I think most judges give weight to this factor in reaching their factual conclusions. |
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There is a scant amount of data available, severely limiting the kinds of conclusions one can draw. |
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We see the manipulation of bodgie science in order to maintain political conclusions. |
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Her strong-willed nature came from deep thinking and drawing her own conclusions. |
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However, I think it is quite normal to hold two views that, if taken to their logical conclusions, really are contradictory. |
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I find that people have difficulty understanding that broad statistical generalizations don't justify leaping to conclusions about individuals. |
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I anticipate that any number of stuffed shirts in London will back me up on these conclusions. |
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Indeed, he draws determinate conclusions only about the people who respond to the sense of transcendence or about the characters in their novels. |
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The judge added it was premature and unfair to reach conclusions based on the State's summary of its case. |
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This is, admittedly, slender evidence on which to base general conclusions. |
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The only obvious weakness of these essays is that some of the conclusions rest on fairly slender numbers of cases or anecdotes. |
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But to buy into his sinister conclusions means buying into his level of contempt for the present authority. |
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We are coming to the end of the enterprise network review process and we welcome the conclusions. |
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Much work is needed before we can reach some safe conclusions on how, why, and when symbionts such as bacteria act as pathogens or mutualists. |
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This proposed model for understanding the evolution of feathers is rife with ungrounded assumptions and unsupported conclusions. |
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But they draw diametrically opposed conclusions as to the meaning of this link. |
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The argument of this section has been brisk and obviously more has to be said to defend its conclusions and its premises. |
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His profound ideas led him to some conclusions that strike the modern reader as bizarre, even absurd. |
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You must form all conclusions and all maxims for yourselves, from premises and data collected and considered by yourself. |
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In addition, many of Wilson's conclusions about individual controversies and developments are sound and well grounded. |
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It does not require even half an education to guess why he feels obliged to adduce flimsy evidence and extrapolate fanciful conclusions from it. |
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I enjoy thinking about scenarios, putting myself in those situations and allowing my mind to draw up conclusions. |
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In both premisses and conclusions, these two strands of contract theory are, morally speaking, a world apart. |
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In addition, there are several more specific corollary conclusions to the main finding. |
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We present the results using both corrections, but note our conclusions do not change. |
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However, she goes on to over-egg the pudding with some statements that are just plain silly and call her conclusions into question. |
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By means of ingenious and subtle arguments and making the fewest possible assumptions, he arrived at the following conclusions. |
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These studies addressed similar issues and reached somewhat similar conclusions. |
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In the succeeding examples, I will simply state the relevant conclusions and refer to supporting evidence published elsewhere. |
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A package of proposals will be put forward for public debate in the normal way, once we have reached our final conclusions. |
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It is Jenkins's more radical conclusions that pose stumbling blocks for historiographers such as Evans. |
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Historically, the naturalistic fallacy is the attempt to derive normative conclusions from statements of fact. |
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The fight will not bear fruit if it assumes the preserve of emotionalism and unbridled hatred or preformed conclusions and judgments. |
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The main results of this study are summarized by the following conclusions. |
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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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And the conclusions expressed seem, well, slightly at variance with Grant's synopsis. |
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The conclusions of the Qur'an are not taken for granted but verified through observation of the world. |
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Third, public enquiries do not have a particularly good track record of producing useful conclusions. |
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The Department of Health said the report contained no new evidence and its conclusions were not fully supported by evidence. |
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But Middleton's play refuses moral conclusions in a new spirit of horizontal time and space that refuses medieval hierarchy. |
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The problem is that his conclusions are so far removed from reality, it's almost comical. |
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Wars of peoples could admit of none of the old limited, bargained conclusions of pomaded dynasts. |
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Another drew bold negative conclusions about one of the men on the basis of having misread his own notes about certain dates. |
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Quantitative research can be characterized as a linear series of steps moving from theory to conclusions. |
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Instead of tidy, maudlin conclusions, the film is handed an ambiguous closure. |
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Last Thursday, I had three examples of events reaching their conclusions in a way that follows my rules of natural justice. |
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The warning is justified since the information provided is insufficient to permit meaningful conclusions. |
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Belief in God, on the other hand, could be either an act of faith or a belief based on conclusions from evidence and argument. |
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The two filmmakers converge on questions of what defines us as fallibly human, even as they reach vastly different conclusions. |
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In neither instance did these verifications change any of the conclusions reported below, unless otherwise stated. |
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The piecemeal approach means that there is some repetition and that the conclusions are necessarily modest. |
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I want to skip over Dick's diplomatic sweet talk and address his conclusions right away. |
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Where the data was available, the actual wavelengths studied are included in parentheses so that readers may draw their own conclusions. |
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The conclusions of Moore and Hatfield are based on data from forages rather than from grain hulls. |
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It now seems likely that Kay's parting shots will overshadow whatever conclusions the ISG eventually reaches. |
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What follows shows the synchronicity of ideas and events around the year 1884, from which some conclusions are drawn. |
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Being a mujtahid, he had the right and authority to derive his own conclusions. |
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We would expect that an effect of hypermnesia would be demonstrated, despite Krizan and Marmolejo's 2001 conclusions to the opposite effect. |
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These conclusions can then be scrutinized by other scientists in the form of peer review. |
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I have absorbed their arguments, their conclusions, and their mortal dread. |
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Here, smart girls are able to draw conclusions about what are the most fashionable clothes this summer. |
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Although it is still too early to draw any final conclusions, we do have incipient evidence that the peer groups are making a difference. |
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Some have even taken these arguments to their logical conclusions and have called for the end of the capital gains tax. |
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But what follows is not a maudlin melodrama, no matter what conclusions you may draw from that surely unimpressive premise. |
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After the better part of 20 years attempting to do this, we think the following conclusions can be safely drawn. |
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If argument did not deliver incontestable conclusions, where was one to go? |
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In the witness box, it was evident that she could not accept the psychologist's conclusions. |
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But the reporter did have some of her data incorrect and drew some wrong conclusions. |
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Note that the inductive argument the agents run through depends upon the conclusions they each draw from several counterfactual conditionals. |
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On Sunday and Monday, the police fell back to let unpermitted demonstrations proceed to their peaceable conclusions. |
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One of the conclusions hits the spot, but the others, while funny, are sitcom laughs. |
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Suspicious buyers could draw the wrong conclusions, equating cosy partnerships with greedy cartels. |
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The certainty of mathematics would lead to correct and indisputable conclusions about society and about man. |
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But as with all government business, many things remain unsaid or unexplained, in which case I have to draw my own conclusions. |
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But your conclusions are suspect because of the completely unscientific nature of your analysis. |
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Even when his conclusions are unsound he often attempts to derive them from Scriptural based premises. |
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We tend to jump to untenable conclusions, swayed by popular impressions or simple emotions. |
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We may skip the hocus-pocus part of the article and go directly to its conclusions. |
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In the first place, Bane and Mead agree that theological premises do not directly yield policy conclusions. |
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But it is a pity that he has jumped to conclusions before looking more carefully at the evidence. |
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The second part is devoted to a discussion of how Korpi arrives at his conclusions. |
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There is no place in the criminal justice system for conclusions based upon inferences. |
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For all the emollience of the noble lord's statements, two conclusions from his report are inescapable. |
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Unfortunately, many conclusions about growth and respiration are based on measurements of single leaves, leaf disks or mature plant parts. |
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A breathing space or a period to reflect might sometimes be a wise precaution before final conclusions. |
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No conclusions can be drawn from this study regarding long-term beneficial effects, if any, of this drug on late neurocognitive outcome. |
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I have given a few samples of Heidegger word-torrents, but for the most part I have extracted the more or less discussable conclusions. |
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The neuroscientists warned against drawing conclusions until the experiment was over. |
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The Paris prosecutor's office said it was closing the file into his death as a result of the police conclusions. |
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Again, this does not engender confidence in the reliability of the inspector's conclusions. |
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It may therefore seem like philosophical nit-picking if I criticise some of his arguments for getting to those conclusions. |
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Instead, a dubious logic pervades, upon which we base entire networks of conclusions and imperatives. |
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With the exception of the modeling papers, most articles are well referenced with conclusions clearly supported by the data furnished. |
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Although the treatment of the events tends to be even-handed, there are some dubious conclusions. |
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The two voices in this debate drew opposite conclusions from events in the Gulf. |
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Just being seen in certain situations can spark giant leaps to conclusions with no basis in fact. |
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His conduct invited the police to draw the conclusions which they did and to act as they did. |
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We're willing to leap to conclusions without the benefit of data, just like our ancestors. |
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Which is no bad thing provided we draw the appropriate conclusions, the foremost being that we must cut our coat according to our cloth. |
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Emphasis is placed on how creationists and evolutionists can look at the same data and yet come to different conclusions. |
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The Tracey Review tore into Captain Toohey's reasoning and his explosive conclusions, and this is the report the Government released last night. |
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The Bush version excises the whole section on conclusions, preferring not to comment on the likely consequences of oil exploration. |
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Given these highly complex interactions, research in this area frequently yields contradictory conclusions. |
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Of course it's always easy to look at others critically, make assumptions and proceed to erroneous conclusions. |
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Don't jump to conclusions, she chided herself, personally embarrassed by her outrageous notions. |
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Scientists run experiments on physical evidence and draw conclusions based on their results. |
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As regards the survey data, the proof of the pudding will be clear when we see how the Home Office presents the conclusions. |
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While the object of his investigation is novel, his conclusions will be familiar to students of nineteenth-century America. |
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Sensory and instrumental measurements are used together to draw conclusions and make assumptions about quality. |
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They vary in clarity, intelligibility, accessibility of writing, and in the quality of their observations, conclusions, and recommendations. |
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This synthesis of nuclear physics and stellar astronomy has led us to four significant conclusions. |
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Consequently, we cannot draw any firm conclusions about the direction of causality. |
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So, I then ask myself whether the justices have reached insupportable conclusions of fact. |
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Those familiar with Bresson's oeuvre will know better than to jump to hasty conclusions. |
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In the Commonwealth, appellate courts were arriving at the same conclusions. |
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The remainder of this section explores the implications of these conclusions for pedagogical decision-making. |
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In many cases it is perfectly reasonable to accept the conclusions of authority figures one trusts. |
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The results presented herein represent the conclusions and opinions of the authors. |
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The whole episode, he says, had been so surreal he was expecting the strangest of conclusions. |
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General conclusions are that surface dyslexia represents a delay or developmental lag in acquiring literacy skills. |
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Character wise, she is hot-tempered, bold, judgmental and jumps to conclusions easily. |
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He lays the evidence before us, without comment, so that we may draw our own conclusions. |
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In a great twist at the end, they find out they have jumped to conclusions about the death. |
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Examples are given to show how failure to consider accuracy and reliableness may lead to erroneous conclusions. |
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But, one should be careful before leaping to conclusions about what the joke implies about the teller. |
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Toleration of different points of view and conclusions would be more representative of the open society. |
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It's tempting to leap to conclusions based on a single performance graph or a column in a summary table. |
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However, more research is required before conclusions can be drawn about possible differences in costs between England and the Continent. |
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A close inspection suggests antecedent variables that may have set the occasion for his conclusions, erroneous though they evidently were. |
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That statement is a direct contradiction of the two most important conclusions of the report, which the Minister says he accepts. |
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It is too early to draw any firm conclusions on this question from research carried out to date. |
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The result is that he jumps to easy conclusions, something intelligent laypeople are not likely to trust. |
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You only heard part of the conversation, and you've already jumped to conclusions about Patrick. |
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Given the history of the site, this adds confidence to my conclusions as to the acceptability of the overall development. |
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Wisely, Shakeshaft does not base her conclusions on evidence that comes so close to anecdotal accounts. |
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The series of conclusions he arrives at are all tied to the system of exploitation that we find ourselves in. |
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All the tests have proved negative but the sample size is not big enough to draw any firm conclusions. |
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Let me detail this a little, and then draw some broader conclusions at the end. |
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At present the only safe conclusions are those concerning the climate and the predominantly angiospermous nature of the flora. |
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This fact accords with results of previous studies, but given the scant data and the magnitude of the values, no conclusions can be drawn. |
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Ms Kelly said the department eventually put out a long report so that no one would notice its conclusions. |
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By questioning underlying presumptions and conclusions they are creating a space in which to think about gender. |
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By integrating the function using calculus we can compare the sum of the series with the integral of the function and draw conclusions from this. |
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Scientific investigation proceeds not by amassing conclusions but by accumulating incremental evidence, which is all that we can know. |
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But the BMJ queried whether these conclusions had been drawn from an examination of the study's raw data. |
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The conclusions about the radioactive, chemical and bacteriological situation prompt corresponding countermeasures. |
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Stubborn, inflexible and goal oriented, they often jump to conclusions and miss the big picture. |
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These conclusions were reached by applying an impressionistic methodology involving generalising from a few cases. |
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Prentice, the chief number cruncher for the health initiative, did not believe it bore out such sweeping conclusions. |
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While such research is illuminating, its conclusions are always tentative and probabilistic. |
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There is enough data for us to draw more than tentative conclusions as to their future performance. |
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But the official also stressed that the report was based on tentative conclusions and said the analysis is not yet final. |
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Given the small size of the population I have considered, my own conclusions are necessarily tentative. |
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So Rushton's use of this data to draw the conclusions he reaches about hereditability is sound in my opinion. |
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In particular, would they find their own conclusions harder to arrive at if they were more in touch? |
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What conclusions can be drawn from this aside from that it is wise to get a full night of sleep? |
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Perhaps it was as well for the Pope that he died before trying conclusions with that tough and capable Norman. |
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Putting it that way, of course, would have made it far more difficult to draw simplistic moral conclusions. |
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I want to believe that the conclusions this woman reaches about her son's future are untrue, filtered through that terrible demoralization. |
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They were the first to deal with the issue in a systematic way and to apply their conclusions to the problem of economic depressions. |
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Draw your own conclusions as to what the future holds once the Government legalises cannabis, which it will. |
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The suppliants, as we shall see later on, drew their own conclusions and acted accordingly. |
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His history, whilst highly selective with dubious conclusions, includes some fascinating gobbets. |
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When reviewers' conclusions differed, the study was reviewed jointly by three reviewers. |
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You don't know how they relate until you examine them and it's better to examine the evidence than base conclusions on wishful thinking. |
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Last year, for example, the government based its conclusions on the general level of pesticides in all fresh peas from only 27 samples. |
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Unfortunately, they base their conclusions on a survey from a print-on-demand publisher. |
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A group of scientists favoring nuclear power accuses Kennedy of basing her conclusions on fear, not science. |
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But the sportsman proved again that you can try conclusions with the Russian fighters but not for will-power! |
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And third, dimensional analysis, such as principal components analysis, draws conclusions from the variation in items. |
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Politically impartial juries would no doubt reach different conclusions depending on their contemporaneity. |
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I come to these conclusions concerning her ability to support herself on these bases. |
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Hall does not draw conclusions or make judgments about his subjects but allows readers to form their own interpretations. |
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While my research into these matters is not yet complete, I would like to present my provisional conclusions. |
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Again I can state my conclusions relatively briefly, since here too I accept the main thrust of Miss Lieven's submissions. |
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As each news bulletin heralds an upwards revision of long past obscene totals, alternative conclusions are easy to avoid. |
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Of course, none of these conclusions could have been reached without all these workers rejecting the idea of continental drift. |
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Although his treatment is unexpectedly mild, his conclusions about creation science are really less than kind. |
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Some day we will attempt to record, systemize and draw conclusions based on this growing mountain of information in the form of a book. |
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Two things stand out as central conclusions to be drawn from the internecine wrangling within the Conservative Party and the response to it. |
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Any conclusions to be drawn from the survey need to be viewed in the light of changing political circumstances in the academic research domain. |
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By and large, she seems to have her head screwed on right, but I question one or two of her conclusions. |
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I'm going to wait until I've bird-dogged this one over time before I come to any conclusions. |
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If Canada really wanted to try conclusions with him he should do it in the context of class. |
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I would like each one of you birders, naturalists, and bloggers to think about this and share your conclusions. |
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Well there you go again mom jumping to conclusions, He happens to be a really good friend of mine. |
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Other critics have endorsed his conclusions, and now even Wordsworthians are cautious in commenting on the poem. |
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At this level, the book is remarkably sober, eschewing the melodramatic and avoiding definitive conclusions. |
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If similar comparisons are extended to the United States homeland, the conclusions are troubling. |
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I think it's far too soon to draw conclusions about direct culpability, but there was definitely an element of preventability here. |
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Science accords primacy to the facts themselves, and requires that conclusions honor them. |
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The preliminary work does not rule out making conclusions about possible inexpediency of continued investigations within its framework. |
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Findings of fact and conclusions of law that do not contain decretal language are not appealable. |
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That is the strongest argument against the conclusions of the Green member who has just resumed her seat. |
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All that information has to be collected, compiled, sequenced and analyzed before any credible conclusions can be drawn. |
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Ollivier's conclusions are a complete repudiation of the entire heritage of Marxism, including Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution. |
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In fact, the contradiction with the present study is only in terms of conclusions and not in terms of results. |
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The experts reviewed the work of the serologist, and found his conclusions to be scientifically unsound. |
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The conclusions he deduced from it depended entirely on his empirical assumptions. |
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Inevitably, your inner reflection will lead you to draw conclusions that will help you change the course of your entire life. |
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Little appetite has the New Deal for trying conclusions with political champions. |
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We were the rapporteurs at this seminar and delivered the conclusions and recommendations. |
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While evidence for microbial life on Mars is mounting, far more work needs to be done before any conclusions can be made. |
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We look forward to its conclusions, and trust that it will not be another socialist whitewash of the existing failed policy. |
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Their concurrence with conclusions drawn ensures the validity of the moderator's analysis. |
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And when it comes to discussions about his effectiveness in playing that card, there are similarly contradictory conclusions. |
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One wonders how all of these expansive and apparently contradictory conclusions fell within the committee's assigned sphere of responsibility. |
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Gonsalvo, however, was in no condition to try conclusions with his well-appointed enemy. |
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If we didn't generally jump to conclusions, we wouldn't make most of the inferences that need to be made. |
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Can I suggest reading all the evidence and expanding the straw poll before jumping to conclusions. |
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Ruffini simply counted the use of certain expressions, then leaped to conclusions about liberal bias. |
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While Greenberg qualifies her conclusions, she also overreaches in inferring a political sea change. |
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Mostly, though, it follows the romcom formula right through to its series of misunderstandings and foregone conclusions. |
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The public contributed on an open day, before the forum's conclusions were fed back to the city council. |
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Her locutions seem to have neither introductions nor conclusions but begin from a place of inquiry and intimacy. |
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The author deserves great credit for his determination to avoid arriving at simple conclusions. |
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The four-member commission's report is still being drafted and its final conclusions are not yet definite. |
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Rushing through his conclusions he just finished his presentation before this unexpected deadline. |
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Beyond procedural or stylistic infelicities, the author's conclusions prompt further reflection. |
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You come to important conclusions and finish an ongoing saga of conflict today. |
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It is also written in excruciatingly careful prose, belying the pointedness of its conclusions. |
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The appropriateness of using survey data for drawing conclusions about computer and Internet use patterns needs to be verified. |
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In the absence of any effective rebuttal, it had to draw its own conclusions. |
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The convictions that samsara is nirvana and that atman is Brahman are two distinctive religious conclusions born of such insight. |
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Some day I am going back to that same pool and I hope I may be permitted again to try conclusions with that rainbow. |
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An enthusiastic supporter pumped his hand and spewed out some of his own conclusions. |
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Personally, I find the Independent so poor these days, that I'd very leery of accepting any conclusions from an article therein. |
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We regard Article 10 as reinforcing and buttressing the conclusions we have reached and set out above. |
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We do not believe that definitive conclusions can be reached on so obviously inadequate an evidentiary record. |
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In fact, from the above conclusions the truth is actually even more complicated. |
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To reach its conclusions, the investigative committee had to do a bit of digging. |
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These models are somewhat restricted in their direct physical application, though some generalized conclusions could be drawn from these results. |
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Broad generalizations are made to draw conclusions about the historical development of England and Japan. |
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Most readers will probably be satisfied to peruse only the first and last chapters, those dealing with the history and chronology of the fires and the conclusions drawn. |
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And even while the commemorators shared many ideas about civilization and progress, they followed their ideas of civilization and progress to widely divergent conclusions. |
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While each method has potential methodological caveats, the concordance of the results using the different methods lends promise to the conclusions reached. |
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Since I believe not in mistakes, but in likes and dislikes, I find Shaw's musical judgment equally acute in both of his contradictory conclusions. |
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Despite this, the Committee reached conclusions that are contradictory and that were not based on a comprehensive review of the available literature. |
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But then all claims to knowledge about the physical world are corrigible, and we must reach provisional conclusions about them on the evidence available to us. |
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Certain moral decisions and attitudes are foregone conclusions. |
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Lessons in which there are no right or wrong answers, and from which solid conclusions cannot be drawn, tend to frustrate boys, who often view them as pointless. |
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It's not possible to deduce moral conclusions from first principles. |
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Such propositions appear only as premises, never as conclusions. |
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Their conclusions with regard to the origin of the vanadium enrichment and to the geology of the Springfield coal bed conflict with the established geology of the coal. |
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Orthodox people certainly can deeply appreciate the Rhodes conclusions regarding the impossibility of ordaining women to the priesthood and episcopacy. |
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How Wyclif conceives of the very essence of Scripture must always be borne in mind when assessing both his exegetical principles and the theological conclusions they produce. |
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Such countries may not bulk large in the Nato range-finder but, without them, generalised conclusions about Christian-Muslim conflict are suspect. |
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Images tell a story and also form a rhetoric of travel, a way to make a compelling argument and bring back conclusions from the realm of the unknown to the known. |
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The two scientists had the same information but reached opposite conclusions. |
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When trainees have no riskfree way of getting adequate explanations, they may draw the wrong conclusions about entirely innocent research conduct. |
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He draws on this naturalization of epistemology to argue for conclusions that are threatening to some of our most deep-rooted beliefs about ourselves. |
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The aforementioned surveys may not be sufficient to make any firm conclusions about correlation, and much less about causation. |
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Against Sartre's blind consistency, Foucault's postmodern leftism substituted haphazard shifts, though keeping intact destructive political conclusions. |
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In this article I try to refute the so-called libertarian theory of free will, and to examine how our conclusions ought to modify our common attitudes of praise and blame. |
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We trust the judicial process to reach the ultimate conclusions about the truth or falsity of these allegations. |
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Her conclusions are similar in some ways but in others are quite distinct. |
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A constructional model may deal with some of these issues otherwise and arrive at different conclusions, which do not always imply the antinomy, in some cases. |
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It goes without saying that bruises on a vulnerable person should always be investigated and the conclusions of that investigation carefully recorded. |
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He then set out his conclusions which I quoted earlier in this judgment. |
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And then Welles changes the ending, offering his own gimcrack conclusions about freedom and slavery that belie the unplumbed depths of the material. |
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Morgan wanted to draw firm conclusions based on quantitative and analytical data and so set out to test their theories using the fruit fly as his subject. |
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It is neither practicable nor useful to provide a summary of all the reports undertaken by the CC and the conclusions reached in a book of this nature. |
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Physics has a big advantage here, since the ability to derive interesting conclusions from general principles comes earlier in physics than in other sciences. |
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The Academics took the part of the questioner, who puts questions to his interlocutors and deduces conclusions that are unwelcome to them from their answers. |
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Global learners, on the other hand, process information by deduction, reasoning from general conclusions or theories to predictions and explanations. |
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These conclusions unnerved Kelley and eventually led him to change the focus of his career from psychiatry to criminology. |
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Publishing raw data may in a similar way enhance the speed and quality of research, as other researchers can reanalyse the data to verify results or to draw new conclusions. |
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Yet his narrative is gripping, perceptive, and moving at times, even if his conclusions are highly debatable. |
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Time will tell whether Spurlock's capable of arriving at conclusions rather than telegraphing them in advance, but for now, he's a voice in the wilderness. |
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For instance, rebasing by adding 50 to the non-economic component in each period and subtracting 50 from the economic component would not affect the conclusions at all. |
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This means that the conclusions he reaches concerning cultural values attaching to old age are not in any way tested against records of actual practices. |
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In my judgement those overall conclusions did not require elaboration. |
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At least a couple of times during the day, the audit team should meet and share facts, tentative conclusions, and problems and to replan the rest of the audit. |
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In a demassifying America, it is a mistake to derive sweeping conclusions about our civic health from the fate of an unrepresentative sample of mass organizations. |
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McEwan novels often have formally dazzling conclusions that recast the meaning of the preceding story. |
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Nor will they reach any satisfying conclusions about life itself no matter how earnestly they pursue them. |
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But readers should be wary of drawing too many political conclusions based on associations with either Hayek or Keynes. |
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I also proposed to give handwriting samples to the FBI so that they may draw conclusions regarding the likelihood that I wrote the anthrax letters. |
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As an example of the former, Wiseman applies his wonderfully analytic mind to question specific prior efforts to criticize the conclusions of the Feilding Report. |
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The conclusions of the advisory report were spoon-fed to a friendly group of Japanese political reporters two days ago. |
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Although, understandably, the discussions traverse a wide area of opinion there seem to be four main conclusions that are put forward as the cause of the crisis. |
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People can look at it from all angles and draw their own conclusions. |
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Her placid, almost vacant stare simply invites people to draw their own conclusions about St. Vincent as the indie-rock version of a manic pixie dream girl. |
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In a letter to the conference of German interior ministers, Amnesty International comes to similar conclusions regarding the situation in Afghanistan. |
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A few liberal blogs are resisting the conclusions and some hair-splitting is going on about micro-details of line spacing and superscript heights. |
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We can tentatively draw two conclusions that bear on this larger debate. |
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It would be nice if scholars would investigate a greater diversity of languages and systems before drawing conclusions about links between numeral structure and math learning. |
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There are, in sum, no comforting conclusions to be drawn any where. |
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His research has been thorough and his conclusions accurate. |
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Though his conclusions are a little predigested, he wants to create enlightening and ultimately dignifying experiences that teach people how the other half lives. |
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In addition, different analysts have drawn quite different conclusions from the same body of data about trends in poverty, depending on how the poverty line is estimated. |
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We will draw the conclusions that are required and endure the consequences as the Word of God instructs us, without prejudice and without partiality. |
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Evaluations of drug treatment programs have reached more positive conclusions but generally suffer from methodological problems, most notably self-selection into treatment. |
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He gives the basics of the science behind his conclusions, very useful for a science know-nothing like myself, and the final few chapters try and draw out some lessons for us. |
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You reach your own conclusions, mate, I don't have to spell it out. |
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One of the many ambitions of the Athenians was to reduce all Italy, but the disaster at Syracuse prevented their trying conclusions with the Romans. |
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However those critical scholars who are drawing conclusions from the canonic texts alone believe that the woman Jesus rescued and Mary were two separate persons. |
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The conference closed with an action plenary, drawing together conclusions that had been reached during the workshops, and proposing upcoming actions. |
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The robust version of descriptive philosophy of science derives from, or superimposes upon, the conclusions of modest descriptivism, a theory about evaluative practice. |
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Tools exist that can synthesise such data to scientific standards and provide logical and defensible conclusions about impacts on a system, a population, and society. |
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