Sentence examples for implications of equal from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

More important, the implications of equal temperament are neutralized.

But the language of citizenship, with all its implications of equal rights and equal duties, has not yet satisfactorily taken its place.

Similar(58)

Although the HSBC ad presents these different viewpoints with the implication of equal worth, all are not equal; that is, different viewpoints create different consequences.

I argue that the Court's failure to grapple with the underlying equal protection issues, or to grasp the breathtaking implications of its equal protection holding (including the inconsistency between that holding and the outcome that it endorsed in Florida itself), evince the almost embarrassing bankruptcy of the rationale that the Court's majority adopted and that Professor Lund defends.

My principal reply emphasized the Court's inexplicable failure to grasp the sweeping implications of its equal protection holding for the outcome that it effectively mandated in Florida itself.

Though the majority was careful to circumscribe the implications of its equal protection views to the specific circumstances in Florida, the opinion offered at least a hope that the court might someday apply the same concerns more broadly in elections to insure equal voting rights.

Finally, we tested the implications of our assumption of equal outcome severity from bicycle and car accidents.

The real world implications of P not equaling NP are that certain algorithms will take longer and certain functions in cryptography (which relies on problem solutions being difficult) will be more secure.

For mammals, an important implication of "late equals large" is that brain proportions should not vary much according to other factors (e.g. adaptation to a particular sensory, locomotor or cognitive function) or covariation between brain components after accounting for variation in brain size.

However, it is important to quote Cheesman's flexible view: "The groups have deliberately been called sections rather than subgenera in an attempt to avoid the implication that they are of equal rank.

We shall consider two versions of this argument, Dworkin's (1981 , 1994 2000) effort to spell out the implications of treating people with equal respect, and Gibbard's (1982) appeal to an ex ante pareto optimality principle combined with an assumed right to a decent basic minimum of income.

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