While compassion makes us feel the richer for our magnanimity, justice stirs up far more complex emotions of self-justification and equivocation. |
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The 'story', if it can be called that, opens in mystery and proceeds through ambiguity, equivocation, and vagueness. |
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Valved horns were permitted, in the light of Wagner's own equivocation about them, joining those valved horn hybrids known as Wagner tubas. |
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In this respect the US nuclear policy has been one of dissemblance and equivocation. |
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As seems to be the case in Malaysian, there is some equivocation about whether the borrowings are pronouns or just nouns. |
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In taking up the Cistercian rule Merton assumes a way of life that, without equivocation, stands over against that of his former world. |
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Look, in my view it's due to, if you like, a bit of equivocation about earnings growth for the course of the next 12 months. |
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But in the meantime, I back the president's decision without any equivocation. |
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I'm over-reacting, of course, but it seems that such reportage has more to do with equivocation than articulation. |
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No question has been raised as to any equivocation, ambiguity or uncertainty in the interpretation of that will. |
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Apparently, they didn't realize that the people who felt this way were looking for leadership on the issue not equivocation. |
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Garnet was accused of knowing about the plot beforehand and not reporting it to the authorities. he was accused of Jesuitical equivocation. |
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He is practicing the ancient craft of equivocation, a trade plied by oracles thousands of years ago. |
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Both have stated without equivocation that they would support the traditional definition of marriage. |
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From conception to natural death, human beings deserve all the protection we can give, and without equivocation. |
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It is now vital for us to condemn the new Mauritanian regime without equivocation. |
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Canada believes without equivocation that the United Nations continues to have that leadership role. |
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Above all, it should have demanded that the British Government implement such a scheme without equivocation and without delay. |
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I will take this opportunity to ask that all forms of violence, without equivocation or exception, be targeted. |
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But Congressional equivocation also reflects Congressional ambivalence. |
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Such a thing should, though, be repudiated clearly and without equivocation. |
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I certainly, without equivocation, would stand with the opinions of that particular judge. |
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The Prime Minister also promised gas tax changes without delay, without equivocation. |
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That being said, I accept your ruling without equivocation and withdraw my comments. |
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We should tell the court what we mean without equivocation and without interpretation. |
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I say without equivocation to the House that the assets test is a logical and necessary expression of any genuine commitment to the pursuit of a needs based welfare system. |
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With official equivocation over animal experiments, it isn't surprising that plans for a world-class primate research lab at Cambridge have been axed. |
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His reactions are relevant only because they seem to fit his career-long pattern of equivocation and calculation trying whenever possible to have it both ways. |
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As someone who's been struggling with NOT getting things done for over forty years, I can say without equivocation that Allen's methods really do work. |
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For example, in the mid-90s, there was his pathetic equivocation on the issue of Nike using Asian sweatshop labor. |
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The conventional image of him is that of a fussy, superstitious, small-minded, uninspiring leader whose chief skill was equivocation. |
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And unlike Mr. Gorbachev, he was willing to say this openly and without equivocation. |
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I have to say with no equivocation that there was no suggestion along the lines of the statement made by the judge in Quebec. |
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On my first day in office I prohibited, without exception or equivocation, the use of torture by the United States of America. |
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There is no equivocation on the question of historicity there. |
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The belligerents in abortion wars disdain this search for compromise as mere equivocation, a flinching from deeper truths. |
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On this there can be no room for equivocation, weasel words or fudge. |
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But diplomatic ambiguity that translates into equivocation and weakness is not helpful at all. |
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Romney was so proud of his pro-choice pedigree that he even tweaked his Senate opponent, Democrat Ted Kennedy, for equivocation. |
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But the implication that Europeans were indifferent to the colour of their slaves rests on an equivocation between unfree labour and slave labour. |
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Other common strategies used to save face for others include the use of circumlocution and equivocation when criticism of another's performance is unavoidable. |
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As with any equivocation, this interpretation touches on the unrepresentable cause of her desire: the object-gaze brought into play in the scopic drive. |
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If parties are concerned about delay, equivocation or lack of clarity in responses to their submissions, they have their administrative law remedies. |
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The equivocation leads Weisberg to shift the meaning of flexibility. |
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I will conduct my public and private life as an example of stability, fidelity, morality, and without equivocation adhere to the same standards of conduct which I am bound by duty to enforce. |
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I can say, without equivocation, safety will never be compromised. |
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And, in order that forgiveness be total, it must be given in the Spirit, carried to the Sacrament of Reconciliation, be present in the heart and spoken clearly, without equivocation and without condition. |
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We need to reject these proposals wholesale and without equivocation and to call firmly for agricultural policy to be revised for the benefit of the farmers and the countryside. |
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We must seize the moment without equivocation. |
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Quite clearly, the handbook for all candidates that we read, that we examined in previous elections, states without equivocation that the choice is up to the candidate. |
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Two, there is now a long track record of hesitation, equivocation or near indifference among the countries that face North Korea regarding the nuclear issue. |
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The whole picture on these matters is characterized by a great deal of equivocation, out of sheer necessity, by underground activity and resistance with a high degree of secretiveness. |
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As Geach saw it, we need to think of predication as constant across embedded and unembedded occurrences of predicative moral sentences so as not to commit a fallacy of equivocation in making arguments. |
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And if he asked what was wrong with her I wasn't going to equivocate because equivocation — any kind of uncertainty, a tremor in the voice, a tonal shift, playacting — is the surest lie detector. |
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Mr. Chair, I want to make it absolutely clear, and I want assurance from the President of the Treasury Board, without any equivocation or prevarication, that he can tell us that the bill is in its usual form. |
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For once, I would hope the Liberal Party would stop its equivocation, get on board and start to support victims and law-abiding Canadians for a change. |
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Delay and equivocation is all we have seen on that and many other issues. |
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A strong indication of this equivocation is the way Rickert virtually disappears as the book progresses, while Emil Lask receives no more than two scant references. |
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For my own investigations of traditional logic lead irresistably to the conclusion that it is essentially an equivocation between psychology and verbality. |
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By logical errors I mean such simple things as Equivocation, Amphiboly, and Begging the Question. |
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