Local voluntarism provided political training for all the nation's people, particularly its soldiers. |
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He grabbed power in a civil war, not a revolution, and advocated voluntarism and cadres to force Socialism rather than evolve it. |
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More recently, different groups have encouraged a spirit of voluntarism and giving among staff, faculty, and students. |
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Instead, they insisted that only Christian-minded voluntarism could protect the weak and ameliorate misery. |
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They do so because the college community is vigilant about supporting cultures of quality engagement and voluntarism, as described earlier. |
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Although the strategy was flawed by its excessive voluntarism, it did force the party to modernize itself. |
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According to doxastic voluntarism, believing and disbelieving are choices that are up to us to make. |
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Women's groups draw on voluntarism and self-financing to manage a social relationship with inherent demands and limits. |
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His recasting of subjectivity, albeit in nonessentialized terms, still looks back to the voluntarism of Existentialism. |
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Thus he steers between determinism and voluntarism, yet he argued an inevitable historical tendency towards equality. |
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However, there is at least one crucial distinction between Parsonian voluntarism and Kantian freedom. |
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This voluntarism is said to have stimulated the tendency to synthesize thinking and action. |
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Given that his goal was to ensure access to land, he was probably right to conclude that voluntarism would not work. |
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Discard the veneer of voluntarism and Greece can be tougher on its creditors. |
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Again I make the point that until we have reliable intelligence, voluntarism only will not lead to a good system. |
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At the same time, I think it may not be enough to leave it to the voluntarism of the regional or local units of the sovereign States involved. |
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I must say that I do not always hear the same voluntarism in the other European institutions where I work. |
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It thus legalized a de facto situation and enshrined the principle of voluntarism for the universal requirement to bear arms. |
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The false dichotomy arises from a failure or an inability to conceive of a genuine space between compulsion and choice, between, in philosophical terms, determinism and voluntarism. |
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The terms of the debate centre on celebrating personal behaviour, community tidiness, local accessibility, micromanagement, voluntarism, neighbourhood activism, and so on. |
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In the foreground is their condemnation of various parochialisms, patriotisms, and unchosen loyalties that limit personal autonomy and voluntarism. |
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The tools of voluntarism are friendship, trade, compassion, and love. |
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Although the NGO sector has become increasingly professionalised over the last two decades, principles of altruism and voluntarism remain key defining characteristics. |
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For both groups, the highest percentage of voluntarism took place in religious organizations, followed by education and youth development activities. |
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For example, on pensions policy, the most often-raised points are about the earnings link, about voluntarism versus compulsion, and safeguards for schemes' members. |
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The objective of voluntary service is the provision of service for the community on the principle of voluntarism. |
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For its part, the political discourse has remained close to the rhetoric of emulation and voluntarism of yesteryear. |
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A focus on rules and institutions also helps to avoid voluntarism and structuralism. |
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He later claims that his rectoral address was merely a defense of the university, but the Germanism and voluntarism are more than apparent. |
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The element of voluntarism suggests that a party is entitled to resile from a position as a result of a changed assessment of what constitutes its self-interest. |
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With this type of site, too many people are compelled by exhibitionism, lack of concern, or unwitting voluntarism to post the most seemingly insignificant ramblings about their private lives. |
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She paid homage to the founding fathers of African States before imploring the present leaders to encourage voluntarism so that African optimism should be seen in daily achievements. |
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For Arthur Schopenhauer, a typical 19th-century irrationalist, voluntarism expressed the essence of reality a blind, purposeless will permeating all existence. |
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On the other side, companies that advocate pure voluntarism have yet to explain how one ever reaches sufficient scale to make a difference or how to pull laggards along. |
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The subjective approach to social science is based on an ontology of nominalism, an anti-positivist epistemology, voluntarism, and an ideographic methodology. |
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This kind of voluntarism that we see seems to be preferable. |
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Promote the contribution that voluntarism can make to the creation of caring societies as an additional mechanism in the promotion of social integration. |
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For the moment, the recommendations remain within the realm of voluntarism, but they may well lead to a more binding mechanism based on the model of the open coordination method. |
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Others however hide behind voluntarism arguing that if companies say that they will behave responsibly then there are fewer needs for state action. |
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From the beginning, business propagated the concept of voluntarism, leaving it to the discretion of the individual company whether to introduce the new institutions or not. |
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How, then, could this kind of attitude towards civic action be included in the non-governmental voluntarism underlying the Anglo-American concept of social capital? |
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Society must participate in the resolution of population problems and voluntarism has an important role to play in activities and programmes undertaken in this field. |
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He is usually associated with theological voluntarism, the tendency to emphasize God's will and human freedom in all philosophical issues. |
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Hoover's first measures to combat the depression were based on voluntarism by businesses not to reduce their workforce or cut wages. |
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Here is a missed opportunity to explore the possibilities of voluntarism, a point of tangency with contemporary metaethical thought. |
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He also rejected accusations of arbitrariness, voluntarism, and populism. |
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Voluntarism is the theory that God or the ultimate nature of reality is to be conceived as some form of will. |
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