Sentence examples for natural arguments from inspiring English sources

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There are natural arguments for each — Twitter is one of the go-to sources for news (and also sports!), but a company like Salesforce could pump additional life into it to get that user base growing more broadly.

A legal form that establishes special obligations of a sort that do not arise among strangers but equally rejects the affirmative and open-ended obligations that arise among intimates deprives itself of the most natural arguments in its favor.

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And there's the quite natural argument that having that logoed slip if fabric stitched into the neck holds a talismanic must-have power in itself.

A natural argument follows that the volume derivative of t and of μ* is small compared to dλ/dV; henceforth, we neglect these two terms in Equation (49).

In these very general spaces, by elementary tools and by a natural argument, using radically new and original technique, we derive unexpectedly richer conclusions from very weak hypotheses (see Theorems 3.1 and 3.2).

This idea is supported by a natural argument: if something is good only because it is related to something else, the argument goes, then it must be its relation to the other thing that is non-instrumentally good, and the thing itself is good only because it is needed in order to obtain this relation.

A second natural argument in favor of seeing legal theory as inherently evaluative in the relevant sense relies on the idea that any adequate theory of law must take account of the internal point of view that legal practitioners tend to adopt towards the law.

If n ∈ E, then there is some m ≥ 1 such n = m − d m ; we denote such an m as m = m n ; hence, one can consider a function of the natural argument, φ : N → N, defined as φ ( n ) = m n − d m n. (14).

A finite subsequence h = ( x i + 1, …, x i + k ) of X = ( x i ) i = 1 ∞ is called a segment of X of length k, | h | = k ; for two functions of natural argument a ( m ) and b ( m ), differed from 0 we denote a ( m ) ∼ b ( m ) if a ( m ) / b ( m ) → 1 as m → ∞.

In classifying the basic forms of inference that characterize natural language arguments, some countenance other kinds of inferences that are said to be unique: notably "conductive" and "abductive" arguments.

Indeed, back in the spring of 2008, a high-ranking local union official described strikes as "as natural as arguments between a husband and wife".

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