Deliberation Sentence Examples

deliberation
  • Free-will is so, although it is preceded by deliberation and determination, i.e.

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  • After much forethought and deliberation, I took delivery of the trike last October.

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  • Rhodes and Jameson, after considerable deliberation, came to the conclusion that they might advantageously intervene between Kruger and the Uitlanders.

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  • Necker, as director-general of the finances, set forth the condition of the treasury and proposed some small reforms. The Tiers Etat (Third Estate) was dissatisfied that the question of joint or separate deliberation should have been left open.

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  • Specifically, he discusses similarities and differences between rational deliberation and evolution.

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  • A topic which has been the subject of much deliberation by the two main political parties in recent months.

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  • It did not require the states to provide civil unions, much less marriage, leaving these issues to democratic deliberation.

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  • We have all had the experience of thoughts or ideas occurring to us spontaneously rather than as a result of conscious deliberation.

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  • Equally important (if not more important) are various models of structured citizen deliberation based on random selection of participants.

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  • Obviously the wholly extraneous issue of radicalism and opposition to the war entered into the deliberation of the jury.

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  • The author simply did not cross checked the original ukase of 1811 and the Deliberation of 1817.

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  • After much singing, forgetting the words and deliberation the judges whittled it down to just seven acts each.

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  • The author simply did not cross checked the original Ukase of 1811 and the Deliberation of 1817.

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  • But after hours of deliberation, they whittled the longlist down to a shortlist, and the five eventual winners are unveiled today.

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  • After some deliberation, you may find that you are more than happy to continue the search for the perfect pair of button fly pants that fit well and look fantastic.

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  • Don't be quick to buy an autograph that looks like it was written with slow deliberation or stops in the middle of a name.

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  • Moreover, it differs in several particulars from the Articles, these differences being doubtless the outcome of deliberation and of compromise.

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  • Here he joined Conrad (who had come by sea from Constantinople) and Baldwin III., and after some deliberation the three 1 We speak of First, Second and Third Crusades, but, more exactly, the Crusades were one continuous process.

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  • They are used in the pursuit of hares, and, although they are capable of very fast runs, have less endurance than foxhounds, and follow the trail with more care and deliberation.

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  • He was almost the only one who succeeded in making a firm stand in the tumultuous conclave of 1378; but the deliberation with which he made up his mind as to the validity of the election of Urban VI.

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  • Like Fabius, he restored the fortunes of his country by deliberation.

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  • But by far the greatest part of the book is undoubtedly the result of deliberation, touched more or less with emotion, and animated by a certain rhetorical rather than poetical glow.

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  • When he entered the latter body the strained relations between Great Britain and the United States formed the most important question for the deliberation of Congress.

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  • To give time for further collection of funds and deliberation, the property was re-let for five years to the original purchaser.

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  • This view of liberty of will is the only one in accordance with the facts of humanity; it excludes reflective volition, and explains the enthusiasm of the poet and the artist in the act of creation; it explains also the ordinary actions of mankind, which are done as a rule spontaneously and not after reflective deliberation.

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  • As to the necessity under which Deity exists of acting or creating, this is the highest form of liberty, it is the freedom of spontaneity, activity without deliberation.

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  • This " disproportionateness " between the human mind and the universe of reality imposes deliberation in the selection of studies, and disregard for those which lie out of the way of a wise man.

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  • Neither the doctrine of Hobbes, that deliberation is a mere alternation of competing desires, voluntary action immediately following the " last appetite," nor the hardly less decided Determinism of Locke, who held that the will is always moved by the greatest present uneasiness, appeared to either author to require any reconciliation with the belief in human responsibility.

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  • After much deliberation we decided to start off with a platter of fabulous Spanish charcuterie.

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  • Fourteen requests were more complex and required further deliberation and, in some cases, the application of an exemption.

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  • This Practice Advisory was developed with the utmost care and after lengthy deliberation.

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  • It has then met at Lambeth, and after sitting for five days for deliberation upon the fixed subjects and appointment of committees, has adjourned, to meet again at the end of a fortnight and sit for five days more, to receive reports, adopt resolutions and to put forth the encyclical letter.

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  • In contrast to his predecessor, he was a man of slow and calm deliberation, and it was natural to suppose that he was little, if at all, accessible to impulses of the moment or to the persuasions of his entourage.

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  • After much deliberation the republic agreed to transport 4500 horse and 29,000 foot to Palestine with provisions for one year, for a sum of 85,000 marks; in addition 50 Venetian galleys would be provided free of charge, while Venice was to receive half the conquests made by the crusaders.

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  • This proposal of the Lords to discuss supply infringed upon the privileges of the Commons; accordingly, when the report of committee was read to the Lower House, Bacon spoke against the proposed conference, pointing out at the same time that a communication from the Lords might be received, but that the actual deliberation on it must be taken by themselves alone.

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  • The Pan-American congress, then projected, now met in Washington, and Blaine, as its master spirit, presided over and guided its deliberation through its session of five months.

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  • While at this academy Butler became dissatisfied with the principles of Presbyterianism, and after much deliberation resolved to join the Church of England.

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  • His people must have wondered at his unusual deliberation.

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  • Boris, speaking with deliberation, told them in pure, correct French many interesting details about the armies and the court, carefully abstaining from expressing an opinion of his own about the facts he was recounting.

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  • This chair, not in the ordinary faculty, had become, through Reinhold, the most important in the university, and great deliberation was exercised in selecting his successor.

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  • Separate deliberation would enable the majority among the nobles and the superior clergy to limit reform.

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  • Women and men assembled for deliberation in separate airechta or gatherings, and no man durst enter the women's airecht under pain of death.

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  • Before this great gathering of all Christian Europe he proclaimed a Crusade for the year 1217, and in common deliberation it was resolved that a truce of God should reign for the next four years, while for the same time all trade with the Levant should cease.

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  • Two consultors had the duty of separately drawing up a preliminary plan for each title, these projects being twice submitted for the deliberation of the commission (or sub-commission) of consultors, the version adopted by them being next submitted to the commission of cardinals, and the whole finally sent up for the papal sanction.

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  • It was the initiatory body; and it lay with the Collegio to send matters for deliberation either before the senate or before the Ten.

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  • Finding it impossible to keep this part of their vow, the fathers met at Vicenza, where Ignatius was staying in a ruined monastery; and here after deliberation it was determined that he, Laynez and Faber should go to Rome to place the little band at the disposal of the pope.

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  • Nevertheless much of the old order was restored; the podestet who represented King Charles was assisted by 12 buoni uomini, and by the council of the 100 buoni uomini del popolo, " without the deliberation of whom," says Villani, "no great matter nor expenditure could be undertaken."

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  • Among its first subjects of deliberation must have been the ratification of Aristides' assessment.

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  • It is amusing to observe the extreme care and deliberation with which the bird draws the worm from its hidingplace, coaxing it out as it were by degrees, instead of pulling roughly or breaking it.

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  • The death of Sir Thomas Fleming made a vacancy in the chief justiceship of the king's bench, and Bacon, after some deliberation, proposed to the king that Coke should be removed from his place in the court of comman pleas and transferred to the king's bench.

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  • The deliberation of the Allies on the 7th and 8th, when the forces opposed to them were insignificant, had been fatal.

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  • He has a fivefold wergild, summons the nobles and clergy for purposes of deliberation, calls out the host, administers justice and regulates finance.

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  • On the pretext that fair deliberation was impossible in the capital, the assembly was now ordered to meet in Brandenburg, while troops were concentrated near Berlin and a state of siege was proclaimed.

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  • Joint deliberation would ensure a majority to the reformers and therefore the abolition of privileges and the extinction of feudal rights of property.

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  • But the farther he went and the more his attention was diverted by the ever-increasing crowds moving toward the Kremlin, the less he remembered to walk with the sedateness and deliberation of a man.

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  • For the most part I escaped wonderfully from these dangers, either by proceeding at once boldly and without deliberation to the goal, as is recommended to those who run the gauntlet, or by keeping my thoughts on high things, like Orpheus, who, "loudly singing the praises of the gods to his lyre, drowned the voices of the Sirens, and kept out of danger."

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