Sentence examples for shared notions from inspiring English sources

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Exact(9)

Political dialogue is shot through with shared notions of right and wrong.

Gradually, Pat and Paul arrived at various shared notions about what philosophy was and what it ought to be.

Once again the venue had been chosen carefully – a cultural centre where Afghans and westerners could mingle around shared notions of art and creativity.

By implication, the show is an exercise in anthropology as well, an exploration of an ever-receding way of social life among successful creative people in the city, one in which the friendships built and circles configured seemed more firmly rooted in genuine affection, in affinity, in shared notions of whimsy, than in the prospect of mutual professional advantage.

Global trade favours a harmonized legal protection system and widely shared notions of justice demand that such system is democratically backed.

Common to all those who identify themselves as citizens are the shared notions of constitutional democracy, of freedom, of equality and justice, of love, and faith.

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Hollande's insistence on a private life that needs to remain such makes sense only if we assume a shared notion of selfhood – essentially, that a public, perceptible face conceals a private, imperceptible self.

There was a shared notion of Canada being 'super chill,' modern, and, of course, friendly.

The Trump administration has tried to defend this proposal by arguing that Christians have been particularly mistreated in Syria, but whatever the specific factors, I believe such a proposal would not be possible, and certainly would be receiving far more nationwide and sustained criticism, were it not for the still widely shared notion that America originated as a "Christian nation".

13 The organising vision serves three functions for those seeking to introduce and 'roll out' a new technology: (1) interpretation (a shared notion of what the technology is and how it could be used); (2) legitimation (a shared rationale for why the technology should be adopted and used) and (3) mobilisation (activating and coordinating stakeholders to promote adoption and diffusion).

More plausible are arguments that suggest that there is something in particular about obligation that makes it fit for a theological voluntarist explanation, some feature that is not shared with notions like moral virtue and moral good.

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