Sentence examples for accommodate freedom from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

It is not good enough, he argues, for moderates, or even liberal atheists, to insist that governments should accommodate freedom of personal belief, because beliefs are directly responsible for actions.

Human society simply does not follow the rules of a termite colony; order must accommodate freedom and individuality.

Similar(58)

How does American law accommodate religious freedom in cases such as this?Well, it's complicated.

How does American law accommodate religious freedom in cases such as this?The First Amendment says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or preventing the free exercise thereof".

It was clear, the show proclaims, that by the mid-50's the hard-edged machine aesthetic of the prewar years had given way to a visual language centered more on natural forms and helped along by more flexible materials that could accommodate a wider freedom of design.

But it suggests that in America, religious institutions will not break under the weight of moral freedom but bend, as many of them have bent already, to accommodate themselves to the freedom of moral choice to which Americans have increasingly grown accustomed.

"A company might decide that it's good for morale to accommodate the exercise of freedom of speech on an issue that is very important to people, but that's an employment judgment not law".

Because it is the combination of various hash descriptors, the content-based fingerprinting can be considered as an extension and evolution of image hashing and thus offers much more freedom to accommodate different robust features (color, shape, texture, salient points, etc., [7]) and design efficient hashing algorithms to successfully against different types of attacks and distortions.

The amount of smoothing was set to 8 degrees of freedom to accommodate the two peaks and intervening valley expected in the transect curve.

The authors propose that these differences primarily arise because globular proteins typically employ more residues to "construct" their three-dimensional structures, leaving them fewer degrees of freedom to accommodate substitutions.

Alternatively, the functioning enzyme may consist of a B'B" heterodimer, allowing more degrees of freedom to accommodate destabilizing mutations [ 31], as observed in Aquifex aeolicus[ 32, 33]; the transition from a homo- to a heterodimer initially might not have been adaptive, but the resulting heterodimer nevertheless may be under strong purifying selection [ 34].

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