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If the idea is such a wonderful idea, why is there any need for coercion?" Ray Gooding, cabinet member for education on Essex county council, where two thirds of the county's 570 schools are now academies, agreed: "It would be better if it could follow its own course rather than being bludgeoned along.
After the Junior Blackhawks left the ice to enjoy rounds of hot cocoa, and their parents sampled a new Seattle's Best coffee machine, two mite-level teams of 7- and 8-year-olds took to the ice with no need for coercion.
Subjects would willingly follow a ruler with Virtue, without the need for coercion.
Such empathy is necessary for strong enough therapeutic relationships to develop between the frequently attending patient, GP and cognitive behaviour therapist that might influence a patient's behaviour without the need for coercion.
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He argues, first, that higher taxation makes people less willing to pay it, and therefore increases the need for state coercion.
At a fundamental level, sport can help us to trust others, encouraging us to adhere to rules without the need for excessive coercion.
Taken together, the new documents about rights-based family planning are an important reminder of the need for voluntary, coercion-free contraceptive services.
The reasons for this situation will be analyzed, the need for research on coercion and the obstacles that research done by users/survivors faces.
In a world (paradise) of saints (completely virtuous persons), there would be need for law but not for coercion; so coercion is not part of Aquinas's definition of law and law's directive force can be contrasted with its coercive force (and see 6.1 ii) above).
The Book of Lord Shang (but not Han Feizi) allowed for the possibility that in the future the need for excessive reliance on coercion would end and a milder, morality-driven political structure would evolve, but these utopian digressions are of minor importance in the text (Pines 2013a).
But in our actual world the need for (the threat of) coercion is such that Aquinas will say without qualification that law ought to have coercive force [vis coactiva] as well as directive [vis directiva]; he even says that it is a characteristic of law [de ratione legis] (ST I-II q. 96 a. 5), despite not including it in his official definition of law's nature [its ratio] (q. 90. a. 3).
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