Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Justice as Fairness" ¶ 14
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

key and component
German and British thinkers emphasised beauty as the key component of art and of the aesthetic experience, and saw art as necessarily aiming at absolute beauty.
Thus, natural beryllium bombarded either by alphas or gammas from a suitable radioisotope is a key component of most radioisotope-powered nuclear reaction neutron sources for the laboratory production of free neutrons.
" Bioinformatics plays a key role in various areas, such as functional genomics, structural genomics, and proteomics, and forms a key component in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical sector.
For Irenaeus, salvation was achieved by Christ restoring humanity to the image of God, and he saw the Christian imitation of Christ as a key component on the path to salvation.
The citric acid cycle is a key component of the metabolic pathway by which all aerobic organisms generate energy.
Cross-examination is a key component in a trial.
" Another key component affecting a trial outcome is the jury selection, in which attorneys will attempt to include jurors from whom they feel they can get a favorable response or at the least unbiased fair decision.
The bacterial origin fMLF as a key component of inflammation has characteristic chemoattractant effects in neutrophil granulocytes and monocytes.
Choosing and installing the correct device drivers for given hardware is often a key component of computer system configuration.
Agriculture is a key component of the economy in rural areas, though some people are employed in the tourist industry or other non-farm occupations.
In the last decade of the 20th century the American poet Denis Garrison developed a two-line 17 syllable variation of the image couplet with his Crystalline, where euphony is the key component and a title thereto optional.
Carol Clover, in her popular and influential book " Men, Women, and Chainsaws: Gender in the Modern Horror Film " ( Princeton University Press, 1992 ) argues that young male viewers of the Horror Genre ( young males being the primary demographic ) are quite prepared to identify with the female-in-jeopardy, a key component of Horror narrative, and to identify on an unexpectedly profound level.
The idea that the number of valences of a given element was invariant was a key component of Kekulé's version of structural chemistry.
As he did in other roles, Kean exploited his athleticism as a key component of Macbeth's mental collapse.
A key component of a microkernel is a good IPC system and virtual-memory-manager design that allows implementing page-fault handling and swapping in usermode servers in a safe way.
NSA is a key component of the U. S. Intelligence Community, which is headed by the Director of National Intelligence.
Since the early 1970s, oral history in Britain has grown from being a method in folklore studies ( see for example the work of the School of Scottish Studies in the 1950s ) to becoming a key component in community histories.
As sound was added to silent film, the virtuoso orchestra became a key component of the establishment of motion pictures as mass-market entertainment.
" Pantheism is a key component of Advaita philosophy.
Corporate investment, a key demand component of GDP, fell enormously ( 22 % of GDP ) between 1990 and its peak decline in 2003.
With steam engines, it was possible to construct mainline railways, which were a key component of the industrial revolution.
The development of jet aircraft, specifically the B-47 Stratojet, was a key component in building the Strategic Air Command ’ s bombing capacity.
This validates the reproductive isolation mechanism, a key component of speciation.
The campaign was a key component of the FSLN's cultural transformation agenda.

key and Rawls
In testing how well these elements fit and work together, Rawls based a key test of legitimacy on the theories of social contract.
Noting that Rawls himself acknowledged the failure of his theory of justice to comprehensively address these three frontiers, Nussbaum claims that Rawls's attempt to expand his theory to address one of these areas — transnational justice — is " ultimately unsatisfying " because he fails to follow through with the essential elements developed in A Theory of Justice, namely, by relaxing some of the key assumptions about the parties to the original contract.
Budweiser was a key sponsor for the Rawls telethon and UNCF.

key and argument
He repeats Acheson's argument that the region lacks major urban centres, but adds that the Maritimes were also lacking the great rivers that led to the cheap and abundant hydro-electric power, key to Quebec and Ontario's urban and manufacturing development, that the extraction costs of Maritime resources were higher ( particularly in the case of Cape Breton coal ), and that the soils of the region were poorer and thus the agricultural sector weaker.
The central argument in Principles was that the present is the key to the past – a concept of the Scottish Enlightenment which David Hume had stated as " all inferences from experience suppose ... that the future will resemble the past ", and James Hutton had described when he wrote in 1788 that " from what has actually been, we have data for concluding with regard to that which is to happen thereafter.
This mirrors the key assumption in Anselm's argument.
This forms a key external argument against the total authenticity of the Testimonium in that Josephus, as a Jew, would not have claimed Jesus as the Messiah, and the reference to " he was Christ " in the Testimonium must be a Christian interpolation.
Though some points above may be arguable, but some key points seemingly aren't giving that it would require one to abide by many of the premises to even make an argument to begin with.
There are anomalies for all paradigms, Kuhn maintained, that are brushed away as acceptable levels of error, or simply ignored and not dealt with ( a principal argument Kuhn uses to reject Karl Popper's model of falsifiability as the key force involved in scientific change ).
So, despite the interest, the flaw in EPR's argument was not discovered until 1964, when John Stewart Bell demonstrated precisely how one of their key assumptions, the principle of locality, conflicted with quantum theory.
In a review of The Mismeasure of Man, Bernard Davis, professor of microbiology at Harvard Medical School, said that Gould erected a straw man argument based upon incorrectly defined key terms — specifically reification — which Gould furthered with a " highly selective " presentation of statistical data, all motivated more by politics than by science.
In this argument, Durkheim acknowledges the importance of another key social fact-the culture.
This is a key argument in the debate opposing microkernel proponents and monolithic kernel aficionados.
* Hungarian Notation becomes confusing when it is used to represent several properties, as in < tt > a_crszkvc30LastNameCol </ tt >: a constant reference argument, holding the contents of a database column < tt > LastName </ tt > of type varchar ( 30 ) which is part of the table's primary key.
There is a physical argument that a 128-bit symmetric key is computationally secure against brute-force attack.
In this simple example there may be a call to an event handler called < tt > OnKeyEnter ()</ tt > that includes an argument with a string of characters, corresponding to what the user typed before hitting the ENTER key.
The evil demon is omnipotent, Christian doctrine notwithstanding, and is seen as a key requirement for Descartes ' argument by Cartesian scholars such as Alguié, Beck, Émile Bréhier, Chevalier, Frankfurt, Étienne Gilson, Anthony Kenny, Laporte, Kemp-Smith, and Wilson.
The French use of the term, clair-obscur, was introduced by the seventeenth century art-critic Roger de Piles in the course of a famous argument ( Débat sur le coloris ) on the relative merits of drawing and colour in painting ( his Dialogues sur le coloris, 1673 was a key contribution to the Débat ).
* The recent discovery of self-verifying theories, systems strong enough to talk about themselves, but too weak to carry out the diagonal argument that is the key to Gödel's unprovability argument.
This is the key point in Foucault ’ s argument: the shift from the Panopticon to panopticism.
He noted that Fahy's subordinates had actually alerted Fahy in writing that failing to investigate that report, or at least to disclose its existence in the briefs or argument in the Supreme Court, “ might approximate the suppression of evidence .” Thus, Katyal concluded that Mr. Fahy “ did not inform the Court that a key set of allegations used to justify the internment ” had been doubted, if not fully discredited, within the government's own agencies.
The key argument defending this interpretation is that demons had no need to mate with humans and turn them against God, but only a need to stop the entire human race all at once from having faith that it would be promised a savior from sin, which would guarantee the damnation of all humanity at once, thereby allowing Satan to fulfill his revenge against God for expelling him from Heaven.
A key component in the argument in favour of overt political independence is that new legislation and a new system of governance could best secure the future development of modern Québécois culture.
A key argument against the positional system was its susceptibility to easy fraud by simply putting a number at the beginning or end of a quantity, thereby changing ( e. g. ) 100 into 5100, or 100 into 1000.
A key player on this side of the argument is the Russell Group of Universities, who have argued that they should be able to charge much increased fees in order to differentiate themselves from smaller universities.
Her major argument was, that since Berezovsky was one of the key figures to push Putin into the power, he knew for certain the theory was wrong.

1.278 seconds.