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"cogently" Definitions
  1. in a way that is strongly and clearly expressed and that influences what people believe

130 Sentences With "cogently"

How to use cogently in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "cogently" and check conjugation/comparative form for "cogently". Mastering all the usages of "cogently" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I can imagine a book that cogently argues the opposite.
That he cogently answers questions for the next hour seems almost superhuman.
He laid out the case against the president clearly, passionately, cogently and, I believe, courageously.
She would help her cause dramatically and Democrats nationally by addressing them quickly, cogently and effectively.
And by and large, he spoke cogently and convincingly about policy and his vision for the state.
Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt ask whether our democracy is in danger and cogently describe the risk.
"One says… if you can't experience anything… how we can talk cogently about you being harmed?" he says.
While its story mechanics are creaky, the valor of Pitsenbarger is evoked cogently, in well-executed battle sequences.
Brant has cogently influenced the legacy of Basquiat on several fronts, but the artist and his work remain gloriously defiant.
She regains her ability to speak and recognize her daughter, and she speaks cogently to her gathered family about her childhood.
It is cogently enthralling and spaciously mounted by Pompidou curator Jonas Storsve and Nicola del Roscio of the Cy Twombly Foundation.
But it is admittedly refreshing to see a politician speak coherently and cogently, especially after our current President's distressingly incomprehensible ramblings.
Andrew Bacevich has written cogently about just how militaristic American culture has become, much to the detriment of the US military itself.
Many of the party's ideas, which were not cogently communicated to the electorate in the party's overelaborate 2019 manifesto, remained abstract promises.
But its latest project, which arrives at Carnegie's Zankel Hall on Friday, responds cogently to an era of increasingly policed and politicized borders.
However, it could also be more cogently argued, based on the Clinton experience, that the likely acquittal would equate to innocence to most Americans.
And far from being "deranged," in most cases (including the ones just mentioned), the attackers clearly, and cogently, explain the geopolitical rationale for their actions.
The problem — as Shtulman, a developmental psychologist, cogently explains — is that new knowledge doesn't erase old misconceptions the way a software upgrade deletes the previous code.
Jonathan Chait, a veteran political columnist now at New York magazine, cogently argues that Obama has been a transformational figure who changed America for the better.
To be more precise, the magazine's writers critique what is better called a "business wishlist"; they see nothing that can be cogently recognized as an economic doctrine.
The Federal Reserve's recent rule proposal regarding physical commodity activities of banks shows the Federal Reserve Board's sensitivity to politics far more cogently than the monetary policy critique.
In a brief accompanying video, he cogently discusses the intricacies of these short pieces, written in just two voices, and he gave lively, beautifully delineated accounts on Sunday.
" While parts of O'Connor's opinion "lists a few examples of major provisions and cogently explains their link to the individual mandate, at least as it existed in 2010.
De Mille was effusive and dramatic in the videotape as Miss de Lappe followed her lead, fluidly demonstrating dance steps and cogently discussing how to teach de Mille's choreography.
The character Cutter in Christopher Priest's novel-turned-movie, The Prestige cogently lays out the important parts of this structure: Every great magic trick consists of three parts or acts.
Brant has cogently influenced the legacy of Basquiat on several fronts, including collecting, exhibiting, and curating the artwork itself (the current exhibition at the Brant Foundation is curated by Brant).
Puh-leese. As Charles Krauthammer so cogently pointed out on Fox News the evening the scandal broke, if you thought Donald Trump was a saint, you haven't been paying attention.
As she cogently argues, psychological warfare planners understood the word "culture" the way that midcentury anthropologists did: to refer to the entire "structure of society," not merely to its artists.
The group's performance at the grand prize competition, available to watch on Vimeo, reveals a quartet of expert collaborators who cogently traverse a range of repertoire staples and modern works.
But Wolff cogently identifies the disconnect between the populist Trump and the Trump who would endorse a plan that slashes Medicaid while repealing taxes on health insurers and pharmaceutical companies.
That was probably his strongest moment; regardless of whether you agree with him on the effectiveness of tariffs — and most economists don't — the president was making his points clearly and cogently.
During the primaries, the only candidate in either party, in my view, who spoke cogently about how to defeat Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) terrorists was South Carolina Sen.
Writing for Medium in 2017, Natalie Shure cogently diagnosed the way feminist writers in corporate media tend to cover women in politics, including powerful politicians like Clinton and, more recently, Sen.
One of the reasons for the failure at the strategic level is that policy makers haven't been able to cogently locate the "centre of gravity" of the enemy forces fighting in Afghanistan.
Buttigieg's argument is that the field should not be concerned with labels, and that strong policies that the candidates are able to cogently explain to voters will transcend any right-wing marketing campaign.
It is only Bloomberg's inexperience that prevented him from cogently asking Sanders what he has been doing in Congress for the last 35 years while this system was getting so out of whack.
Kate O'Beirne, who cogently advanced the conservative agenda in the pages of National Review and unflinchingly defended it on the CNN program "The Capital Gang," died on Sunday in McLean, Va. She was 67.
Those companies totally redid their looks but failed to do so cogently: Airbnb's pretentious new logo, the "Bélo," aimed high but ultimately just reminded users of a combination of various reproductive and non-reproductive organs.
His erratic decision to pull U.S. troops out of northern Syria this month also makes it impossible for Republicans to cogently claim that acquittal is justified for the sake of international stability or national security.
DAVID SMOLLAR, SAN DIEGO To the Editor: There is an additional objection to those voiced so cogently by Holland Cotter and Roberta Smith to a mandatory out-of-towner entrance fee to the Metropolitan Museum.
Since the Black Sea and its littorals have become contested zones between Russia and the West, it behooves us to think cogently about U.S. interests in the equally important Caucasus and how to defend them.
Brimming with energy, Mr. Wacky happily (and cogently) shouts about the various family fun attractions attendees can expect before taking a moment to dunk on what is surely only a shell of a man by now.
While Mr. Sadat was the prime mover on the Egyptian side, observers said Mr. Boutros-Ghali argued cogently if unsuccessfully for a Palestinian state and a withdrawal of Israeli forces from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The futures issue actually gets to the heart of why crafting a VIX-tracking product is so difficult (most recently, the maddeningly complex VXUP and VXDN funds were a particularly high-profile failure, as chronicled cogently here).
While Charles Isherwood wrote that this "grab bag of incidents from Mr. Deblinger's life" does not make for "the most cogently thematic show," he noted that Mr. Deblinger's "high-voltage energy" enlivens even the more digressive moments.
Rosenstein, the newly appointed deputy attorney general, cogently described several significant errors of judgment, mainly having to do with Comey's public statements about his investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server while secretary of state.
For instance, whereas Under a Constellation's floral forms cogently evoke human body parts, the installation's direct bodily representations — human ear sculptures embedded among the fence's vines and flowers — appear overly realistic as forms and heavy-handed as symbols.
And when it comes to evading spam filters, he says, most systems rely on a range of signals, including things like a user's IP address and recent activity — not just checking to see if the spammer is writing cogently.
The most effective way to do this, he proposed, was not to advocate for minor, incremental changes to an already accepted idea, but to make the case for a currently "unthinkable" idea, stating it cogently and provoking an informed discussion.
Berger's ideas about things like capitalism and animal rights, no matter what the viewer thinks of them, are stated so cogently and with so many years of refinement and care that they inspire reflection, and in some cases ring startlingly true.
In its eclectic showcase Forgotten Masters cogently argues that Kampani Qalam was not merely a relic of the EIC, but instead the last triumphant gasp of an unbroken tradition of Indian art before it was shattered by colonialism and imperial photography.
Damir Banović of the University of Sarajevo writes on this topic cogently, with clear relevance to the situation that obtains in America: Earlier, traditional societies imposed clear frameworks and roles upon individuals, but with postindustrial modernization, identity became individualized and pluralized.
The movement-based performance, which lasts for roughly 90 minutes, cogently draws lines around what black space is, how the black body can behave in such space, and ultimately how can blackness retains its pitch amid structural and physical violence.
From students cogently arguing points of view on news about the Boy Scouts and Harvey Weinstein to local teenagers who vividly described what the California fires have felt like to them, we admired the care many seemed to take with their responses.
And even if you know the details, unless you've indulged existing flat-earth literature, you are unlikely — right here, right now — to be able to cogently, concisely, and comprehensively respond to the lengthy rebuttals flat-earthers will give to each and every scientific proof.
In 2015 curator, Adrienne Edwards wrote "Blackness in Abstraction" in Art in America, an essay that cogently explores Adam Pendleton's recent "Black Dada" works and outlines a history of contemporary artists' conceptual visual ruminations, which have presented blackness in multitudes since the early 1940s.
"Lucky Penny," directed by Ben Snyder, isn't the most cogently thematic show; it's a grab bag of incidents from Mr. Deblinger's life, loosely assembled around stories of his relationship with his father, and his father's relationship, in turn, with his father, who became mentally ill.
Unlike a physical "Choose Your Own Adventure" book, I could never tell how far I was from the end, and thus how far I was from the beginning, and so I could never cogently construct a narrative arc that made sense for pacing or structure.
But the ambassador should be able to operate from a new office there as a complement to a special ambassador to the Palestinian authority in East Jerusalem, living and working with the Palestinian Authority -- much as my friend and colleague, Martin Indyk, has so cogently suggested.
He personalized the war, saw attacks on the policy as attacks on himself, and failed to see that his landslide victory in 19733 and the international and domestic context in early 1965 gave him considerable freedom of action — a point Humphrey cogently underscored in his February memo.
" Reaction to Haley's speech: Jamil Jaffer, a former top staffer on Bob Corker's Senate Foreign Relations Committee, emailed me after reading Haley's speech: "Ambassador Nikki Haley's speech today carefully and cogently lays out the case for a presidential determination that Iran isn't entitled to continued suspension of sanctions.
There's a concern, and we certainly understand it…However, until the ISIS fight can be continued, the ability to cogently and comprehensively deal with the challenge Iran poses is of necessity something that cannot be addressed as well as we would like, as well as others would like.
Eliot Horowitz (CTO and co-founder of MongoDB) responded cogently to questions, comments and objections, concluding with: In short, we believe that in today's world, linking has been superseded by the provision of programs as services and the connection of programs over networks as the main form of program combination.
First, Republicans must cogently educate the public on how ObamaCare fundamentally altered private health care for the worse — creating mega-medicine giants who have hijacked the patient-doctor relationship, put profit over personalized care and set the stage for the one-size-fits-all prescription of single-payer universal health care.
You're such a goddamned exhibitionist, put on such a wonderful show, that it is difficult if not impossible to speak with you seriously and cogently without an audience; I'm taking this opportunity, this medium, this hour, in fact, to try and put across to you something of what I feel and think. Amen.
That doesn't mean that we should (or can) jettison all reference to our stated beliefs, reasons, rationality; indeed, Kant also cogently argued that despite the efforts of all manner of determinists, we cannot coherently explain these away (for any attempt to explain away our rationality would itself represent a use of that faculty).
I mean, I literally ... when I did my interview with Tim Cook recently, he talked about it quite cogently and the reaction was, "How dare he say such things, that you need to have responsibility, that you need to have ..." You know, they attacked him rather than listen to the message he was putting forth.
Each author cogently places Mr. de Blasio in context, if from slightly different perspectives (as suggested by their titles): "Reclaiming Gotham: Bill de Blasio and the Movement to End America's Tale of Two Cities" by Juan González; and "The Pragmatist: Bill de Blasio's Quest to Save the Soul of New York" by Joseph P. Viteritti.
Sunstein cogently argues that nudges add a valuable tool to the government's toolbox alongside its other, blunter instruments, such as prohibitions, taxes, and subsidies: If freedom and welfare matter, coercion is often best avoided, and so the last decade has seen a remarkable rapid growth of interest in choice-preserving, low-cost tools, sometimes called nudges.
On songs like "The Sparrow," Agrimonia's uncanny ability to cogently blur the lines between the already closely-related, often amorphous sounds of post-metal, post-rock, rock, and doom is on full display, and despite this sonic cannibalization, the result sounds completely fresh and new (especially once they fire up the keyboards and Blom unleashes her merciless growl).
As they said in an illuminating recent interview (which also cogently and clearly lays out their anarchist, anti-capitalist politics in an accessible way),"To those that say "shut up and listen to the music" we reply "silence will be your only companion when they come for you, in the fog of night, because you are "different" in any kind or form.
From Trump's inauguration until today, while former President George W. Bush has earned widespread praise for speaking out clearly and cogently against major outrages committed by President Trump, former President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein Obama3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Obama's high school basketball jersey sells for 0,000 at auction Dirty little wars and the law: Did Osama bin Laden win?
At one point, deSouza cogently writes how Rothko's "trailing brushstrokes" become "plumes of smoke" and Rothko's orange become the orange he saw in nighttime explosions of TV. He easily shifts from the metaphysical and the past to the physical world of the recent present and then back again to a different past when he makes formal connections to an 1840 work "The Slave Ship [Slavers Throwing overboard the Dead and Dying — Typhoon Coming on]" by J.M. Turner.
John Lauritsen credited Duesberg with cogently explaining the logic of Koch's first postulate and providing a clear explanation of how AZT functions as a "non-selective terminator of DNA synthesis".
Billboard's 1973 review commented that "The fading Indian musical influence blending cogently with free flowing modern jazz is the end result here", and suggested that the second side was the more commercial.
The Gold Exchange standard of the interwar period, as Kindleberger cogently stated, collapsed because "Britain couldn't and America wouldn't." In fact, Kindleberger provides a slightly different variation of monetary hegemony that possesses five functions rather than three defined here.
In his approach to rhyme and metrics, Czechowicz was unorthodox. However, as Czesław Miłosz cogently points out, "all of his poetry is intrisically linked to the so-called 'bourgeois lyricism' of the seventeenth century and to folk songs."Miłosz, Czesław (1983). The History of Polish Literature, p. 411-12.
He was an industrialist. He wrote How to Win at Cricket, or, the Skipper's Guide (published in 1988), which John Arlott described as "a perceptive and thought-provoking study of captaincy which is expressed most cogently and is, above all, full of good, sound common sense".Arlott, pp. 1240-42.
The College's central mission is to provide a good foundation in the humanities and social sciences to all its students, whether or not they are working towards pre-professional degrees. All students should know how to read critically, write cogently, and speak persuasively. All students should understand the basic methods of the sciences, and all should be conversant with mathematics.
This work is reviewed—briefly, but cogently—by Koposov et al. (2015: 16–17). Koposov and co-workers note that the Clouds show significant signs of distortion characteristic of tidal stress. This stress may have been induced by proximity to the Milky Way, but simulations suggest that it is more likely a result of interactions between the Clouds themselves (Besla et al.
Ultimately, Robbins' writings containing social issues can not be easily classified. On the one hand, his narrator cogently, even passionately explores and exposes injustices his characters' endure. There is a sense of working-class rage. Moreover, these poems have the effect of elegies to the actual human values abused by the world capitalist system and the various branches of the soviet communist system.
Although little known to the public, and even to some solicitors, lawburrows is still in use in the present time. Several cases in the 1980s failed because lawburrows was misapplied and, consequently, in 1988, the case for the repeal or the overhaul of lawburrows was argued cogently by W J Stewart. Civil Judicial Statistics Scotland records 25 instances in the four-year period 1999—2002, 17 of which were in 2001.
It was also restored with a modern thyrsus in wood and iron. Dionysus Sardanapalus from the British Museum In the early 19th century, Ennio Quirino Visconti cogently argued, against Johann Joachim Winckelmann and other earlier antiquarians, that the "Sardanapalus" of the Museo Pio-Clementino was in fact a Dionysus.Visconti, Mus. Clem. II:290-304, noted by J.J. Pollitt, in Olga Palagia, J. J. Pollitt, Personal Styles in Greek Sculpture :8f.
In L'Évolution de la Matière (1905), Le Bon anticipated the mass–energy equivalence, and in a 1922 letter to Albert Einstein complained about his lack of recognition. Einstein responded and conceded that a mass–energy equivalence had been proposed before him, but only the theory of relativity had cogently proved it. Gaston Moch gave Le Bon credit for anticipating Einstein's theory of relativity. In L'Évolution des Forces (1907), Le Bon prophesied the Atomic Age.
The Code is universally acknowledged as a cogently drafted code, ahead of its time. It has substantially survived for over 150 years in several jurisdictions without major amendments. Nicholas Phillips, Justice of Supreme Court of United Kingdom applauded the efficacy and relevance of IPC while commemorating 150 years of IPC. Modern crimes involving technology unheard of during Macaulay's time fit easily within the Code mainly because of the broadness of the Code's drafting.
Chittu (Snisha Chandran), a simple tribal love-girl is cogently married to Jaisurya (Sathya), a young and intelligent journalist from the city. Surya had decided to marry Rani (Chandhana Shetty) after 7 long years of love affair. But the events that happened in forest just before their wedding engagement changed every thing. Surya is forced to marry Chittu, a tribal woman, when the villagers find them together in a hut on his visit to Poombarai forest.
During his career Camm wrote three lengthy pamphlets, a number of addresses to the King, several dozen essays to the gazettes, and some scattered poetry. He was an indefatigable letter writer, and his correspondence reflects the major debates of more than thirty years in Virginia. His contribution to American Revolutionary debates was to state cogently the minority viewpoint of Virginia Loyalists. Camm Hall at the College's campus adjacent to Colonial Williamsburg is named in his honor.
Schröder's equation was solved analytically if is an attracting (but not superattracting) fixed point, that is by Gabriel Koenigs (1884). In the case of a superattracting fixed point, , Schröder's equation is unwieldy, and had best be transformed to Böttcher's equation. There are a good number of particular solutions dating back to Schröder's original 1870 paper. The series expansion around a fixed point and the relevant convergence properties of the solution for the resulting orbit and its analyticity properties are cogently summarized by Szekeres.
The Alice B Award is one small contribution toward overcoming discrimination. As Martha Nell Smith so cogently wrote: > "The trajectory of lesbian literature for the first two-thirds of the > twentieth century can be described as a movement from encrypted strategies > for expressions of the love that dare not speak its name to overtly > political celebrations of woman-for-woman passion that, by the late 1960s, > refused to be denied, denigrated, or expunged."Alice B Award Winner Lori L. > Lake. Retrieved on 2008-05-31.
" Similarly, a review in Booklist suggested that while Sommers "argues cogently that boys are having major problems in school," the book was unlikely to convince all readers "that these problems are caused by the American Association of University Women, Carol Gilligan, Mary Pipher, and William S. Pollack," all of whom were strongly criticized in the book. Ultimately, the review suggested, "Sommers is as much of a crisismonger as those she critiques."Carroll, Mary. "The War against Boys: How Misguided Feminism Is Harming Our Young Men.
Müller-Lauter argued cogently on the basis of a detailed analysis of Nietzsche's texts that the role that Heidegger reserved for himself had in fact been effectively performed by Nietzsche himself. Central to this interpretation was the reexamination of the “doctrine” of the will to power found in Nietzsche's work, turning it from a metaphysical doctrine (as in Heidegger's interpretation) into a theory of a plurality of will-to-power quanta dynamically interacting with one another in processes with an inherently contradictory and perspectival character.
A capsule review of the book for the Los Angeles Times, Phil Freshman commented, "Using hard logic and crackling humor, a trio of Canadian laboratory researchers cogently deflates Transcendental Meditation; they spotlight transparencies in its claims and warn of its latent hazards to those in wobbly mental health." In his book Rational Mysticism, author John Horgan comments that although Persinger says he's neutral toward religious belief, he's more biased than other neurotheologians and that his two books "cast religious belief and spiritual practices in a psychopathological light".
The similar Allied smaller- calibre air-defence weapons of the American forces were also quite capable, although they receive little attention. Their needs could cogently be met with smaller-calibre ordnance beyond using the usual singly-mounted M2 .50 caliber machine gun atop a tank's turret, as four of the ground-used "heavy barrel" (M2HB) guns were mounted together on the American Maxson firm's M45 Quadmount weapon (as a direct answer to the Flakvierling), which were often mounted on the back of a half-track to form the Half Track, M16 GMC, Anti-Aircraft.
In June 1787, Smith was one of the first to campaign for the abolition of the slave trade, becoming a vocal advocate for the cause. In 1790 he supported William Wilberforce in the slave trade debate in April. While he had been out of parliament he had given his support to Abolitionism by writing a pamphlet entitled A Letter to William Wilberforce (1807), in which he cogently and convincingly summarised the abolitionists' arguments for abolition. Once the trade had been halted, he turned his attention to freeing those who were already slaves.
Phisicke Against Fortune book cover of 1579 De remediis utriusque fortunae ("Remedies for Fortunes") is a collection of 254 Latin dialogues written by the humanist Francesco Petrarca (1304–1374), commonly known as Petrarch. The dialogues, completed towards the end of Petrarch's life, are treasure-chests of wisdom and humour which have not lost their relevance despite the passing of six centuries. They display remarkably lucid ideas that are cogently expressed. Drawing on classical sources, Petrarch expounded on refinement in taste and intellect, on finesse and propriety in speech and style.
Wood's works are always cogently constructed, knitting together densely wrought counterpoint with rigorous motivic working, sometimes using a personalized serialist language. His music commands a broad communicative range: it can be violently expressionistic, poignantly lyrical, or even, as in the jazz inflected Piano Concerto, exuberantly rhythmic. Wood likes to compose slowly and he typically prefers chamber music genres, though several of his large- scale works, such as his Symphony and Violin Concerto, are amongst his best known. In recent years he has contributed several articles on music to The Times Literary Supplement.
Mill's major work on political democracy, Considerations on Representative Government, defends two fundamental principles: extensive participation by citizens and enlightened competence of rulers. The two values are obviously in tension, and some readers have concluded that he is an elitist democrat, while others count him as an earlier participatory democrat. In one section, he appears to defend plural voting, in which more competent citizens are given extra votes (a view he later repudiated). However, in another chapter he argues cogently for the value of participation by all citizens.
In addition to her work as a dancer, she has regularly written and lectured on the arts. In January 1996 she debated at the Oxford Union, opposing the motion 'This House Believes the National Lottery Gives Too Much Money to the Elitist Arts'. Her address was described by Lord Gowrie, her debating partner, as 'the best speech I have heard on the Arts in 30 years'. The motion was heavily defeated, a triumph which the Evening Standard attributed largely to 'the eloquence of a ballerina, unaccustomed to public speaking', describing her speech as 'cogently argued and delivered with generosity of spirit'.
Descartes proposed that consciousness resides within an immaterial domain he called res cogitans (the realm of thought), in contrast to the domain of material things, which he called res extensa (the realm of extension). He suggested that the interaction between these two domains occurs inside the brain, perhaps in a small midline structure called the pineal gland. Although it is widely accepted that Descartes explained the problem cogently, few later philosophers have been happy with his solution, and his ideas about the pineal gland have especially been ridiculed. However, no alternative solution has gained general acceptance.
In "The Public Stake in Revisionisim", Barnes wrote that "The number of civilians exterminated by the Allies, before, during, and after the Second World War, equaled, if it did not far exceed those liquidated by the Germans and the Allied liquidation program was often carried out by methods which were far more brutal and painful then whatever extermination actually took place in German gas ovens".Lipstadt, pp. 76-77. Barnes said that certain (unnamed) "court historians" were guilty of ensuring that Allied war crimes were never "cogently and frankly placed over against the doings, real or alleged, at Auschwitz."Lipstadt, p. 77.
A government review of the Youth Service, set up in November 1958 and chaired by Lady Albemarle, was published in 1960. It argued cogently for specific kinds of provision to be provided by local councils and ushered in a significant building boom of new premises for youth work. Often thought of as a golden age, the period following the Albemarle report was a time of thriving centre- based youth work. Today (as outlined in the Transforming Youth Work document released in 1998 by the DfES) it is the statutory duty of all local government organisations to provide a youth service in their region.
Kirkus called the book "an absorbing and cogently argued original contribution to WW II literature." Booklist said historians would give the book "short shrift" because it was primarily derived from existing published works, and Library Journal described the Hess theory as "generally discredited." His 2000 book Hitler's Traitor: Martin Bormann and the Defeat of the Reich contends that Germany's defeat was largely the result of the Red Orchestra spy ring that had penetrated the German High Command. The book contends that Martin Bormann, a top aide to Adolf Hitler, and Heinrich Müller, head of the Gestapo, were both Soviet agents.
It is not an unwarranted fabrication ([or "fiction"] ). (tr. Campany > 2002: 104, emending Ware 1966: 51) Ge Hong uses ranhou (, "only thus") to emphasize that the veracity of Liexian Zhuan biographies is not tainted by Liu Xiang's failure in waidan alchemy, indicating that the collected stories are reliable because he could not have invented them (Campany 2002: 104). Internal evidence suggests that Liu compiled the Liexian zhuan in the very last years of his life. Although his authorship is disputed and the text is dated later than the 1st century BCE, "recent scholars have argued cogently" for the traditional attribution (Campany 1996: 41).
The first book to cogently explain the workings of the Japanese society for the Western reader was The Chrysanthemum and the Sword by Ruth Benedict. This book was produced under less than ideal circumstances since it was written during the early years of World War II in an attempt to understand the people who had become such a powerful enemy of the West. Under the conditions of war, it was impossible to do field research in Japan. Without being able to study in Japan, Benedict relied on newspaper clippings, histories, literature, films, and interviews of Japanese-Americans.
EW interprets the scene to mean "Modern life has become a movie (a point made more cogently by Neal Gabler's new book, Life the Movie)." The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette took the same meaning from the conceit, and described it as a "not-so-deep observation" that "has no real pay-off". The New York Times felt it was a "halfhearted narrative device ... suggesting that the novel's action is actually part of a film that's being made." The reviewer felt that allusions to ""the director" or to the fact that this or that scene is a "flashback"" was used to retroactively suggest cohesion in the novel's plot.
The book today commands a rich premium from collectors, on the rare occasions when a copy becomes available for sale. His most famous disputant was Rav Menachem Kasher, whom he attacked vigorously in "Agan HaSahar", following Kasher's cavalier dismissal of his published opinions on the dateline controversy. In his book Torah and Existence, he cogently argues that the purpose of the world revolves around Torah. The first chapter contains an elaboration of his opinion that the founding of the modern State of Israel constituted the "Atchalta d'Geula" (Beginning of the Redemption), though he strongly opposed much of the policies and leadership of the state.
Bradshaw concluded, "This is an engrossing drama, with excellent performances and tremendous design by Maria Djurkovic." In his review for The Telegraph, Tim Robey gave the film four out of five stars. Robey focused on the acting performances, especially Scanlan who "gives arguably the standout performance in this generally smashing cast ... in two perfectly weighted, emotionally crushing scenes". In his review in the New York Observer, Rex Reed called the film "a cogently written and elegantly appointed period piece that relates passages in his books to emotions in his personal life, holding the attention and shedding light on one of literature’s most fascinating footnotes".
Anderson and McVey noted that the Harian Rakjat "prided itself on well written and cogently argued editorials", but the editorial in question "is no gem of style or clarity". They believed that the "foolish hesitant editorial" provided the Army an opportunity to place the blame of the coup on the PKI. Since the coup, Anderson and McVey noted that the Army's success in blaming the PKI was "both because of actual PKI involvement, however confused, and because all groups now in power wish to believe it, since for years they lived in growing fear of a possible PKI takeover"."Synopsis of the Coup Analysis" by Benedict Anderson and Ruth McVey.
Contrastingly, other writers have been less ready to put forth the true culprit. Graham Edwards, in considering the evidence, claims that "several writers have their favourite nominations, all cogently argued, equally convincing and open to counter-argument", leaving the mystery open to the reader. Gregory Brandon was said to be the illegitimate grandson or great grandson of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, whose However, an ancestry of Richard Brandon from the Duke of Suffolk's illegitimate son Charles is highly unlikely. Charles Brandon died in 1551, eight years before Elizabeth I's accession to the throne, and therefore cannot be identical with the Charles Brandon who was this Queen's jeweller.
On the other hand, some cosmologists insist that energy is conserved in some sense; this follows the law of conservation of energy.e.g. This argues cogently "Energy is always, always, always conserved." Thermodynamics of the universe is a field of study that explores which form of energy dominates the cosmos – relativistic particles which are referred to as radiation, or non- relativistic particles referred to as matter. Relativistic particles are particles whose rest mass is zero or negligible compared to their kinetic energy, and so move at the speed of light or very close to it; non- relativistic particles have much higher rest mass than their energy and so move much slower than the speed of light.
Elam's 1934 response was entitled 'The Vitamin Survey, A Reply' and was a critical appraisal of that survey and its results. This was followed in 1935 by 'The Medical Research Council, What it is and how it works'. The second paper was based on the same arguments about MRC research practices and remits as the first paper, but distilled and argued more cogently on a broader front. Elam's argument was that 'powerful vested interests' had managed to 'entrench' themselves behind 'State-aided research', and had managed to make themselves unaccountable; the public were unable to influence the decisions about what research should be undertaken, and it operated like a closed shop, only answerable to itself.
The text of the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement is reprinted in John Gooneratne, Negotiating with the Tigers (LTTE) (2002–2005): A View from the Second Row, Stamford Lake, Pannipitiya, Sri Lanka, 2007, pp. 123–34. The text of the agreement is also available at the Sri Lanka government website He criticisms of this agreement, and of the Norwegian mediation effort in Sri Lanka, were most cogently expressed in his speech from the opposition in the parliament in Colombo on 8 May 2003.The full text of his speech, "Flaws in the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement" is in Adam Roberts (ed.), Democracy, Sovereignty and Terror: Lakshman Kadirgamar on the Foundations of International Order, I.B.Tauris, London & New York, 2012, pp. 193–203.
Pinker's assumptions about the innateness of language have been challenged by some; English linguist Geoffrey Sampson has contested some of the claims made in the book about this.Geoffrey Sampson: The ‘Language Instinct’ Debate. Richard Webster, writes in Why Freud Was Wrong (1995), and concludes that Pinker argues cogently that the human capacity for language is part of the genetic endowment associated with the evolution through natural selection of specialised neural networks within the brain, and that its attack on the 'standard social science model' of human nature is effective. Webster accepts Pinker's argument that, for ideological motives, twentieth-century social scientists have minimized the extent to which human nature is influenced by genetics.
He also wrote that it may be "the most careful and detailed exploration to date of the claims of those maintaining biological factors as essential in the origin of a same-gender sexual desire fixed from earliest prenatal life", and that it cogently countering such claims. However, he was unconvinced by Stein's argument that his views should not be labelled social constructionist, and found Stein's discussion of the ethics of the research less impressive than his review of the scientific findings. Croissant wrote that the book was important and that Stein "meticulously articulates the assumptions of the current paradigms" governing scientific research on sexual orientation. However, he found Stein's critique of "constructivist theories" weak, attributing this to the fact that "Stein's argument converges with constructivist insights".
The label "Mad Dog", argue Holland and McDonald, is a misnomer: he was neither mad nor a dog. For example, they say, by the time of his death he was sufficiently well versed in the constitution—the result of his studies in Portlaoise—to cogently argue against the Downing Street Declaration, which was being negotiated shortly before he died. Republicans tended to ignore the "Mad Dog" and "psycho" tags, which they deemed to part of what they believed to be a normal British propaganda campaign, albeit, says the author Gene Kerrigan, "in a cartoon fashion, as a bogeyman". Ackerman has argued that the fact McGlinchey was able to spend so long on the run demonstrates the level of support he enjoyed in the countryside.
The book was published in the United States as Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones. In his review for The New York Times, Larry Rohter said the book "challenges the standard version of events" by recognising Jones' importance on a par with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, and added: "Though Mr. Trynka sometimes overstates Jones’s long-term cultural impact, his is revisionist history of the best kind – scrupulously researched and cogently argued – and should be unfailingly interesting to any Stones fan." Trynka wrote Iggy Pop: Open Up and Bleed, a biography of Iggy Pop. A review in The Guardian describes the book as "piecing together the chaotic life story of this often unhinged performer in thorough and scrupulously non-judgmental detail".
In 1648, while exiled in France, Sir Charles Dallison published The Royalist defence; Vindicating the King's Proceedings in the late Warre made against him. P. R. Newman considers this to be "The most expansive and cogently argued of all Royalist self-vindications". In it he explains that he initially took up arms because of the Militia Ordinance which he considered an illegal act because the king did not give his royal assent to it. In the opinion of Dallison no new law can be passed without the assent of the king, so those who marched under the authority of the Militia Ordinance were committing high treason, and it was the duty of all loyal subjects to defend the king against those who break the law and commit high treason.
Moreover, each episode would tell the story of a romantic couple; and "threading through all parts was the theme of life and death, culminating in the mockery of death". If true, these details were never communicated to the Sinclairs, who found themselves with recurring requests for additional funding as Eisenstein's vision expanded. There appears to have been no attempt by Eisenstein to respect the economic realities involved in making such an epic work, the financial and emotional limitations of his producers, or his contract obligations; this shows his inability or unwillingness to cogently communicate to the Sinclairs before acquiring permission to proceed away from those contract obligations. This was the ultimate legacy of the film, and would be repeated in the similarly aborted Soviet Eisenstein project, Bezhin Meadow.
The two features of Rodger's method that have been mentioned thus far, its increased statistical power and the impossibility of type 1 error rate inflation when using it, are direct by-products of the decision-based error rate that it utilizes. "An error occurs, in the statistical context, if and only if a decision is made that a specified relationship among population parameters either is, or is not, equal to some number (usually, zero), and the opposite is true. Rodger’s very sensible, and cogently argued, position is that statistical error rate should be based exclusively on those things in which errors may occur, and that (necessarily, by definition) can only be the statistical decisions that researchers make" (Roberts, 2011, p. 69).Roberts, M. (2011). Simple, Powerful Statistics: An instantiation of a better ‘mousetrap’.
From this point on the different events of the story will become known owing to conversations the main character has with others and the reports filed by this prosecutor. One ought to be reminded that the novel can be understood as a place where different facts are given expression, on one hand as a faithful rendition as they took place, or by use of fiction on the other. Upon reading one can find that the novel reviewed touches on topics that positively have occurred and are validated in detailing events of Uchuraccay, the Quechua Indian myth of the Inkarrí as related cogently by Father Quiroz, festivals like the fertility rite and Turu pukllay (indigenous bullfight) “The prosecutor thought about the festival of Turupukllay (turu pukllay). The Incan condor lashed by the claws to the back of a Spanish bull.
The objectives of the IU are "to stimulate in all countries a public opinion favourable to permanent peace and prosperity for all people, through the progressive removal of the basic economic causes of poverty and war".Article II. IU Constitution, August 2005 (adopted and confirmed by the International Conference at St Andrews (1955) and amended most recently at Madrid (2004). The IU's work is guided by principles of equal freedom and sharing of common resources of community and nature - ideas most cogently set out in modern times in the writings of the 19th-century American reformer Henry George. Specifically, towards the realisation of its objectives, the IU "favours the raising of public revenues by public collection of the rental value of land apart from improvements"; and, further, favours "the abolition of taxes, tariffs, or imposts of every sort that interfere with the free production and exchange of wealth".
Michelle Obama, Obama's wife, said at a subsequent fundraising event that the photograph was the only one that remained permanently on display at the White House with other images being on display periodically. Michelle felt that the image was symbolic of political progress in civil rights for African Americans telling her audience that "I want you to think of that little Black boy in the Oval Office of the White House touching the head of the first Black President". Julia M. Klein, writing in the Chicago Tribune, described the photograph as reminding "us of the symbolic heft of this breakthrough presidency" as "cogently as photographs of Obama beside the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial". Jackie Calmes writing in The New York Times in 2012 described the popularity of the photo as "tangible evidence" that "Obama remains a potent symbol for blacks, with a deep reservoir of support".
According to the book review by Mervyn Bendle from James Cook University, Durie contends that instead of a "hardening of resolve", Western attitudes in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks consisted of "widespread capitulation to Muslim demands" to the detriment of public policy, human rights, and free speech. Among other things, Durie cites various statements praising Islam by politicians such as Barack Obama, Nicolas Sarkozy and Mary Robinson; statements by Western politicians in support of Sharia law; and other statements of "humility" by Christian leaders as evidence of dhimmitude. Adam A.J. DeVille from University of St. Francis describes the book as mix of scholarly and high journalism work. According to DeVille the book does not provide enough evidence to substantiate the claims it makes, and this may be due to the fact that Mark Durie is not an academic. He finds Durie "writes more cogently and dispassionately than" Bat Ye’or.
The question of pre- emption is predominantly legal, and although it would be useful to have the benefit of California's interpretation of what constitutes a demonstrated technology or means for the disposal of high-level nuclear waste, resolution of the pre-emption issue need not await that development. Moreover, postponement of decision would likely work substantial hardship on the utilities. As the Court of Appeals cogently reasoned, for the utilities to proceed in hopes that, when the time for certification came, either the required findings would be made or the law would be struck down, requires the expenditures of millions of dollars over a number of years, without any certainty of recovery if certification were denied. 13 The construction of new nuclear facilities requires considerable advance planning - on the order of 12 to 14 years. 14 Thus, as in the Rail Reorganization Act Cases, 419 U.S. 102, 144 (1974), "decisions to be made now or in the short future may be affected" by whether we act.
Both cases were dismissed by U.S. District Courts, and on January 3, 1911, the U.S. Supreme Court, upon federal appeal, upheld the lower courts' rulings. Historians are sharply critical of Roosevelt's criminal prosecutions of the World and the News, but are divided on whether actual corruption in acquiring and building the Panama Canal took place. In 1906, following a disputed election, an insurrection ensued in Cuba; Roosevelt sent Taft, the Secretary of War, to monitor the situation; he was convinced that he had the authority to unilaterally authorize Taft to deploy Marines if necessary, without congressional approval. Examining the work of numerous scholars, Ricard (2014) reports that: > The most striking evolution in the twenty-first century historiography of > Theodore Roosevelt is the switch from a partial arraignment of the > imperialist to a quasi-unanimous celebration of the master diplomatist.... > [Hagiographies of Roosevelt] have underlined cogently Roosevelt's > exceptional statesmanship in the construction of the nascent twentieth- > century "special relationship".
Salazar consistently applied the inductive method and insisted on empiricism. He advanced rational explanations for the witch panic in Navarre, including rumours of persecutions in France, preachers’ sermons, the spectacular auto de fe at Logroño, witnessed by 30,000 people, and a dream epidemic.(Henningsen 1980 390) The Instructions of 1614 were not entirely original, since in many respects they restated guidelines formulated by inquisitors who met in Granada in 1526 in order to determine how to react to witchcraft discovered in Navarre that year.(Kamen 1983 231) The restated guidelines included forbidding arrest or conviction of a witch solely on the basis of another witch's confession. But the 1614 Instructions also added new directions regarding the taking and recording of confessions.(Levack 1999 15) Thus, Salazar's contribution was not to create scepticism where there was none, since other inquisitors shared his views, but rather to restate this scepticism so cogently and with such an overwhelming body of empirical evidence that it definitively carried the day within the Inquisition.
A few volumes of the English Reports at a law library In England and Wales, beginning with the reports of cases contained in the Year Books (Edward II to Henry VIII) there are various sets of reports of cases decided in the higher English courts down to the present time. Until the nineteenth century, both the quality of early reports, and the extent to which the judge explained the facts of the case and his judgment, are highly variable, and the weight of the precedent may depend on the reputations of both the judge and the reporter. Such reports are now largely of academic interest, having been overtaken by statutes and later developments, but binding precedents can still be found, often most cogently expressed.W. T. S. Daniel, History of the Origin of the Law Reports (London, 1884) In 1865, the nonprofit Incorporated Council of Law Reporting (ICLR) for England and Wales was founded, and it has gradually become the dominant publisher of reports in the UK. It has compiled most of the best available copies of pre-1866 cases into the English Reports.
The responsible French government minister applied pressure on the Helvetic Republic to communicate his complaints to the authorities in Bern that they had permitted an emigrant to publish in the Lausanne bailiwick, and from there to introduce into France, a work which they held to be seditious. The author, called upon to defend himself in the face of the French government complaints, defended himself with "as much prudence as dignity", and was thereby able to ensure that the Swiss authorities made an entirely appropriate response to the complaint. Interestingly, while the Paris government launched a minor diplomatic incident over the book with the Swiss authorities, in Paris itself two widely-distributed newspapers were extolling its virtues in lavish terms. It was while he was still based in Lausanne that Bigex conceived and launched his "Étrennes catholiques / Étrennes religieuses pour l'an de grâce ..." project, which involved producing a compilation twice yearly - later, possibly, annually - of simple but cogently argued essays and judiciously adapted extracts, according to the Catholic viewpoint of the author-compiler, whose own objective was simply to "combat the false doctrines of the times and the unholy maxims of unbelief".
The primary promoter of "flood geology" during the early twentieth century was George McCready Price, but he had comparatively little influence among evangelicals because he was a Seventh-day Adventist, a church treated warily by many conservative Protestants.Numbers(2006) pp8, 223, 241, 260; Barry Hankins, American Evangelicals: A Contemporary History of a Mainstream Religious Movement (Rowman & Littlefield, 2008):"the Religious and Science Association and the Deluge Geology Society were part of the bitter fundamentalist battle that took place in theological circles as well....These organizations were often top heavy with Seventh-day Adventists, and the fighting often pitted the Adventists against fundamentalists who thought Adventism was cultish with its reverence for prophet Ellen White." (72-73) To Seventh-day Adventists, "the saints who greeted Christ as his Second Coming would be observing the seventh-day Sabbath in harmony with the Fourth Commandment....The Sabbath doctrine seemed to demand a literal creation week, for as Price cogently argued, if a person does not believe that there ever was a real Creation at some definite time in the past, how can we expect him to observe the Sabbath as a memorial of that event, which in his view never occurred?'" Numbers (2006), p104.
Speer, Albert, Inside the Third Reich, Macmillan (New York and Toronto), 1970 In 1942, German military leaders did briefly investigate and consider the possibility of a cross Atlantic attack against the U.S.—most cogently expressed with the RLM's Amerika Bomber trans-Atlantic range bomber design competition, first issued in the spring of 1942—proceeded forward with only five airworthy prototype aircraft created between two of the competitors, but this plan had to be abandoned due to both the lack of staging bases in the Western Hemisphere, and Germany's own rapidly decreasing capacity to produce such aircraft as the war wore on. Thereafter, Germany's greatest hope of an attack on America was to wait to see the result of that nation's war with Japan. By 1944, with U-Boat losses soaring and with the occupation of Greenland and Iceland, it was clear to the German military leaders that the dwindling German armed forces had no further hope to attack the United States directly. In the end, German military strategy was in fact geared toward surrendering to America, with many of the Eastern Front battles fought solely for the purpose of escaping the advance of the Red Army and surrendering instead to the Western Allies.

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