Sentence examples for raising difficulties for from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Even in infectious causes, there are often no clinical symptoms of infection, raising difficulties for diagnosis.

Usually, problems (1) and (5) are considered as raising difficulties for platonism, whereas problems (2), (3), and (4) are often taken as yielding difficulties for nominalism.

One way in which evolutionary biology may play a modest role in metaethics is by raising difficulties for appeals to natural teleology in the attempt to account for ethical normativity.

Similar(57)

In a 1968 essay, Larry McMurtry wrote that Texas was divided but "not yet fragmented to a degree that would raise difficulties for the novelist".

"John's action will also make the relevant agencies further hesitate in future when they invite foreign artists... [He] has raised difficulties for future arts exchanges between China and other countries," the newspaper said in an editorial.

Previous incumbents sometimes returned proposed laws to parliament, or sent them to the constitutional court for further consideration.But Mr Schmitt, a former Fidesz MEP, let it be known that he would not raise difficulties for the government's tidal wave of controversial new legislation, earning himself the nickname "Mr Rubber Stamp".

It has to be mentioned that self-managed nodes can raise difficulties for persons without technological knowledge.

As we saw, for Ortega, the interpretation of human actions raises difficulties for standard empiricist accounts of explanation of the human and social world.

Moreover, if the system in question is nonlinear, then the faithful model assumption (§1.2.3) raises difficulties for inferring the determinism of the target system from the deterministic character of the model.

Objections to the one-act approach have been raised by a number of commentators, in particular Allison, who partly endorses Ginsborg's criticisms of Guyer, but raises difficulties for her reading of §9 (2001, 113 115) and, in particular, rejects the self-referential understanding of judgments of beauty as "inherently implausible" (2001, 115).

Ortega, together with Croce, Dilthey, Collingwood and others who associated with the tradition of historicism, expressed sympathy with those who claimed that the interpretation of human actions raised difficulties for standard empiricist accounts and explanations of the human and social world.

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