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Internalization of religious motivation is associated with increased subjective well-being. |
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Fatigue is a subjective feeling of tiredness which is distinct from weakness, and has a gradual onset. |
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To study the effects of dust storms, we surveyed subjective eye and respiratory system symptoms among inhabitants in Mongolia. |
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Stenopaeic slit refraction is usually attempted when retinoscopy and more conventional subjective refractive techniques, i.e. JCC and FC, fail to provide satisfactory results. |
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In order to define relative criticalities in categories 1 through 4 of the first-pass model, subjective rankings obtained from survey questionnaires are used. |
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David Lodge describes mimesis as the subjective showing of characters' direct feelings and thoughts and diegesis as the objective telling or reporting of the events. |
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If the subsequent events are to be governed by the first assumption then implementation appraisals shall be subjective and perceptional more of looking the other side. |
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Here Ehrat offers a critique of subjective approaches and functionalism and again argues for using semiotic theory and pragmatics to define the effects of scandal. |
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In this case, the drug becomes an external and heteromorphic substance that acts upon the adolescent's subjective intimate level in a positive or negative way. |
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It is concerned with all of the human mentifacts, whether subjective, reified, effable, or ineffable, and pertains to humane concerns as well as to the objects of science. |
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The EOE treated group showed a significant improvement compared to the placebo group in all the subjective and objective parameters tested with no reports of adverse events. |
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Telekinetic energy, which has been variously designated as psychic force, ectenic force, and telekinesis, is demonstrably a power or faculty of the subjective mind. |
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Refractive errors were determined objectively by hand held retinoscopy, refined by subjective refraction and finalized with dissociated red-green balance test. |
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The relative peripheral refraction of the more myopic eye of anisomyopia was shifted hyperopically, as occurs in isomyopia with similar central subjective SE values. |
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Eidetic reduction, the more subjective stage of eidetic analysis, operates without undisciplined subjectivism only through its criteriological principle. |
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However, his interpretation and conclusion receive their rationale almost as often from the subjective horizon as the more diachronic oriented commentaries do. |
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Pitt's Act was deemed a failure because it quickly became apparent that the boundaries between government control and the company's powers were nebulous and highly subjective. |
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During the marginal revolution, subjective value theory was rediscovered. |
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There are three judges at ringside to score the fight and assign points to the boxers, based on connecting punches, defense, knockdowns, and other more subjective measures. |
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As a result, this is of limited use in establishing the nature of contemporary powers, at least not without the exercise of subjective observation. |
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The guidance notes on data collection note that ethnicity is a personal, subjective awareness, and that pupils and their parents can refuse to answer the ethnicity question. |
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He's as much a giant of the subjective as Kipling is of the objective. |
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This point relies both on an account of the subjective experience of conceiving an object and also on an account of what we mean when we use words. |
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National identity may refer to the subjective feeling one shares with a group of people about a nation, regardless of one's legal citizenship status. |
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Prominence is interesting to many mountaineers because it is an objective measurement that is strongly correlated with the subjective significance of a summit. |
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The conscious perspicience of the subjective content of the Self in the action of its orgasmic forces and of its own autopsic domination is Psychology. |
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Though perception is always colored by experience, and is necessarily subjective, it is commonly understood that what is not somehow aesthetically satisfying cannot be art. |
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They placed a great emphasis on the subjective determination of history. |
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In civil law, it is usually not necessary to prove a subjective mental element to establish liability for breach of contract or tort, for example. |
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If there is clear subjective evidence that the accused did not have foresight, but a reasonable person would have, the hybrid test may find criminal negligence. |
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The objective test that it introduced was phased out, and a form of subjective recklessness was introduced instead for cases involving criminal damage. |
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Quality of life can simply mean happiness, the subjective state of mind. |
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Most authorities now consider Coregonus vandesius to be a subjective synonym of Coregonus albula, which is a more widespread North European freshwater whitefish species. |
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The distinction between a hill and a mountain is unclear and largely subjective, but a hill is universally considered to be less tall and less steep than a mountain. |
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This inadequacy would not seem inherent in scandalism of pornography, but rather resulting from a lack of history and field of subjective pornographic criticism. |
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The essential elements test is a straightforward reading of Article 18, but it fails to protect domestic political factions and is unworkably subjective. |
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Subjective case is used when the pronoun is the subject of a finite clause, and otherwise the objective case is used. |
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The effects of acceptance versus suppression of emotion on subjective and psychophysiological responses to carbon dioxide challenge in patients with panic disorder. |
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Subjective parameters such as pain, headache, kinesalgia, stiffness, numbness, tenderness and sensory disorders were measured with a pain scale. |
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Admittedly, this view is subjective, but my aim is to suggest that at least some of the negative criticism of Fifine that Allis cites, he disregards a little too insouciantly. |
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Ajmal Malik, Naheed Khanum and Sehar Abbas have said that subjective and better story based family dramas can bring back families to the stage dramas. |
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Subjective civilian control achieves its end by civilianizing the military, making them the mirror of the state. |
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The expressive aspects of their work have been linked to the subjective heroism of earlier forms of Expressionism as well as to the Surrealist technique of automatism. |
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