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"What I see are wild hypotheticals that are not obviously plausible and certainly lack any empirical support," he said.
The news of the Brexit vote — for all that it had been obviously plausible for years, highly possible for months, and even on the very eve was known to be at best a hairbreadth business — still shocked Europe, and perhaps the world, as no political event has since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Hedonism as is demonstrated by its ancient roots—has long seemed an obviously plausible view.
WASHINGTON -- Justice Samuel Alito called the central point made by the government during Tuesday's Supreme Court arguments in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission "wild hypotheticals that are not obviously plausible" and that "certainly lack any empirical support".
It is not conspiratorial but rather obviously plausible to suggest that they have been kept out of sight because legal due process, constitutionally guaranteed to even the most heinous of criminals, might provide information that our government would find embarrassing.
"Having written a check for 3.5-or-so 3.5-or-so 3.5-or-so million dollarsng that that party and the members of that party are not going to owe me anything, that I won't get any special treatment?" Such questions evoked derision at times from Justices Antonin Scalia and Samuel Alito, the latter referring to "wild hypotheticals that are not obviously plausible"...
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"It's obviously scientifically plausible that if you reduce consumption of excess calories, you reduce obesity," he said.
Obviously, it is plausible that meaningful changes in economic activity in these saturated areas are not detected due to filtering and, therefore, remain hidden.
The only plausible explanation, obviously, is a postapocalyptic zombie boom: they are driving the surge in numbers.
Aquinas, for example, appears to think that the thesis was specifically formulated to apply only to the case of creatures (cf. Summa Theologiae I, q. 28, a. 2, corpus), and to some extent this is plausible, since obviously Aristotle was not thinking about theological examples such as the Trinity when he formulated it.
Armstrong himself is not terribly clear on this point but, extrapolating from Armstrong 1993 (433 434) and 1997 34 355) (which are not obviously consistent), the most plausible form of W's being water is [Water,w], where w is the mereological sum o+h1+h2 of the thin particulars underlying the oxygen and hydrogen molecules o, h1, and h2.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com