Sentence examples for does he argue that from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

Nor does he argue that spending on domestic activities is necessarily more effective in creating economic stimulus than dividends or stock buybacks would have been.

After all, if a person is not responsible for their own brain, who is? Neither does he argue that we should do away with concepts of good and evil.

Matt Yglesias heroically actually reads Rick Perry's book, and learns that — 9. Private Enterprise Blossomed Under Conscription and Wartime Price Controls: Not only does he argue that the New Deal failed to end the Great Depression, but he asserts "recovery did not come until World War II, when FDR was finally persuaded to unleash private enterprise".

Not only does he argue that some kind of life can continue forever in a closed universe, he also claims that it is the very collapse of the universe that permits eternal life.

Kant, however, holds that aesthetic experience could give us sensible confirmation of the moral truths we already know through pure reason, but it also give us emotional support in our attempt to act as we know we should, although in no case does he argue that the support that morality can get from aesthetic experience is indispensable.

So why does he argue that reallocation is "the most irresponsible" option "other than doing nothing at all"? Blahous should know as well as anyone that trying to address Social Security's finances in the next year, under the imminent threat of a 20% benefit cut to its neediest and most vulnerable beneficiaries, would produce a "solution" that solves nothing and hurts everyone.

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Nor, apparently, did he argue that the sample did not belong to him.

Not only did he argue that the posters are "highly irritating," but also "a big waste of natural resources".

In so doing, he argues that the infant is encouraged to identify with the mirror image as "me" by verbal and gestural prompts issuing from the bigger other(s) holding him/her up in front of the reflective surface (for example, the utterance "That's you there!" accompanied by pointing and grinning).

In his recent book Inequality - What can be done? he argues that high levels of inequality are not inevitable and that policies can be designed to make our societies both more equitable and more efficient.

But, he argues, that doesn't mean it's not an uncomfortable elitist dynamic that we should try to change.

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