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objection and against
By making inroads in the name of law enforcement into the protection which Congress has afforded to the marriage relationship, the Court today continues in the path charted by the recent decision in Wyatt v. United States, 362 U.S. 525, where the Court held that, under the circumstances of that case, a wife could be compelled to testify against her husband over her objection.
In order to be confirmed over their objection the plan must not discriminate against that class of creditors, and the plan must be found fair and equitable to that class.
In 2005, against the backdrop of renewed UK government interest in nuclear power, Lovelock again publicly announced his support for nuclear energy, stating, " I am a Green, and I entreat my friends in the movement to drop their wrongheaded objection to nuclear energy ".
The term, which derives ultimately from the Latin recusare ( to refuse or make an objection ), was first used to refer to those who remained loyal to the Roman Catholic Church and did not attend Church of England services, with a 1593 statute determining the penalties against " Popish recusants ".
) Once the text of this interpolated letter is removed and the two letters compared, Murphy-O ' Connor asserts that this objection is " drastically weakened ", and concludes, " The arguments against the authenticity of 2 Thessalonians are so weak that it is preferable to accept the traditional ascription of the letter to Paul.
" The author also mentions the Quakers ' objection to the treat, " who distinguish their Feasts by an heretical Sort of Pudding, known by their Names, and inveigh against Christmas Pye, as an Invention of the Scarlet Whore of Babylon, an Hodge-Podge of Superstition, Popery, the Devil and all his Works.
When it comes to the use of divine hiddenness as an objection or evidence against God, Daniel Howard-Snyder and Paul Moser in the introduction to a volume of papers dedicated to refutations of Schellenberg's argument, cite Nietzsche's question: " a god who is all-knowing and all-powerful and who does not even make sure his creatures understand his intentions — could that be a god of goodness?
One objection against an instinctive and genetic basis for the incest taboo is that incest does occur.
In the United States Stanton Peele, a psychologist and lawyer, has encouraged legal action against mandated attendance of twelve-step programs, stating an objection to the courts and other government and tax-supported agencies mandating attendance at meetings run by organizations with spiritual or religious content.
He visited Warsaw, met with Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski ( against the objection of the U. S. Ambassador to Poland ), recognizing the Roman Catholic Church as the legitimate opposition to communist rule in Poland.
* Premise, a claim that is a reason for, or an objection against, some other claim as part of an argument
In his first chapter, " Economy ", Thoreau notes what he considers the valid objection of Momus / Momos against the house which Minerva / Athena made, that she " had not made it moveable, by which means a bad neighborhood might be avoided ".
Several objections were filed with the reasons for objection listed as, " One, the judges of the election administered the oath to themselves swearing in each other ; and Two, the words ' for incorporation ' were written on one ballot while ' against corporation ' was written on another ballot.
Conscientious objection ( also called conscientious refusal or evasion ) to obeying a law, should not arise from unreasoning, naive " traditional conscience ", for to do so merely encourages infantile abdication of responsibility to calibrate the law against moral or human rights norms and disrespect for democratic institutions.
In the case of the controversial film Battle Royale, director Kinji Fukasaku seemed to accept this view, when he withdrew an objection to Eirin's R-15 rating of his film, to support Eirin against threats from politicians over the film.
The motion was passed by a small majority ( September 5 ); but the members of Dahlmann's party were just those who voted against it, and it was they who on September 18 reversed the previous vote and passed a resolution accepting the truce, after Dahlmann had failed to form a ministry on the basis of the resolution of the 5th, owing to his objection to the Radicals.
To criticize does not necessarily imply " to find fault ", but the word is often taken to mean the simple expression of an objection against prejudice, or a disapproval.
On the western flank, an offensive was launched against Tsarevo Selo with the objection of reaching the Serbian lines.
The courts may also interpret a law in such a manner that any objection against it of retrospective operation may be removed.
The primary objection advanced against Bible codes is that information theory does not prohibit " noise " from appearing to be sometimes meaningful.
This was precisely the same objection that had always been raised against the impulse doctrine of Descartes in the previous century, and had led even the followers of Descartes to abandon that aspect of his philosophy.
A sensible manner of discounting interest to the depositors against what could be earned by employing their money in the trade of the bench soon developed ; in short, selling an " interest " to them in a specific trade, thus overcoming the usury objection.
Darwin described the perceived lack of transitional fossils as " the most obvious and gravest objection which can be urged against my theory ", but explained it by relating it to the extreme imperfection of the geological record.
Legal permission to reprint the works was obtained from every author except Alexander Grothendieck himself, who cannot be contacted ; it was decided to proceed without his explicit agreement on the grounds that his refusal for the SGA to be re-published by Springer-Verlag was an objection against Springer and not one of principle.

objection and is
But the most fundamental objection he has to poets appears in the Tenth Book, and it is derived from his doctrine of ideal forms.
Within sixty days after the receipt of notice that the Export-Import Bank is prepared to act favorably upon an application the Department of Economic Affairs will indicate to the Export-Import Bank whether or not the Department of Economic Affairs has any objection to the proposed loan.
But in such an important question, we would be satisfied if the judgment were that the principal objection to the identity of forces which produce electricity and magnetism were only a difficulty, and not a thing which is contrary to it.
To raise the added objection that men require certainty on psychological grounds, answers to ultimate questions having an irrational rather than scientific basis, is in a real sense to undermine the objection itself.
However, my principal objection in this sort of novel is to the hackneyed treatment of race-drivers, pilots, submariners, atomic researchers, and all the machine-masters of our age as brooding mystics or hysterical fatalists.
The Plague is considered an existentialist classic despite Camus ' objection to the label.
The government's policy toward conscientious objection is in transition, as part of Armenia's accession to the Council of Europe.
However, Hume admits that there is one objection to his account: the problem of " The Missing Shade of Blue ".
::" For here is the chief and most confounding objection to excessive skepticism, that no durable good can ever result from it ; while it remains in its full force and vigor.
Philosopher G. H. R. Parkinson notes a common objection to Kant's argument: that what ought to be done does not necessarily entail that it is possible.
He warns that this is open to the grave objection that it makes grace a ( quasi ) material commodity and represents an almost mechanical method of imparting what is by definition a free gift.
Further, the objection maintains that Red cannot be distilled from an apple because Red is an abstraction from other experiences and not an innate property an apple might contain.
Per the objection, expressions such as, " An apple is red and juicy ," includes at least six concepts and would best be left as dead-end logical propositions.
The objection regards any additional analytic work of the mind as a synthesis of other experiences that is incapable of logically revealing any true essence of Apple.
One objection to the argument is that it leaves open the question of why the First Cause is unique in that it does not require a cause.
In other words, the only claim that is indubitable here is the agent-independent claim that there is cognitive activity present The objection, as presented by Georg Lichtenberg, is that rather than supposing an entity that is thinking, Descartes should have said: " thinking is occurring.

objection and even
The " language-reality " objection may even suggest that " reality / non-reality " or " objective / subjective " distinctions themselves are merely artifacts of language and therefore are also solely abstractions of experience.
In 1944, Jones wrote to John Walvoord of Dallas Theological Seminary that while the university had " no objection to educational work highly standardized …. We, however, cannot conscientiously let some group of educational experts or some committee of experts who may have a behavioristic or atheistic slant on education control or even influence the administrative policies of our college.
Harsanyi argues that the objection overlooks the fact that “ people attach considerable utility to freedom from unduly burdensome moral obligations … most people will prefer a society with a more relaxed moral code, and will feel that such a society will achieve a higher level of average utility — even if adoption of such a moral code should lead to some losses in economic and cultural accomplishments ( so long as these losses remain within tolerable limits ).
However, a similar objection was noted by Thomas Nagel in 1970 who claimed that consequentialism ‘ treats the desires, needs, satisfactions, and dissatisfactions of distinct persons as if they were the desires, etc., of a mass person .’ and even earlier by David Gauthier who wrote that utilitarianism supposes ‘ that mankind is a super-person, whose greatest satisfaction is the objective of moral action.
After the German conquest in 1864, the term Sønderjylland became increasingly dominant among the Danish population, even though most Danes still had no objection to the use of " Schleswig " as such ( it is etymologically of Danish origin ) and many of them still used it, themselves, in its Danish version " Slesvig ".
Another objection lies in the fact that the people who are most likely to recite the Pledge every day, small children in schools, cannot really give their consent or even completely understand the Pledge they are taking.
Some states argue that such limitations the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion would permit them to make conscientious objection during time of war a threat to public safety, or mass conscientious objection a disruption to public order ,... states even that it is a ' moral ' duty to serve the state in its military.
Later he counselled conscientious objectors to compulsory military service and defended Jehovah's Witnesses in court who even refused to do community work instead of military service because of their absolute conscientious objection.
* Revert the language to the standard of 1814 ; an objection to this is that most modern Norwegians would find it even more difficult to read.
The Spirit of the Times even described the music as vulgar because it was " entirely too elegant " and that the " excellence " of the singing " an objection to it.
Another objection is the " conscientious Nazi " — imagine a Nazi who wants to kill all Jews, and even says " If I found out I was Jewish I'd kill myself ".
However, even in this view Smith's objection is on practical grounds and outsourcing would still be allowed in a market system.
Although vociferous objection arises about possible level-crossing congestion on the Chertsey line, the effect of 20 trains per hour through the four crossings between Richmond and Barnes, where even now five trains may pass at one closure, is muted
But even if one accepts the susceptibility to error of people's intuitions, the objection can be reformulated: if the existence of mental conditions seems perfectly obvious and is central in people's conception of the world, then enormously strong arguments are needed in order to successfully deny the existence of mental conditions.
Although the overwhelming majority of Egyptians today continue to self-identify as Arabs in a cultural sense, a minority reject this, pointing to the failures of Arab and pan-Arab nationalist policies, and even publicly voicing objection to the present official name of the country.
Ἀξιό < sup > πλ </ sup > is an abbreviation for Axiopolis in the manuscripts of De Aedificiis .</ ref > However, even if correct, Russu's objection does not affect the interpretation of the axi-element as meaning " black ".
There was objection that these displays offended foreign visitors and did not uphold the reputation of the law, though the scenes even became gruesome tourist attractions.
There was some objection from students because they had not been involved in — nor even aware ofthe decision before it was announced to the media, and from some who believed that the college could not remain a serious institution were it to admit women.
A motion in limine generally addresses issues which would be prejudicial for the jury to hear in open court, even if the other side makes a timely objection which is sustained, and the judge instructs the jury to disregard the evidence.
" This use of the term " network " is very similar to Deleuze and Guattari's rhizomes ; Latour even remarks tongue in cheek that he would have no objection to renaming ANT " actant-rhizome ontology " if it only had sounded better, which hints at Latour's uneasiness with the word " theory ".
Specifying a large minimum degree removes the objection that there may be a few ' pathological ' vertices ; if the minimum degree of a graph G is 1, for example, then there can be no isolated vertices ( even though G may have very few edges ).

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