Sentence examples for minds constitute from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

Snowden's actions, in many minds, constitute treason.

Panpsychism, (from Greek pan, "all"; psychē, "soul"), a philosophical theory asserting that a plurality of separate and distinct psychic beings or minds constitute reality.

Mr. Barr's letter said that the Mueller report identified no actions that, in his and Mr. Rosenstein's minds, "constitute obstructive conduct, had a nexus to a pending or contemplated proceeding, and were done with corrupt intent". Mr. Barr did not consult Mr. Mueller in writing his letter to leaders of the congressional judiciary committees, a Justice Department official said on Sunday.

And even philosophers who reject his theism say his arguments for the basic rationality of belief, laid out in books like "Warranted Christian Belief" and "God and Other Minds," constitute an important contribution that every student of epistemology would be expected to know.

Similar(56)

Finally, parents attempting to make decisions based on quality of life considerations encountered difficulties using such a criterion [ 29], while others were able to articulate what, in their minds, constituted quality of life and applied the concept to decisions made in instances where they had time to reflect [ 32].

The connection between the cognition of an object and the feeling of pleasure and displeasure in its existence, or the determination of the faculty of desire to produce it, is certainly empirically knowable; but since this interconnection is not grounded in any principle a priori, to this extent the powers of the mind constitute only an aggregate and not a system.

It is never said how or why the existence of such a mind constitutes an explanation.

Goulding was recently forced to deny that her single On My Mind constituted an answer record to Ed Sheeran's Don't, a heartbroken number apparently about her.

The ile ori seems to say that a good head (i.e., good character and a good mind) constitutes true wealth.

In its most radical form, proposed by Descartes and consequently called Cartesianism, dualism is committed to the view that mind constitutes a fundamentally different substance, one whose functioning cannot be entirely explained by reference to physical phenomena alone.

Among those who believe that a significant existence can be had in a purely physical world as known by science, there is debate about two things: the extent to which the human mind constitutes meaning and whether there are conditions of meaning that are invariant among human beings.

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