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24 Sentences With "irrationalities"

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

The irrationalities of disgust, Nussbaum continues, underlie many social evils.
Rather they deliberately promulgate blatant lies which play to voters' irrationalities and insecurities.
His experimental work, most notably with Daniel Kahneman, details irrationalities in individual choice.
To Ray Dalio, the founder and cochief investment officer of Bridgewater Associates, irrationalities in financial markets are seemingly everywhere.
Some of our irrationalities are tied to our goals, to me rationally wanting my goal and you rationally wanting your goal.
And given that there will be irrationalities to which it is just not feasible to cater, a few plus-ones are maybe okay.
Their sole quant, that deliciously smarmy guy (Will Rolan), has mastered an algorithm that's the equivalent to Bobby Axelrod's mind, only without all the irrationalities and strutting.
Q: This last year I was diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder and have had a hard time learning how to cope with my irrationalities, especially because I'm living abroad.
The third opinion of the new establishment is that capitalism is a deeply flawed system, haunted by irrationalities and contradictions that only enlightened members of the new elite can fix.
Editorial It takes a lot these days to surprise anyone with the irrationalities of the American criminal justice system, rife as it is with harsh and counterproductive practices that do little or nothing to improve lives or keep the public safe.
The progress of the last 50 years, particularly in Europe, has made it easy to buy into the idea that the forces of nationalism, xenophobia and prejudice are mere irrationalities, market distortions that will naturally fade away in the long arc of history.
His 4th album 'Irrationalities' was released in October 2019 by Enja/Yellowbird. It a trio album, featuring long-time collaborators Kristjan Randalu and Bodek Janke. JazzTimes praise it as 'a dazzling, multifaceted thing of Beauty'. 'Irrationalities' received 3 awards at the 2020 Independent Music Awards: 'Jazz Instrumental' & 'Vox Pop' for the track 'Easy Come Easy Go' and 'Jazz Producer' for Petros Klampanis.
The second chapter deals with the six types of problems found in Al-Khwarizmi's book, but some of which, especially those of x^2, were now worked out directly instead of first solving for x and accompanied with geometrical illustrations and proofs. The third chapter contains examples of quadratic irrationalities as solutions and coefficients. The fourth chapter shows how these irrationalities are used to solve problems involving polygons. The rest of the book contains solutions for sets of indeterminate equations, problems of application in realistic situations, and problems involving unrealistic situations intended for recreational mathematics.
As a theory on human conduct, it contrasts to the concepts of behavioral economics, which examines cognitive biases and other irrationalities, and to bounded rationality, which assumes that practical elements such as cognitive and time limitations restrict the rationality of agents.
The eventually periodic nature of the continued fraction is then reflected in the eventually periodic nature of the orbit of a quadratic form under reduction, with reduced quadratic irrationalities (those with a purely periodic continued fraction) corresponding to reduced quadratic forms.
In the Book V commentary, he worked on ratio, proposing a theory on the definition of ratio based on continued fractions that was later discovered independently by Al-Nayrizi. In the Book X commentary, he worked on irrational numbers, including quadratic irrational numbers and cubic ones. He expanded Euclid's definition of magnitudes—which included only geometrical lines—by adding integers and fractions as rational magnitudes as well as square and cubic roots as irrational magnitudes. He called square roots "plane irrationalities" and cubic roots "solid irrationalities", and classified the sums or differences of these roots, as well as the results of the roots' additions or subtractions from rational magnitudes, also as irrational magnitudes.
It is an attempt to describe the phenomenon of forgetting irrational thoughts associated with cases of OCD. In the book, the author suggests 'suspending disbelief' as opposed to forcing ourselves to forget; similar to how one would put a virus in quarantine. We can thereby allow ourselves to be absorbed in the activities around us until these irrationalities vanish of their own accord.
The lattice structure of violet phosphorus was presented by Thurn and Krebs in 1969. Imaginary frequencies, indicating the irrationalities or instabilities of the structure, were obtained for the reported violet structure from 1969. The single crystal of violet phosphorus was also produced. The lattice structure of violet phosphorus has been obtained by single‐crystal x‐ray diffraction to be monoclinic with space group of P2/n (13) (a=9.210, b=9.128, c=21.893 Å, β=97.776°, CSD-1935087).
Since the second half of the 20th century, a body of research, by economists such as Maurice Allais and psychologists such as Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, documented a collection of systematic violations of the principles of RCT. These violations are typically interpreted as demonstrations of irrationalities in human behavior. In contrast, the notion of Ecological Rationality questions the normative validity of RCT and therefore interprets the empirical findings in a fundamentally different way. As explicated below, violations of RCT might in fact denote rational action under some conditions.
This thinly fictional account tells of the lives of soldiers during World War I and the trench warfare they encountered. Un anno sull'altipiano underlines, with chill rationalism, how the irrationalities of warfare affected the common man. Gifted with a keen sense of observation and sharp logic, Lussu demonstrates how distant the real life of soldiers is from everyday activities. In a notable passage, he describes the silent terror in the moments preceding an attack, as he is forced to abandon the "safe" protective trench for an external unknown, risky, undefined world: “All the machine-guns are waiting for us”.
It is true that analytic philosophers look all the way > back to Immanuel Kant and Jeremy Bentham for their paradigms of analytic > philosophy. Unfazed because untouched by these notions of social > constitution of individuals, or by the irrationalities of individual > thought, philosophy offers an outmoded yet still seaworthy vessel for any > seeking to ride out the storms of postmodern disillusionment with notions of > agency and process. Had Fraser utilized the works of analytic political > thinkers when she finally came to formulate her socialist-feminist theory of > the welfare state she could have exploited the admittedly "thin" theories of > political agency and political rights within political philosophy today.
Giddens rejects what he considers top-down socialism as well as rejecting neoliberalism and criticizes conventional socialism for its common advocacy that socialization of production as achieved by central planning can overcome the irrationalities of capitalism. According to Giddens, this claim "can no longer be defended". He argues that with the collapse of the legitimacy of centrally planned socialization of production, "[w]ith its dissolution, the radical hopes for by socialism are as dead as the Old Conservatism that opposed them". Giddens writes that although there have been proponents of market socialism who have rejected such central planned socialism as well as being resistant to capitalism, "[t]here are good reasons, in my view, to argue that market socialism isn't a realistic possibility".
The 1965 Soviet economic reform, often referred to as the "Kosygin reform", of economic management and planning was carried out between 1965 and 1971. Announced in September 1965, it contained three main measures: the re-centralization of the Soviet economy by re-establishing several central ministries, a decentralizing overhaul of the enterprise incentive system (including wider usage of capitalist-style material incentives for good performance), and thirdly, a major price reform. The reform was initiated by Alexei Kosygin's First Government and implemented during the Eighth Five-Year Plan, 1968–1970. Though these measures were established to counter many of the irrationalities in the Soviet economic system, the reform did not try to change the existing system radically; it instead tried to improve it gradually.
As a philologist, he urged that, on rational grounds, the letter h be dropped from German orthography in cases in which it appeared in final position in a word,John Betz, "After Enlightenment: the post-secular vision of J.G. Hamann" as "an unfounded practice that appears barbaric in the eyes of foreigners and thus insulting to our nation",Damm, Betrachtungen über die Religion (Berlin, 1773:233), quoted in Sheehan 1998:35. for which Johann Georg Hamann, friend of Kant and teacher of Herder, took him to task,Jonathan Sheehan, "Enlightenment Details: Theology, Natural History, and the Letter h", Representations (Winter, 1998:29-56) p. 35; defending the h on human terms, as speaking "with a human voice"; purging language of such irrationalities, the proto-Romantic Herder asserted, was an "assault on the colour, beauty, texture, character, virility, history, and even spirituality of language", as Graeme Garrard has expressed it, in one of the first shots of the Counter-Enlightenment.

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