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"impartial view" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to describe a point of view that is not biased and is based on facts. For example: "The reporter presented an impartial view of both sides of the argument in her report."
Exact(17)
It is, in their "objective and impartial" view, in Britain's economic interests to remain in the union.
"We believe that the US side should take an objective and impartial view of China's efforts and stop making unilateral or arbitrary judgements of China," Ms. Hua said.
Indeed, being deeply immersed may be a positive disadvantage, in that it might make it impossible to take a clear-sighted, impartial view.
They argue that as a result, the advisers do not have an impartial view of the judge's handling of the case and their presence creates at least an appearance of impropriety.
As a scientist morphed into a journalist, Dr. Epstein combines an understanding of the biology of AIDS with a coolly impartial view of the political and social landscape of Africa.
BP said in a news release that it would appeal the ruling, saying the company "believes that an impartial view of the record does not support the erroneous conclusion reached by the district court".
Similar(42)
By invoking situated knowledges, Haraway suggests that all knowledge is local and limited, denying the possibility of the impartial view-from-nowhere that has often been associated with the perspective of objective knowledge.
What he really learned as a sailor was not something empirical — an assembly of "places and events" — but the vindication of a perspective he had developed in childhood, an impartial, unillusioned view of the world as a place of mystery and contingency, horror and splendor, where, as he put it in a letter to the London Times, the only indisputable truth is "our ignorance".
By John A. Holmes The New Yorker, September 25 , 1937P. 87 In sober and impartial mood View Article By Alan Burdick By Larissa MacFarquhar By Charles Bethea By Phil Klay.
Thus, viewing persons from an impartial point of view need not imply that we view them equally, in every sense of the word; and it certainly does not imply that everyone must receive equal treatment.
Given the conception of the impartial point of view as a 'God's eye' point of view, for example (Baier 1958), it seems questionable whether it is ever reasonable to expect a human moral agent to be able to occupy such a perspective.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com