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388 Sentences With "doctrines"

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

Religions change constantly, rethinking old traditions and incorporating new doctrines.
And if they had different doctrines, they would behave differently.
There's so many ways to approach these doctrines for living.
He never really shared the doctrines of the Democrats, either.
Such as particular doctrines like Calvinism and the Reform movement.
By doctrines, he meant political ideologies like communism or socialism.
The rise of litigation funding has discredited doctrines with ancient roots.
Around 1877, Tolstoy becomes determined to follow the doctrines of Jesus.
No government would cite these doctrines to justify its actions today.
Mr. Lu is also famous for sharing his doctrines on Weibo.
The essential claim here is that the adherence to "comprehensive doctrines," or
Indeed, it inflames global extremism through its export of intolerant Wahhabi doctrines.
It's also an internal challenge to Islam as a body of doctrines.
These related doctrines have been pursued across the years by numerous presidents.
"We're open for dialogue, we're prepared to discuss military doctrines," he added.
Smaller nuclear powers often maintain vague doctrines to deter more powerful adversaries.
With telecom companies, with the news networks, where they had fairness doctrines.
She&aposs a big supporter of the doctrines and philosophies of Justice Scalia.
Brands are able to keep copying one another because of outdated legal doctrines.
But they also explained how a principled originalist would re-evaluate established doctrines.
Second, pundits proclaim doctrines; presidents execute policies that reveal the contours of policy.
Until recently, there was little discussion of offensive cybercapabilities, nor doctrines of deterrence.
American arms had won a knockout over the Soviets' weaponry and military doctrines.
The old doctrines based on containers, pockets and bags are no longer sufficient.
Justice Kennedy mused that any number of free-speech doctrines doomed the law.
However, economic doctrines simply aren't coherent enough for one person to thoroughly reject.
And doctrines advocated by one side can unexpectedly be repurposed by the other.
It says it adheres to the earliest doctrines of the Christian church teachings.
Parishioners of doctrines that promote slavery, prison industrialism, and other exploitative capitalist interests.
One of the most fundamental doctrines of Western philosophy was established by Aristotle.
Foreign policy thinkers like to talk in terms of doctrines and philosophies and factions.
Piercing has always been one of the most well-applied doctrines in corporate law.
The centrality of reincarnation doctrines shouldn't be held as a mark against Buddhist truth.
The senator asked if the nominee knew about the Younger and Pullman abstention doctrines.
It can also legislatively dismantle the court-created doctrines that are gutting harassment law.
Almost all of the justices' work has involved creating legal doctrines, case by case.
Think about the doctrines every Republican politician now needs to endorse, on pain of excommunication.
Do not mention force, or you will be accused Of upholding fallen doctrines in secret.
EMP attacks are included in the military doctrines of China, Russia, Iran and North Korea.
And then conservatives say, well, then the answer is to have government programs, fairness doctrines.
Only then can these doctrines take their rightful place beside Dred Scott and Plessy v.
Chevron deference is only one of many of these types of judicial doctrines of deference.
Their doctrines condemn your forefathers and mine for ever having settled in these United States.
But conservative anti-liberals are not content with rubbishing libertarianism and other liberal economic doctrines.
I sympathize with people who think the media's too obsessed with searching for presidential doctrines.
But Popper's insistence that scientific theories must be falsifiable led Soroush ultimately to reject Khomeini's doctrines.
He also warned that China and Russia are integrating anti-satellite attacks into their wartime doctrines.
These developments clearly undermine long-held economic doctrines, and they've been a boon to working families.
Prior presidential doctrines have been the creation not just of presidents but the administration around them.
There'd probably be a small magazine where the doctrines of your sect would be hammered out.
He is a creature unwedded to basic conservative or liberal doctrines and is unconcerned with orthodoxy.
Secular employers cannot invoke doctrines intended to protect people of faith to justify their own discrimination.
"Capital T, capital B." He brought up the doctrines of human dignity and the Ten Commandments.
Talk to us about different doctrines, and allows us to take a composite of all of that.
Russia has developed doctrines for these influence operations, and organized manpower and computer resources to execute them.
Making sense of the contradictory, whimsical and largely evidence-free doctrines he and others espoused is difficult.
If the tradition on capital punishment had been reversed, serious questions would be raised regarding other doctrines.
Militarily, China has developed systems and doctrines to deny U.S. carriers and troops access to East Asia.
Any rules and doctrines generated by the Obama board favorable to unions and workers can be repealed.
The pope has tried to change pastoral practices, like communion for divorced Catholics, while not changing doctrines.
Many of the church's doctrines affect women disproportionately, from those governing abortion to infertility treatment to divorce.
Of America's five major international enemies today, four embrace its doctrines: China, Cuba, Venezuela and North Korea.
So his important ethical teaching only makes sense when you don't separate it from these historic doctrines.
Judge Gorsuch has written at length on the doctrine and related doctrines while on the Tenth Circuit.
"A jolt to the legal system, a movement against stability — one of the Roberts doctrines," he said.
IN THE PAST, predictions about future warfare have often put too much emphasis on new technologies and doctrines.
I don't think anyone's saying that a religion is reducible to the concretized doctrines in its holy text.
Nuclear war between the two is unlikely -- both maintain nuclear doctrines that mandate "No First Use" -- says Shukla.
Repeatedly, UNRWA employees have been found to be associated with Palestinian extremist groups and their doctrines of hate.
To understand qualified immunity, think of a Russian nesting doll, but with layers of legal doctrines and exceptions.
Meta-doctrine is composed of the concepts and prescriptions that provide structure and limitations to specific legal doctrines.
Justice Scalia rarely voted to overrule precedent, while Justice Clarence Thomas can hardly stop reconsidering old doctrines. 85033.
Their recitations of Big Mother's doctrines are stiff, encouraging the audience to doubt the sincerity of their cause.
The success of his doctrines was particularly apparent in the prominent role of Kurdish women in Kurdish politics.
Needless to say, courts typically do not limit constitutional doctrines to the very particular context of playground resurfacing.
But less acknowledged is the effect of the doctrines' demise on the nomination contests of our political parties.
Courts cannot perform the delicate balancing required by the First Amendment and common law doctrines under such uncertain circumstances.
The ring of inauthenticity was partly because Romney was wedded to free market doctrines that did not scream compassion.
The outlook of our new robot-building overlords is far more communitarian than, say, the doctrines of Ayn Rand.
I mean, the specific differences between Islam, its doctrine of jihad, its doctrines around apostasy and blasphemy and martyrdom.
Worn down, their souls crushed, they accepted Jewish doctrines that denied the Fatherland and opposed all that was nationalistic.
"We believe that the relevant transactions complied with applicable tax laws and did not violate judicial doctrines," it stated.
He doesn't think in terms of ideas or doctrines, and indeed all evidence suggests he's incapable of abstract thought.
" Wright persuasively argues that America has "two competing national security doctrines—Trump's and that of his national security team.
There is a certain type of mind, he writes elsewhere in this book, that is attracted to radical doctrines.
It accuses the Pope of imposing "strange doctrines on the faithful," and asks him to publicly correct his teachings.
And in many many ways, they have mimicked those, and they have adopted many of the doctrines and organizations.
The pastor and his church are part of the Apostolic movement, which takes its doctrines from Jesus' earliest followers.
As the Guardian recently reported, one Catholic hospital operating under these doctrines systematically refused proper care to women having miscarriages.
My compassion is for the people whose lives are being destroyed needlessly by these doctrines and the behaviors of extremists.
Mainstream Christian churches are suspicious of the Witnesses because the sect is at odds with them over certain key doctrines.
The origin of these press protection doctrines began with the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in New York Times Co. v.
Yet Thailand's Muslims are gradually growing more conservative under the influence of Middle Eastern doctrines, which unnerves their Buddhist compatriots.
However, for Muslim and Jewish communities, religious doctrines specify terms for what slaughter practices qualify as halal and kosher meat.
Although Trump and Mattis speak in different tongues, both are voicing militarily aggressive doctrines that increase the chance of conflict.
Such movements are often and dismissively called populist, though their doctrines are as moving and refined as any Europe produced.
"The Trump administration's statements of doctrines inhabit a different plane of existence than the president's account," as Musgrave puts it.
Until Tuesday, Mao and Deng were the only Chinese leaders whose names appeared in the constitution's list of fundamental doctrines.
And we unpacked the doctrines of Xi Jinping Thought, China's new reigning ideology, and revisited Mr. Xi's rise to power.
Nor is there founding-era evidence for some of the new anti-regulatory doctrines the court has begun to accept.
The church said that its doctrines on marriage and salvation, of which marriage is an integral part, will not change.
Combined, these doctrines have shifted a massive amount of power away from the legislative and judicial branches to the executive.
It is also true that the doctrines she mentions have come increasingly into question by a small subset of Americans.
In the G.O.P., crank doctrines in economics and elsewhere aren't bubbling up from below, they're being imposed from the top down.
Policy was driven by perceptions of overwhelming conventional military threat and the doctrines of deterrence, with arsenals growing ever more capable.
New Mexico's brief argues that the 10th Circuit decision implicates the fundamental constitutional doctrines of states' rights and separation of powers.
And it could be potently destabilizing in a world where nations' nuclear doctrines are shaped more by posture than by policy.
Author Radley Balko has catalogued the rise of the warrior cop and the increasing convergence of military and policing operational doctrines.
The government argued that the courts should not even hear this case, based on the doctrines of standing and political questions.
There must be some core of fundamental values to which we all can appeal that subsume our varied doctrines and creeds.
So they embrace a whole series of doctrines that say Congress can't do anything unless it's specifically authorized in the Constitution.
The doctrines of the Catholic Church, inextricably linked to Colombian culture, made it clear to me that homosexuality was a sin.
But advocates see a chance to check the drip of secrecy doctrines from the federal government down to the local level.
Our main virtue is creativity, and yet we have not done much more than live off reheated doctrines and alien wars.
"There are many church doctrines and many teachers, trustees and administrators who don't comply with all of them," Ms. DeLaney said.
Ferguson court decisions, banishing the doctrines of overt racism and "separate but equal" from our law, if not from our society.
Rather, what I insist on is what C.S. Lewis called "mere Christianity," that is to say, the core doctrines of Christianity.
"I wished that certain doctrines would have come out differently, and I wished that things had been communicated differently," she says.
He asked the nominee about topics like "motion in limine," a basic legal term, and the Younger and Pullman abstention doctrines.
Commentators in The Washington Post and The New York Times have called for selective censorship of ideas and doctrines they abhor.
In 1963, he joined Dr. Sakharov, the father of the Soviet hydrogen bomb, and other scientists in openly attacking Lysenko's doctrines.
It stretches existing doctrines of criminal liability to such an extent, it has virtually no chance of being sustained by Florida courts.
Some sound almost nostalgic for the grim but familiar doctrines of the East-West nuclear stand-off during the original cold war.
His teenage daughter has taken his doctrines to heart and wants to actually pursue the radical actions that he only bloviated about.
The senior clergy have denounced militant Islamic doctrines, such as those of al Qaeda or Islamic State, but still preach intolerant views.
That interactive space is susceptible to analysis under the Supreme Court's forum doctrines, and is properly characterized as a designated public forum.
In the messages, the sender demands total obedience from the women, including sexual favors, as part of their study of Buddhist doctrines.
Later, she earned a master's degree from Columbia University's Teachers College and studied painting at American University, where she encountered Greenberg's doctrines.
Originating in Europe, some say the Soldiers of Odin (SOO) have ties to neo-Nazi, anti-Islam and right wing extremist doctrines.
Because I can't do the baby thing yet, and without travel there aren't too many other secular, 21st-century doctrines to worship.
Comprehensive doctrines create the illusion that we can just disappear into a way of life and not have to play the game.
" The company said in the filing that it believes "the relevant transactions complied with applicable tax laws and did not violate judicial doctrines.
So the question then becomes what is it about these conditions that produces certain interpretations or leads to certain doctrines becoming more manifest?
On Wednesday, Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong warned that members must work more closely together on intelligence sharing and counter extremist doctrines.
One of the Washitaw Nation's principal doctrines is a claim that the purchase of Louisiana by the United States was illegitimate, experts said.
In the fifth century, Christian doctrines of hell became more streamlined, in part due to the monumental influence of St. Augustine of Hippo.
Instead, it's more like an interpretation of its doctrines — one tailored to fit the needs of the North Korean government at the time.
It rejects a mainstream Christian doctrine of the Holy Trinity, adhering to what church leaders describe as the earliest doctrines of Christian teachings.
It was so concerned with questions of social welfare (healing the sick, caring for the poor) that it embedded them into its doctrines.
Multiple institutional doctrines inherent within the National Guard system also created confusion about use of force in the country and at its borders.
Moralistic Therapeutic Deism is a pseudoreligion that jettisons the doctrines of historical biblical Christianity and replaces them with feel-good, vaguely spiritual nostrums.
Around the office, he talked at times about such moral doctrines as natural law, but never expected secular colleagues to share his beliefs.
Restore the doctrines of fairness and equal time — only then will we have a fighting chance to restore the integrity of our democracy.
On the right, the anti-liberals locate the root of the problem in liberalism's social doctrines, its emphasis on secularism and individual rights.
States with nuclear weapons often leave ambiguity in their doctrines to prevent adversaries from exploiting gaps in their proscriptions and to preserve flexibility.
IN THE early centuries of eastern Christian history, when doctrines were hammered out at seven disputatious bishops' councils, theological arguments were on everyone's mind.
In her view, the faith requires "fundamental alterations to some of Islam's core concepts," and she offers suggestions for how to revise its doctrines.
Mr. Trump's berating of Latin American strongmen and the revival of outdated foreign policy doctrines is not a viable strategy to engage the region.
"With such little evidence supporting their doctrines, these fanatics should spare Americans the proselytizing," Chris W. Cox, a top N.R.A. lobbyist, wrote in November.
The last 18-plus months have underscored why legal doctrines that free the political branches of constitutional constraints in immigration are no longer defensible.
The doctrines of socialist realism, as strong in North Vietnam as it was in Communist Europe, demanded that all art glorify the party's policies.
Indeed, judges often find a way to put forth their view of the law and overrule administrative agencies without citing Chevron or similar doctrines.
But none are so urgently needed as a restoration of the doctrines of equal time and fairness to media coverage of our electoral contests.
So, while the personhood of the fetus is in dispute among reasonable doctrines, the status of African-Americans, women, gays and Jews is not.
Wade, or whether and how it will aggressively revive pre-New Deal doctrines that limit the ability of the federal government to regulate business.
This bill violates fundamental doctrines taught in medical school and will deter future trainees from committing to careers in women's health care in this state.
Instead, the Court should recognize that the new realities of this world require new legal doctrines to fit the privacy expectations shared by most Americans.
They do not want to seem like killjoys, and yet they do not want to collude with activities that make a mockery of their doctrines.
Relatedly, confirmation hearings will continue to be Kabuki theater, educational to some about various legal doctrines but not illuminating anything of the nominee's judicial philosophy.
He promised to be unpredictable and to prize force over nuance and to trash establishment doctrines -- and he has been as good as his word.
Even during his teaching days, however, the bespectacled intellectual was seen as a dark horse for his sharp rebuke to traditional ideologies and official doctrines.
Executive legislative prerogative is more and more governing our nation and therefore diminishing the Constitutional doctrines of separation of powers and the powers of Congress.
These decisions have led to a growing popular andbipartisan movement to amend the Constitution to overturn Citizens United and the doctrines that led to it.
To ensure that the turmoil wouldn't be repeated, new laws and regulations were put in place, supplanting the antiquated doctrines that helped undermine the system.
In the messages, Xuecheng is alleged to have demanded total obedience from the nuns, including sexual favors, as part of their study of Buddhist doctrines.
While the latter remains on solid ground, the two countries have responded to the tumult that has gripped the region by adopting vastly different "doctrines".
Moreover, many of the Supreme Court's free-speech doctrines are designed to protect against unequal or discriminatory enforcement that targets expression disfavored by the government.
Their refusal to clearly codify the religious neutrality of the state into law sends the message that the state must submit to all religious doctrines.
"The time is coming when the struggle for dominion over the earth will be carried on in the name of fundamental philosophical doctrines," he wrote.
Harvard University law Professor Adrian Vermeule recently proposed co-opting liberal institutions and harnessing them to impose Catholic social and political doctrines upon everyone else.
But possibly not, given doctrines of deference to the executive branch, which typically leave defendants scant room to question indictments based on improper prosecutorial intent.
Although doctrines that promote freedom still appeal to people in states where liberal democracy has deep roots, the most seductive ideology in Europe remains nationalism.
The state's lawsuit raises a number of plausible process-based objections and seeks to take advantage of legal doctrines usually associated with right-leaning judges.
Most Americans who do know about the doctrines focus on how their end paved the way for the rise of conservative media — particularly talk radio.
Many United States asset managers are now adhering to the MiFID II doctrines by gathering research on the internet and not buying well-researched data.
Yet arms are thrown up in horror when a religious school asks its staff to be sympathetic to the doctrines of the religion in question.
Often there is little unity among these groups, hence they fail the most important state criterion: a unified religious body with shared goals and doctrines.
The constraint of public reason demands that the considerations in question should look reasonable to all holders of reasonable comprehensive doctrines, not merely one's own.
Still, doctrines within the "tent of the reasonable" are accorded a different status within public institutions and civil society from those deemed outside the tent.
"We spend a lot of time scratching below the surface of doctrines, professional norms, and we spend time in a more personal place," he said.
In Maine, it is defending parents suing over a state law that bans religious schools from obtaining taxpayer funding to promote their own sectarian doctrines.
If we say that a religion is reducible to the concretized doctrines in its holy text, then we don't leave much room for evolution or reformation.
Under May the government has been edging away from free market doctrines as it tries to remedy the economic damage already inflicted by the Brexit vote.
According to activists like Ann De Greef, director of the Belgian animal welfare group GAIA, the answer is simply to make stunning admissible by religious doctrines.
If we are to fulfill the promise of a democratic Republic, we must abolish Court-created doctrines that allow the 1% to rule over the 99%.
Even during his teaching days, however, the bespectacled intellectual was viewed with suspicion by the authorities for his sharp rebuke of traditional ideologies and official doctrines.
Their ideology is an extreme hybrid of the more radical doctrines of the Muslim Brotherhood and the salafists, and their tactics are more aggressive than either.
In all but one of those cases, antitrust doctrines posed roadblocks to applying the Sherman Act to alleged foreign anticompetitive activity that can impact U.S. consumers.
Intolerant and illiberal doctrines related to martyrdom, blasphemy, honor and apostasy reliably lead to oppression and violence against women, homosexuals, freethinkers, liberals and even other Muslims.
You can also unlock Army Doctrines, buffs which you slot in (three slots for these, just like with elites) to customize your force to your preferences.
She embraced doctrines and practices that Protestants had deplored since the Reformation: transubstantiation, the cult of Mary and the saints, the rosary, relics, confession and indulgences.
Despite lawsuits like Ms. Garrick's, the court system does not present the greatest challenge to evangelicals who govern their institutions according to traditional doctrines of sexuality.
As an interracial family in the 1950s — James's father was black, his mother white — "there wasn't a lot of bowing to institutional doctrines," he told me.
But to bring China, Russia and the Europeans on board, Trump will need to abandon his unilateral and militarist "America First" and "Peace through Strength" doctrines.
Over the past several decades, the intelligence community has built up an extraordinary capability to understand the military doctrines and weapons systems of Russia and China.
When the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (LDS), better known as the Mormon church, abandoned several controversial doctrines in 1890, there were dissenters.
Dr. Medvedev played a large role in discrediting the doctrines of Stalin's director of biology, Trofim D. Lysenko, who was behind a pseudoscience known as Lysenkoism.
Much of that is due to political and economic and social and historical factors, and I'm sure some of it has to do with specific religious doctrines.
And they're at different moments in their history, so there are different percentages of people who believe the doctrines fundamentally or literally as opposed to metaphorically, say.
The fact is, America's foreign-policy doctrines envisage a degree of global dominance, based on military might, which its volunteer force is now too small to enforce.
If I recall, Harris was discussing support for specific Islamic doctrines (like martyrdom and jihad) in Muslim-majority countries and citing poll numbers to buttress his points.
What the documents and analysis reveal is that the main driver of ISIS recruitment continues to be cultural alienation, rather than any intellectual dedication to religious doctrines.
But Powell, who is not an economist, hasn't yet had an opportunity to show his own ability to develop doctrines and policies that differ from the consensus.
These clauses have been used as justification for a wide range of doctrines and are also important for questions relating to the power of the administrative state.
It charges Sessions with violating church rules or principles on child abuse, immorality, racial discrimination and "dissemination of doctrines" contrary to those of the United Methodist Church.
Even with an increasingly political Court, the justices have mostly adhered to their own doctrines preventing them from opining on "political questions" or interfering with foreign policy.
Yet unless the Court revisits its First Amendment doctrines, Exxon's attack on efforts by the states to investigate its conduct shows that such nuances may not matter.
The group advocated the creation of a constitution to govern the kingdom, rather than rules based solely on clerical interpretation of the Quran and other religious doctrines.
Had Mr. Petersen watched even a few episodes, he almost certainly would have known what a motion "in limine" is, and what the various abstention doctrines are.
Ms. Hayes certainly reflects that political demographic, advocating for progressive doctrines like Medicare for all and gun control, ideals that are anathema to the current White House.
Yet only such doctrines, progressives have argued, could justify limiting the benefits of marriage to male-female couples (or, in an earlier era, to single-race couples).
These time-honored doctrines have been abandoned over the past 15 years, and the slide of democracy into the media-entertainment abyss has been fast and furious.
There are many similarities between the arguments we're seeing on the alt-right and among religious fundamentalists today and the doctrines that helped facilitate Nazism a century ago.
"I hear 'constitutional' and I think of the particular document, the federal constitution, and the specific principles and doctrines that have been derived from that document," she explains.
Prosecutors have been creative over the 18903 years since the Sherman act, but recently they have struggled to fit the modern world into the doctrines of old law.
It is a combination that has raised questions about the validity of older doctrines on inflation, its relationship to employment, and central banks' ability to affect price growth.
The apparent fact that she had not given a balanced account of Muhammad's marital life was deemed to be a violation of Austria's ban on "disparaging religious doctrines".
Beyond the doctrines and dogma, the do's and the don't's, religion is simply a framework for thinking about the existential questions we all struggle with as human beings.
After 9/11, homeland defense and security doctrines have been gradually pushed toward closer integration with the US military in a process first accelerated by the Bush administration.
Arguing that an "exact fit" has never been achieved, he critiques both fundamentalist readings (whose strict literalism he calls an "abuse") and liberal doctrines that neglect the text.
He remained a lifelong student of the highest caliber: co-teaching with philosophers, metabolizing esoteric doctrines, even directing the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago.
In 1949, Campbell worked closely with L. Ron Hubbard on the development of dianetics, the mental therapy that later evolved into the doctrines of the Church of Scientology.
Mr. Mattis stuck to a framework that has accompanied past administrations' foreign policy doctrines and talked about the importance of strengthening, not weakening, American alliances with other countries.
McMahon, clinging to his faith in the dubious doctrines of counterinsurgency, chases after an illusory victory that his allies, colleagues and bosses don't really believe in any more.
He or she must pledge allegiance to policy doctrines that are demonstrably false; he or she must, in effect, reject the very idea of paying attention to evidence.
But Ford called this line of reasoning an oversimplification of Quaker doctrines, insisting that there is nothing wrong with striving to achieve if it is kept in perspective.
Riyadh fears the Brotherhood, whose Sunni Islamist doctrines challenge the Saudi principle of dynastic rule, has tried to build support inside the kingdom since the Arab Spring revolutions.
There are any number of formal and informal legal doctrines that presume that the Justice Department acts in good faith when litigating on behalf of the federal government.
A person works as a receptionist for this publisher, and their job duties require them to sometimes answer basic questions about the doctrines espoused by the religious books.
The gulf yawned after World War I, when the carnage of industrial warfare and the doctrines of scientific and moral relativity inspired a fundamentalist response in the midlands.
In the 236-page document, entitled "Amoris Laetitia" ("The Joy of Love"), Francis outlines his vision of a more welcoming church while holding up traditional Catholic values and doctrines.
When Michael Peppiatt, at 21, met Francis Bacon, the 53-year-old artist was already all artifice, well spoken when well rehearsed, his bistro doctrines applauded by clinking glasses.
Mormon leaders have been laboring to create a welcoming atmosphere for all members -- gay or not -- even as they hold fast to doctrines that regard homosexual acts as sinful.
Across all aspects of Germany's foreign policy, the country is beginning to give up its cautious traditional doctrines, but much more slowly than many of its allies would like.
The Trump NSS seems to reject both the Bush and Obama doctrines, noting that "neither aspirations for democratic transformation nor disengagement" insulated America from perils in the Middle East.
There are Islamists, there are conservatives who, while they're not becoming jihadists themselves, they certainly endorse doctrines that makes this all look like kind of a rational enterprise. Right.
As a scholar, he doesn't try to deny that the supernaturalist doctrines of karma and reincarnation are as old as the ethical and philosophical ones, and entangled with them.
When an insecure, malleable, relativistic culture meets a culture that is anchored, confident, and strengthened by common doctrines, it is generally the former that changes to suit the latter.
The combination of elites and Doctrines makes for the possibility of a really interesting metagame, if Relic commit to ongoing balance as players figure out overpowered builds and exploits.
The office's lawyers are exceptional appellate specialists with deep knowledge of the court's doctrines and practices, and they often propose ways of resolving cases not advanced by the parties.
Established in the 1870s by Charles Taze Russell, this millenarian movement rejected Christian doctrines it deemed extratextual, including trinitarianism and hell, instead preaching a dubious return to apostolic Christianity.
Today's G.O.P. is a party of closed minds, hostile to expertise, aggressively uninterested in evidence, whose idea of a policy argument involves loudly repeating the same old debunked doctrines.
Given this background, it may not be surprising that he's a firm believer in failed economic doctrines, especially the insistence that tax cuts for the wealthy have magical effects.
In Arkansas, it meant packing the state's national delegation with Trump allies and granting them influential leadership positions to shape Republican Party rules and policy doctrines at the convention.
These doctrines converge on the idea that the United States needs to stay out of foreign conflicts and even sometimes cross the line into outright apologia for bad actors abroad.
However Halleck comes out, it is unlikely the justices will use the case as an opportunity to fundamentally rethink their complex and rather fraught state-actor and public-forum doctrines.
"One reason that doctrines are updated is due to changes in technology—military intelligence capabilities will adapt to new technologies, the power of social media, new cybersecurity capabilities," he said.
If it does, the Democratic Party will be complicit, unless it's willing to reject not only the foreign policy of its last president, but also its own closely held doctrines.
Both are federal doctrines that are beloved by conservatives as they relate to the concept of federal abstention from interference with state court proceedings until they have run their course.
Underlying these developments, they say, is a US and Russian drive to modernize their nuclear stockpiles even as they float doctrines that normalize using the most destructive weapons on earth.
As Emma Green noted in The Atlantic, for many, progressivism isn't just a set of political beliefs; it's a set of liturgies, rituals and moral doctrines for the secular unchurched.
This can decimate spiritual transcendence and ruin the soul -- like it did with my childhood friend, who is HIV-positive, and still lives in secrecy because of doctrines like Graham's.
And she speaks in polished, complete sentences, informed by her training as a lawyer and by the advisers, some well versed in old French far-right doctrines, who surround her.
While attending a synod in Rome in 1980, Archbishop Quinn ruffled feathers by informing the assembled bishops that the church would have to address resistance to its doctrines forbidding contraception.
Large democratic societies contain a multitude of groups that differ in what Rawls calls their "comprehensive doctrines" — moral, religious or philosophical outlooks in accord with which people structure their lives.
Our carefully developed doctrines of deference strike the proper balance among our three branches by respecting both the exercise of legislative authority and the judiciary's right to make the ultimate decision.
The judge said the president didn't have the authority to attach new conditions to spending approved by Congress, adding that the president&aposs efforts also violated the separation of power doctrines.
Rajneesh's earliest financial supporters were wealthy Indians in the area of Bombay, to whom he preached the doctrines of libertinism and self-indulgence that ran diametrically counter to Indian spiritual traditions.
"  The analysis casts the proposal in a grey light because the memo also adds that provisions in the spinoff model "appear to respect the boundaries of the three constitutional doctrines analyzed.
Barton examines the many ways in which various faith traditions have sought to reconcile their doctrines and practices with Scripture, and shows how its complex textual evolution can frustrate such attempts.
It must vet our foreign alliances, to ensure they are not constitutionally feeding the very doctrines that threaten our national security and are antithetical to our values: the freedom of religion.
The United States is leaving established treaties, building new nuclear weapons, devising new nuclear war-fighting doctrines and issuing threats of regional wars -- often without consultations with our allies or Congress.
What we do have, a patchwork of doctrines left over from the Cold War, fails to match our abilities, our national goals and the changing shape of global threats and opportunities.
And, what happens to related doctrines under SOPRA like the Skidmore doctrine, which gives weight to agencies views when they are persuasive, even if not required to do so per Chevron.
But acknowledging that administrative agencies are a large part of the government today does not freeze in place administrative law doctrines that are in tension with other statutes or the Constitution.
All kinds of specific provisions and doctrines can be pressed into service for this purpose, the most interesting of which in the short term is probably going to be the First Amendment.
By involving the Tribe in the payday lending scheme, the lenders hoped to circumvent these laws and take advantage of legal doctrines, such as tribal immunity, to avoid liability for their actions.
There is something deeply sad about transhumanism, too—a yearning, one that perhaps harks back to the self-improvement doctrines that have so colored California since the halcyon days of the midcentury.
People with real power in this country are convinced of their veracity, and those people have tried, and often succeeded, to pass laws and implement policies that afford these doctrines official force.
" Suffer the children The United Methodists' complaint against Sessions lists four charges: child abuse, immorality, racial discrimination and "dissemination of doctrines contrary to the standards of doctrine of the United Methodist Church.
The Saudi state has long ruled through an alliance with the standard-bearers of the Wahhabi creed, who, in exchange for their loyalty, were given permission to disseminate stringent and antiquated doctrines.
Kaiser is working hard to follow the law with compassion and to make sure it is the patient's wishes that are honored, not the myriad qualms, religious doctrines or opinions of others.
To be sure, our nation has set forth its cyberstrategies and continues to refine its offensive and defensive doctrines in cyberspace, but nearly every expert would concede more needs to be done.
Rather, Jeffress's statement may even be interpreted as acknowledging that Trump's position is incompatible with core Christian doctrines of charity toward those in need, and then defending it because of American interests.
On this she says the U.S. government has invoked and interpreted the "standing" and "state secrets" doctrines in such as way as to block any adjudication of the lawfulness of its surveillance regime.
Yet if Americans suspect that Joan of Arc was Noah's wife, or wonder if the epistles were female apostles, then maybe the solution is to fret less about doctrines and more about actions.
I take full responsibility for my actions, my err in judgment, and any interaction that is considered to be a violation of the rules and doctrines of the Church of God in Christ.
Once these men dreamed of winning the highest office in the land, of signing bills, of being remembered for foreign policy doctrines, or at least for rearranging the furniture in the White House.
Indeed, in a series of separate opinions addressing different issues, Thomas has argued that the Supreme Court should set aside decades of precedent and reconsider traditional doctrines that have been long thought settled.
The most current Supreme Court term epitomizes this fundamental shift: More and more often, conservative Christians are pitching arguments built on liberal legal doctrines — especially First Amendment precedents that emphasize broad individual rights.
Adding Mr. Xi by name raises him above his two most recent predecessors, the former presidents Hu Jintao and Jiang Zemin: Their ideas are on the list of doctrines, but not their names.
In fact, it's hard to think of other events in economic history in which rival doctrines received such a clear test, and in which one of them emerged so decisively as the winner.
The actual content of these doctrines became widely popular in Germany and Austria, and many were tolerated or even tentatively adopted by the Third Reich: parapsychological belief in telepathy, astrology, water dowsing, for example.
What we do know, from a policy perspective, is that Mr. Trump is on the record saying marijuana policy is something best left to the states, a position consistent with Republican Party's core doctrines.
But insomuch as deterrence is built on, not just formal stated doctrines, but also informal but universally understood kind of norms of international behavior, you know, what states can and can't get away with.
On land, the United States and NATO are now prioritizing coming up with doctrines and strategies to manage something similar, particularly should confrontations happen in the formerly Soviet states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.
Clinton's active involvement in shaping the Obama administration's foreign policy has been a key tenet of her campaign for the presidency, and these emails on Libya and Syria shed some light on her doctrines.
"Products liability has been one of the most dynamic fields of law since the middle of the 20th century," he wrote, pointing to the courts' flexibility in adapting old doctrines to new commercial goods.
As soon as the nature of his candidacy became clear — his populism and nationalism, his indifference to many doctrines and policy preferences shared across the Tea Party-establishment divide — so did his disruptive potential.
The Russia investigation had a proper factual and legal foundation, and recent writings are nothing more than an improper effort to wrap inapplicable legal doctrines around discredited fiction to undermine the rule of law.
In the past century so-called Catholic social teaching explored different economic doctrines and grew more pro-capitalist from the 1980s—in tandem with the rise of the Anglo-American concept of shareholder value.
In the faraway land of not-too-long ago, it was judicial conservatives who invoked the virtues of judicial modesty and relied on doctrines like mootness and standing to keep cases out of court.
While these doctrines reflect a genuine judicial concern for a lack of expertise in the courts, they're dangerous to democratic accountability because they can give executive agency bureaucrats the power to make new law.
Asian-Americans have been collateral damage in the university's quest to sustain its paradoxical mission to grow its $37 billion endowment and remain the world's most exclusive institution — all while incessantly preaching egalitarian doctrines.
" She also claims that Obama is a Muslim and stated at a speaking engagement in 2013 that "When people in other bona fide religions follow their doctrines they become better people — Buddhists, Hindus, Christians, Jews.
Known together as the belief in double predestination, these doctrines have made Calvinism pretty polarizing (in a 2012 LifeWay survey, about 60% of Southern Baptist pastors expressed some concerns around the impact of Calvinist thought).
When I started doing academic research on both the spread of nuclear weapons and nuclear doctrines in different countries, I really came to view that the way we talk about international relations is really unsatisfying.
One of liberalism's historical sources of strength is seeing the world for what it is, adapting its doctrines to fit changing realities rather than trying to make the world fit an older version of liberalism.
Forty-five days before the inauguration, Barack Obama and Donald Trump struck a contrast that not only reflected their chalk-and-cheese political styles, but their radically different doctrines for how best to keep America safe.
Asian-Americans have been collateral damage in the university&aposs quest to sustain its paradoxical mission to grow its $37 billion endowment and remain the world&aposs most exclusive institution -- all while incessantly preaching egalitarian doctrines.
But senior clergy have denounced militant Islamist doctrines such as those of al Qaeda or Islamic State, while the government, which vets clerics in Saudi Arabia's 70,000 mosques, has sacked many for encouraging violence or sedition.
One was the Kokkinakis case of 1993, a landmark in religious jurisprudence, which found that a man in Crete who preached the sect's doctrines, and had repeatedly been arrested, had suffered violation of his religious freedom.
It said while many conservative groups have turned their backs on overt conversion therapy, they have often absorbed similar doctrines into an "insidious" posture of welcoming LGBT+ people but warning them that their desires are sinful.
To an extent Mr Tavares embodies both doctrines, having swiftly turned around first Peugeot, after it was battered by the financial crisis of 2008-09, then Opel and Vauxhall, which he bought from GM in 2017.
These opinions relate here because, like the public figure and the effective counsel assistance doctrines that Thomas sees as the products of judicial overreach, executive privilege finds no purchase in the actual text of the Constitution.
Trump represents, in effect, abandonment of that goal in favor of a very different idea of responding to the shrinking white share of the population by politicizing and mobilizing white identity while downplaying free market doctrines.
Written over a period of 35 years, these pieces express, above all, his wish that Latin Americans would finally come to their senses and embrace that most unfairly (in his view) maligned of political doctrines: liberalism.
When Baru Cormorant was a child, her nation was colonized by the Republic of Falcrest (more commonly called the Masquerade), her three-parent family torn apart in accordance with its "incrastic" doctrines of sex and gender.
"There is a history to this, a history of over reliance on outdated doctrines and also the notion more trade is just better and problems with trade agreements will work themselves out over time," he said.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, one of America's largest campus ministries, has had its status as a recognized student organization challenged on more than 40 campuses in recent years because it requires student leaders to affirm Christian doctrines.
In a letter to Cummings on Thursday, the Justice Department called a contempt vote "entirely premature" and declined to hand over the specific documents demanded, saying they were protected by attorney-client privilege and other doctrines.
Kirk's philosophical conservatism is nothing like the political doctrines that today bear that name: He backed the Socialist Norman Thomas for president in 1944, Barry Goldwater in 1964, Eugene McCarthy in 1976 and Pat Buchanan in 1992.
Fake Christians While many of this Pope's pronouncements are often assumed to be novel interpretations of Christian doctrines, Francis was also touching on an ancient debate: If you believe but don't behave, can you get into heaven?
"Our power of prediction is so slight, it is seldom wise to sacrifice a present evil for a doubtful advantage in the future", wrote Keynes at age 21 in "The Political Doctrines of Edmund Burke" in 1904.
And, third, the concerns driving the "killer robots" debate center on whether we can prevent the unleashing of self-operating robots on the battlefield, for which militaries around the world are beginning to establish plans and doctrines.
In public, Ali defended the Nation of Islam's racially charged doctrines, telling one incredulous interviewer, for example, that he really believed all white people are devils, one of many tenets that separate the sect from mainstream Islam.
"Reducing the role of nuclear weapons in national security doctrines and abandoning the nuclear deterrent policy based on the first use of nuclear weapons constitutes the most practical and feasible nuclear disarmament measure at present," Fu said.
" But Ms. Marsh said, "These doctrines that he characterizes as bizarre are part of virtually every Eastern religion, including Tibetan Buddhism, Buddhism and Taoism, and just because he thinks it's strange doesn't mean it's not a religion.
Their legal claims are based on constitutional doctrines of Due Process (the loss of their future) and Equal Protection (zero protection for the children), and the Public Trust (wise husbandry of common resources such as the atmosphere).
Weighing each case on its merits and focusing on harm to consumers — rather than abandoning long-standing doctrines to follow the the political winds — won't satisfy populists, but it's exactly what the FTC is supposed to do.
With that in mind sometimes, you just have to learn to let go, and for us that meant cutting numerous focus trees, new doctrines, a government overhaul, etc—all in service of releasing the mod on time.
Instead, the opinion by Judge Reed O'Connor is an exercise of raw judicial power, unmoored from the relevant doctrines concerning when judges may strike down a whole law because of a single alleged legal infirmity buried within.
So, it's worth mentioning here that talking about "evangelical theology" is necessarily a bit reductive; within different evangelical churches and even on a church-to-church level, there are differences in emphasis on particular doctrines or ideas.
Pope Francis has frequently been excoriated by church conservatives for his desire to change some church practices and to "develop" certain doctrines, such as his decision this month to declare the death penalty "inadmissible" in all cases.
" In the Atlantic, two Michigan law professors argue that by seeking to dismantle ICWA, the plaintiffs "risk undoing a set of doctrines that has facilitated tribes' ability to govern themselves and prosecute individuals who victimize Native people.
The Trump White House is far too chaotic, riven by infighting and buffeted by the impulses of the president, to have clear doctrines about democracy promotion, or many other weighty questions of geopolitics, says a senior administration official.
In the letter, the group of churchgoers, including clergy and church leadership, accused the attorney general of child abuse, immorality, racial discrimination and dissemination of doctrines contrary to the standards of the doctrine of the United Methodist Church.
If inflation remains low while the unemployment rate continues to fall, it may not be long before Powell will have to devise his own unconventional policies and doctrines for handling a set of difficult and unconventional economic outcomes.
"The goal is to hopefully get Attorney General Sessions to talk to his pastors and church leaders, bring his position in line with the church's doctrines and social principles, and end the damage he is causing," Wright said.
Mr. Macron, a former banker, has spent two years questioning Socialist orthodoxy on doctrines like the 35-hour workweek and ironclad job protections, and this spring he founded his own political movement, En Marche, or On Our Way.
Petersen doesn't know about the Daubert standard (which covers the admissibility of expert testimony), motions in limine (which attempt to restrict evidence heard in trials), or the abstention doctrines (which cover the relationship between federal and state law).
But there was no consensus about a rationale for a decision or about how far the court was prepared to go to reshape longstanding constitutional doctrines that allow the government to obtain business records held by third parties.
Instead, the justices hold views on governmental authority, how to interpret laws and the eligibility to sue, among other legal doctrines, that often favor business, said Jonathan Adler, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
" Combined with concerns about the militarization of space and the further automation of weapons and sensor systems "and the new, more aggressive military doctrines asserted by the most heavily armed countries," they wrote, "could result in global catastrophe.
A survey in Ontario last summer found that while there was widespread support for accepting the refugees, only a third of respondents had a positive impression of Islam, and more than half felt its mainstream doctrines promoted violence.
Its core philosophical doctrines are correct: The aim of politics should be ensuring individuals are free to live according to their "plan of life" (a term taken from John Rawls, the liberal philosophical giant of the 20th century).
Halford is an expert, assured surveyor of all the rivers that nursed Chambers's soul — whether she's parsing minuscule differences between various evangelical doctrines, or suggesting a line from Scottish folk beliefs to the Victorian fantasy writer George MacDonald.
"[T]hose who adhere to religious doctrines", he wrote, "may continue to advocate with utmost, sincere conviction that, by divine precepts, same-sex marriage should not be condoned" and they are protected in this mission by the First Amendment.
"The court should refine the application of certain Fourth Amendment doctrines to ensure that the law realistically engages with Internet-based technologies with people's expectations of privacy in their digital data," Seth Waxman, a lawyer for the companies, argued.
Conservative Protestants in the early days of the "common schools" pointed out that the schools, intended to be free of any "sectarian" instruction by stripping out doctrines about which Protestant denominations disagreed, were de facto Unitarian and hence unequal.
"In a lot of the other cases, all I needed was a straight edge, compass and a T-Square going on a case by case basis without abandoning tradition or adhering to any conventions or aesthetic doctrines," he notes.
It's just grown more complicated, with various isolationist doctrines in the hemisphere to keep Europe and the Soviet Union and Communism out, so that the US could have the pick of the litter in terms of exploiting natural resources.
In 1989, a Pentagon analyst named Franklin Miller alerted Cheney to the fact that, in order to forestall cuts to the arsenal, SAC ignored official doctrines and simply found targets for every existing weapon, regardless of their strategic value.
In his dissertation, his limited remarks on Roe are skeptical; he calls its logic a "hodgepodge of doctrines and theories" and refers to abortion as a "nontextual right," meaning it has no basis in the text of the Constitution.
Included in the document were extensive details and screenshots of explicit text messages allegedly sent by Xuecheng, including claims to nuns that they could be "purified" through the physical contact and that sex was part of their study of religious doctrines.
"As you know, the precedent for members of the White House staff to decline invitations to testify before congressional committees has been consistently adhered to by administrations of both political parties, and is based on clearly established constitutional doctrines," Cipollone wrote.
Yet no progress has been made, even though these materials can contain information that is important to our assessment of ongoing cases, as well as information we may have to disclose under the Brady, Giglio, Geaslen or Rosario doctrines. 3.
When states fail and societies collapse, you often see tribal and ethnic and religious violence depending on how the fault lines are drawn, and so it's never as easy as isolating a text or some doctrines as the chief cause.
But it is an encouragement for innovation on the ground, for the de facto changes that more sophisticated liberal Catholics believe will eventually render certain uncomfortable doctrines as dead letters without the need for a formal repudiation from the top.
" Moreover, "The synergism of such combined arms is described in the military doctrines of all these potential adversaries as the greatest revolution in military affairs in history — one which projects rendering obsolete many, if not all, traditional instruments of military power.
But I don't believe in this nation, a First Amendment nation, where we don't raise any religion over the other, and we allow people to worship as they please, that the doctrines of any one religion should be mandated for everyone.
To critics, and even to many Catholics who questioned church doctrines, he embodied the patriarchal, authoritarian ideologies of a hierarchy that rigidly opposed abortion, birth control, the ordination of women and changes in the traditional celibacy of an all-male priesthood.
They may have wanted to change the painting for theological reasons — this was, after all, the middle of the Protestant Reformation and the Catholic Church was rewriting its doctrines at the Council of Trent — or because painting styles had changed.
In many important areas — free speech, civil rights, establishment of religion, criminal procedure and punishment — the doctrines the court has developed stray so far from an originalist reading of the text that to return to it would render American law unrecognizable.
The complaint, which comes amid massive news coverage of separations and detentions of migrant children, also accuses the attorney general of child abuse, racial discrimination and dissemination of doctrines contrary to the standards of doctrine of the United Methodist Church.
"Due to the special ideological requirements of their work, the most important condition for leaders in newspapers, magazines, radios and TV stations is their that they have strong political faith and adhere to the spirit of party doctrines," according to the new rules.
Police chiefs in major cities, in particular, are not likely to be avid immigration enforcers -- some are already on record disputing this approach -- and the Supreme Court's federalism doctrines will largely prevent DHS or Congress from requiring that localities assist federal enforcement efforts.
One could argue that Kavanaugh thought Kennedy was asking whether Kavanaugh played a major role "in the vetting process" for Pryor, or discussed specific Constitutional doctrines with Pryor prior to Pryor's nomination (Kennedy mentions Pryor's reported views of the Supreme Court's Miranda decision).
India's army, for instance, has been seeking a new standard assault rifle since 1982; torn between demands for local production and the temptation of fancy imports, and between doctrines calling for heavier firepower or more versatility, it has flip-flopped ever since.
According to new research published today by the Columbia Law School Public Rights/Private Conscience Project and Public Health Solutions, women of color like Bertram Roberts are even more likely to be treated at Catholic hospitals where religious doctrines dictate medical practices.
The fact that countries which rely on rabid nationalism and xenophobia and doctrines of tribal, racial or religious superiority as their main organizing principle, the thing that holds people together -- eventually those countries find themselves consumed by civil war or external war.
Mr. Jolani left no doubt that his group, under whatever name, retains its Qaeda-inspired ideology: His announcement was peppered with effusive praise for Al Qaeda, its current leadership and Osama bin Laden, and he promised no deviation from standard existing doctrines.
If there's a brighter light unifying Britain and America at the time of the Revolution, perhaps it lies neither with the frightened authoritarians nor with the too easily inflamed radicals but with the new doctrines of compassion that could run between them.
In order to build a red presence in cities, the GOP has to offer a tangible alternative to the dogmatic and long-running progressive doctrines that have governed most urban areas for decades, and have only achieved a mixed bag of results.
The fact that countries which rely on rabid nationalism and xenophobia and doctrines of tribal, racial or religious superiority as their main organizing principle, the thing that holds people together — eventually those countries find themselves consumed by civil war or external war.
Nevertheless, the Court's recent "religious liberty" cases are a warning that legal doctrines can shift quickly, and that the Supreme Court's current majority appears eager to extend the constitutional rights of conservative interest groups — even if doing so means inflicting harm on others.
This overlying snarl of rope evokes doctrines such as Timothy Morton's concept of the mesh, Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari's concept of the rhizome, and Bruno Latour's Actor-network theory, as well as such artworks as Marcel Duchamp's spidery 1942 installation, his twine.
The law imposes prison sentences of between three months and 10 years for those found guilty of promoting anti-Semitic ideas, concepts and doctrines in the public sphere, including the distribution of anti-Semitic materials and the creation of anti-Semitic organizations.
"One possibility—a real one—is that the architects of austerity truly believed in the economic doctrines that they espoused, in spite of the overwhelming evidence against them accumulated over more than three-quarters of a century," he writes, in numb wonder.
The church stated that the "admission of openly gay leaders is inconsistent with the doctrines of the Church and what have traditionally been the values of the Boy Scouts of America" and noted that after further review, the church might abandon scouting.
For the newly resurgent left, the rise of demagoguery looks like payback for the small-government doctrines of technocratic neoliberalism—tax cuts, privatization, financial deregulation, antilabor legislation, cuts in Social Security—which have shaped policy in Europe and America since the eighties.
Arms-control experts fear that the justifications from the Pentagon for the new missile, and for a highly accurate new nuclear bomb, suggest that cold-war doctrines, controversial at the time, such as escalation control and limited nuclear-war-fighting, are being dusted off.
The alternative to military action would be for the President to accept the reality of a regime as unpredictable as that in Pyongyang having the capacity to hit the US with a nuclear weapon, and to put his faith in traditional doctrines of deterrence.
Eleven U.S. soldiers were prosecuted and punished in the military court system, but various hurdles—unsympathetic judges, deep-pocketed corporate defendants, and legal doctrines that prevent lawsuits against government officials—mean that even 15 years later, there haven't been a lot of people held accountable.
Luther's actions and his doctrines need to be looked at in light of the fact that there was an emerging vernacular intellectualism associated with the strong and persisting movements of religious dissent to be found throughout Europe from at least the twelfth century forward.
Although both battles are components of the complicated conflict raging across Syria and Iraq, the tactics employed by the attackers differ dramatically and reflect not only different doctrines of how to fight insurgents, but also different views about the future of the two countries.
Ehrman's outreach to a popular audience — among whom I happily include myself — is wholly to the good, if only because throughout history average Christians have proved oddly unwilling to dig into the particularities of their faith, beyond familiarizing themselves with a few tentpole doctrines.
Finkielkraut has devoted his career to meditating philosophically over the Dreyfus Affair and the doctrines of those times, which he has done in the hope that, by illuminating the ideological errors of the past, he might be able to illuminate something of the present.
And while this Court hasn't brought the absurd Lochner-era doctrines that effectively made it impossible to legislate working conditions back from the dead, it has, in Justice Elena Kagan's phrase, "weaponized" the First Amendment to strike down economic regulation and undermine organized labor.
He explains that his approach is "unashamedly Eurocentric and Christian-centric" and goes on to focus heavily on his own special interest: the emergence of Protestantism in its many forms, all underpinned by the subversive notion that established doctrines must be subjected to scrutiny.
With the emergence of global jihad, Saudi rulers have struggled to avoid association with extremist groups such as al-Qaeda, the Taliban and Islamic State (IS), whose religious practices and doctrines resemble those of Saudi clerics except in when and where to resort to political violence.
They managed underground nuclear weapons tests; they established hardness and survivability standards for U.S. weapons systems; they investigated vulnerabilities of Soviet systems; they created targeting doctrines for each type of weapon and target; and they developed military strategy and tactics for battlefield use of nuclear weapons.
Sartre's embrace of Soviet communism, which he abandoned only to endorse Maoism instead, led Aron to condemn him as "merciless towards the failings of the democracies but ready to tolerate the worst crimes as long as they are committed in the name of the proper doctrines".
Meanwhile, the world's nuclear nations are proceeding with programs of so-called nuclear modernization that are all but indistinguishable from a worldwide arms race, and the military doctrines of Russia and the United States have increasingly eroded the long-held taboo against the use of nuclear weapons.
Bundy told jurors that his group seized the refuge in rural eastern Oregon not only to protest what they saw as overreach by the U.S. government but to show how public lands should be entrusted to private citizens according to an ancient, divinely inspired set of doctrines.
"We also do not share any of Chad Daybell&aposs or Lori Vallow&aposs beliefs if they are contrary to Christian principles of honesty, integrity, and truth, or if they do not align with the doctrines of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints."
The emails show that the Clinton campaign set up at least two false-flag groups masquerading as Catholic organizations, with the sole purpose of undermining the Church — or as the campaign called it, provoking a "Catholic Spring" revolt against Church doctrines on same sex marriage and abortion.
It was also one of the most politically successful doctrines in Cold War history, resulting in a Soviet pullout from Afghanistan, the election of a democratic government in Nicaragua and the removal of 85033,000 Cuban troops from Angola and the holding of United Nations-monitored elections there.

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