These unwanted emergent environmental patterns seem intractable to pluralist politics. |
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If all these measures fail and pain remains intractable, then below knee amputation may be needed. |
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Surgery for intractable disease should be delayed until the fetus is viable. |
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Germany, with its intractable economic problems, is seriously considering it. |
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This problem has grown increasingly intractable because of changing social expectations about parenthood. |
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For severe intractable cancer pain, more potent long-acting opioids are recommended. |
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In that case the patient had been diagnosed with terminal cancer or intractable pain connected up with the terminal cancer. |
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Economic progress has been accompanied by wide income disparities and intractable social problems. |
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War is further seen as a means of diverting the attention of working people from the intractable social and economic crisis at home. |
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People with diabetes may develop a particularly intractable form of disordered eating that is not readily amenable to treatment. |
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Under those circumstances, it's hard not to simply decide that the problem is intractable and give up. |
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After years in the doldrums, the economy is picking up, and the seemingly intractable budget deficits have been avoided for the past two years. |
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Spinal cord stimulators also are used in the treatment of intractable pain. |
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In part this flows from the recognition that many of the most intractable social problems are not simply economic or even political. |
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I suggested that it'd not stay healthy for long if it had no work to do but he was intractable. |
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She was brave, but she was also intractable, when she set her mind on something. |
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And he is similarly intractable on the matter of promotional activities, which he has strictly limited to three a week. |
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The idea is to bring them on side, to drive a wedge between them and people they perceive as intractable opponents. |
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That is perhaps one reason why its peoples are so intractable and difficult. |
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Referral for intrathecal administration is useful in rare instances, such as when pain is intractable to standard treatment. |
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Given the intractable nature of controlling leaks, we need to try remedies that have not been tried before. |
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Topical antipruritics are preferred over systemic agents when smaller surface areas of skin are affected and pruritus is not intractable. |
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The industry also produces the occasional miracle med that empowers doctors to cure otherwise intractable diseases. |
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Affected children are microcephalic, have intractable seizures, and their neurological development is severely impaired. |
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The Net poses intractable problems to the would-be lawmaker, or moral disciplinarian. |
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One of the more intractable outsourcing relationships is when one organization manages another's internal systems. |
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That said, the text is often intractable or so annoyingly assertive as to appear priggish. |
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Four years after the cessation of fighting, ethnic cleansing remains an intractable problem. |
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At the heart of the present political conflict is an intractable contradiction. |
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The patient remarked that she had scratched her back with a long bathroom loofah to relieve intractable itching. |
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Their concern is that utopian aspirations towards a new peaceful world order will simply absolutize conflicts and make them more intractable. |
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We have mapped the human genome and embarked on identifying and curing heretofore intractable genetic conditions. |
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I have been suffering with an intractable combination of seborrheic dermatitis and psoriasis. |
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The bending of the arm may be invisible or intractable to the naked eye, even though television cameras can film 25 frames per second. |
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A problem can be intractable under one approach and yet fully tractable under another. |
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Slavery remained an intractable and growing problem, unamenable to existing British naval and diplomatic activity. |
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These are fin de siecle documents, grand apocalyptic opinions, unbendable and intractable, often fermented in a social and political cocktail. |
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They are intractable in their thinking, they are unreasoning and unreasonable and it's just a waste of breath to talk to them. |
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The extent to which a human can be made to feel insignificant in the face of an intractable force of nature knows no bounds. |
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Thus, the ultimate question of a gradual decline of dinosaurs vs. a sudden cataclysm is almost intractable without a wealth of good data. |
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A case report published in Southern Medical Journal shows that lidocaine may be effective in treating chronic, intractable hiccups. |
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This year's Nobel Prize in Physics honors three theorists whose insight resolved what had appeared to be an intractable subatomic paradox. |
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It needs someone immediately capable of cutting through the company's notoriously intractable bureaucracy and hidebound engineering culture. |
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This is the point when both sides are convinced that the other one is completely inane and ridiculously intractable. |
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Some express a feeling of hopelessness and that their intractable sadness will never abate. |
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The question of the Western Sahara remains one of the most intractable Arab-African problems, as well as a long-lasting sore point between Algeria and Morocco. |
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He said humanitarianism alone would not solve intractable conflicts and called for an international political solution. |
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How are journalists going to make sense of it all: Britain in Europe, the most intractable, counter-intuitive story of our time? |
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Rather, they are the intractable difficulties of accounting that cannot be avoided, no matter which model is in play. |
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I think institutional sexism is a really intractable issue on Wall Street. |
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More persistent and intractable problems, such as climate change, require a more concerted effort at Community level to lead the way. |
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The ethics that swirl round childbirth can seem so intractable that every case is a moral blind alley. |
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In the end he was beaten by Pandora, in whose box was not only the party demon but also the even more intractable economic and nationality devils. |
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Injections that block nerve transmission in the plexus may be helpful in the treatment of intractable abdominal pain, such as in cancer of the pancreas. |
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Another example lies in the Fund's reaction to the intractable problem of debt. |
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Their absence both raises awkward questions over whether or not Edinburgh's festival is losing its lustre and highlights the intractable nature of film business politics. |
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The result has been one of Africa's most intractable civil conflicts, a large-scale humanitarian crisis, and significant regional instability. |
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It does not provide simple solutions to challenges that have proved intractable for many years. |
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Invasive alien species may be the most intractable and devastating threat to marine ecosystems and the economies they support. |
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Studies indicate that this new treatment may reduce seizure frequency and severity in some people with otherwise intractable epilepsy. |
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Although the TF made considerable progress in elaborating the issues in new ways a full resolution of the problems remains intractable. |
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We cannot step back and believe that a less confrontational posture will lead to peace with intractable adversaries. |
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Poverty remains intractable despite economic growth in many countries. |
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While he concludes with a proposal for detente, his own account shows that these disputes are likely to be as intractable as they are longstanding. |
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After the Civil War, small-arms technology evolved rapidly, but a penurious Congress and an intractable ordnance board balked at rearming an entire army. |
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Over the coming weeks, we'll be highlighting how organic farming can provide solutions to the seemingly intractable problems afflicting our food chain. |
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No side is pure or blameless in such a complex conflict, which is what makes it seem intractable. |
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In an intractable country, despotism and the cynical short-term maneuver are big temptations. |
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Once one deals in principles that are so fundamental, intractable and as slippery as fairness, then the devil, as one says, is in working through its details. |
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When Dana reached her side, he realized that she was intractable. |
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I found him intractable, dominating and intent on lecturing everyone about the way to do things, which in his case meant only the way they'd done things in the fifties. |
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But politics would seem to call for fairly exacting acuity, and Michal Rovner's swoony images of intractable real-world problems have angered some viewers. |
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Since no single activity is responsible for undesired emergent properties of complex systems, such problems are intractable to our pluralistic political processes. |
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In some centres Ketogenic Diet is used to treat a small number of children with intractable epilepsy who do not respond to standard therapies. |
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Over the past few years there have been many moves to bring about a resolution to what seemed to be an intractable problem. |
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Only she had the necessary prestige to break what had become an intractable deadlock among rival cities and regions. |
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History is replete with instances of misguided leaders believing they were statesmen and entering into parleys and talks with intractable and cunning enemies. |
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In almost 40 years of my diplomatic life, I have never encountered an issue as divisive, as delicate and as intractable as the Kosovo issue. |
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Certainly, information society problems are no more intractable than those of human health. |
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The colours are often dull, cheap as schoolroom paints from yesteryear, greyed, yoghurty, intractable and flat. |
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And the presence of John Thiessen, who represents the state of the art on the intractable Baroque trumpet hereabout, was invaluable throughout. |
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None of these controversies present insuperable challenges, but they are complex and intractable. |
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However, updating the Privacy Act is an act of due diligence and good housekeeping for the federal government on an issue of public policy that is much more manageable than the more intractable problems facing Canada. |
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The world is a delightful hotch-potch to which it is art's job to bring order, though art cannot and will not smooth its rough edges or resolve its intractable contradictions. |
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Once irresolvable conflicts, such as the North-South war in the Sudan, and the civil wars in Angola and Sierra Leone, have dwindled or ended, while serious efforts are being made to resolve other, seemingly intractable ones. |
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The Protocol arrived after five long years of negotiations over intractable North-South issues that are set to continue to bedevil implementation. |
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Surgical techniques such as ligation of the internal iliac artery, compression sutures, and hysterectomy should be used for the management of intractable PPH unresponsive to medical therapy. |
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However, it is worth reading for a number of reasons, not least of which is the way in which, perhaps inadvertently, it reveals much about why the drug problem has proven so intractable. |
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But perhaps the most intractable challenge of all is bridging the sectarian rift between the country's Shiite and Sunni citizens. |
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These measures represent an historic breakthrough in the previously intractable logjam of specific claims and are an important symbol of stronger relations between Canada and First Nations. |
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With regard to peace and security on the continent, Africa continues to grapple with intractable peace and security situations in many parts of the continent. |
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Thus the use of proportionality as a criterion of restraint and value is largely intractable since one person's concept of proportionality might be another's concept of arbitrariness or tyranny. |
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Would he also agree that the Cyprus problem will remain intractable and the Balkans fractious and unstable should the Union refuse membership to Turkey? |
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My main argument is that the philosophical resources of liberal individualism are strained to the breaking point by the intractable problem of racial injustice. |
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The conflict had become deadlocked not because there were no other options available but because separatists had chosen to make the conflict seem intractable by repeatedly refusing all options short of sovereignty. |
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Some of those problems originate in the universities themselves, but the more serious and most intractable ones tend to arise from the universities' environment. |
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You have had a most interesting career as both a politician and an international civil servant working in seemingly intractable situations, such as the Balkans. |
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My delegation remains convinced that the desired breakthrough for peace can be attained in the Great Lakes region, as it was in Sierra Leone and Liberia, after 15 agonizing years of seemingly intractable conflicts. |
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It's always easy to find some aspect of the science that is uncertain, or confusing, and focus on that to the exclusion of the larger picture Q: It sounds like an almost intractable situation. |
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Negotiators from seven nations are due to produce an outline for a settlement for one of the most intractable, dangerous problems facing the world. |
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It is not intractable, but it is a big problem. |
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Instead, it worked to reconcile competing interests, find common ground among stakeholders and identify realistic solutions to previously intractable problems. |
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As will be explained in greater detail later in this report, those impediments are both cognitive and practical in nature, and it is the former that have proven to be the more intractable. |
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The IOC has often been criticised for being an intractable organisation, with several members on the committee for life. |
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Perceiving the situation as intractable and urgent, Radcliffe went on to make all the difficult decisions himself. |
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Molecular genetics allowed much greater insight into this previously intractable problem. |
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The underlying political problems seem to be intractable at the moment. |
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Sometimes they are thickheaded and intractable. |
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Looking back on the last 60 years, it has had a remarkable record in preventing war and suffering, and facilitating long-term political solutions in often intractable situations. |
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One of the tools given to the Committee in grappling with these difficult, sometimes intractable issues was that of professional and independent inquiry. |
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It therefore confronts the industrialized world with a test both of its ideals and of its capacity to resolve many of its most intractable social problems. |
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Panpsychism finesses the intractable philosophical problem of accounting for how consciousness could arise from insensate matter. |
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Unfortunately, this new study shows how intractable that problem truly is. |
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The symptoms can show up as a wide array of intractable health problems. |
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Albuquerque, throughout his career, favoured the Hindu paganry against the Hindi Moslems, finding the former much less intractable. |
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In extreme cases, pudendal nerve entrapment can be a source of intractable perineal pain. |
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Succession for the Yuan dynasty, however, was an intractable problem, later causing much strife and internal struggle. |
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Most of the seemingly intractable problems would vanish into thin air. |
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Just as we are, at last, making progress on the hitherto intractable issue of cooperation with the Hague Tribunal, it would be foolish in the extreme to go backwards on other key requirements on the reform agenda. |
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The world America faces today may seem cussed and intractable, but the world America looked forward to shaping after the fall of the Soviet Union was never as pliant and welcoming as it imagined. |
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If symptoms become intractable to medical management for a prolonged period of time despite adequate adjustment of medication, medical management is considered to have failed. |
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But my hope is that the majority who read the chapter will recognize that it is a constructive attempt to come to grips with at least two intractable issues. |
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At the same time, however, the desire to apply Marxist theories to Japan led to intractable controversies that were to factionalize radical economics for decades. |
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Plans are afoot to build a superjail to hold intractable prisoners, and the state is adding another 500 cells to the prison system to cope with overcrowding. |
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