Sentence examples for underlying notions from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Following this line of criticism, underlying notions of race guiding the elaboration of immune theory have been suggested, where immunity was the culturally transformed activity of the atavistic animal (Rossiianov 2008).

As "eco-immunology" grows in sophistication, the complexity of such economies reveals that the underlying notions of individuality that have assumed a certain authority under the older regime, has weakened.

We wanted to generate data that would help us ensure the content of our telephone coaching intervention most effectively engaged with and accounted for these underlying notions.

Similar(57)

"It's Japan".The underlying notion that the US-Japan alliance was in trouble struck me as very doubtful.

While the three approaches discussed above (range, correlations, code) differ in that they emphasise different informational themes, the underlying notion they aim to clarify is the same (information).

Underlying many notions is a sense that too often housing and land have been turned into lucrative investments disproportionate to the wages and incomes of most of the population.

These frameworks arose both as attempts to recover the simplicity of the type-free approach, as derived from the so-called naive comprehension principle, as well as in order to satisfy metamathematical needs, such as the clarification of fundamental concepts underlying the notions of "formal system," "formalism," "rule," etc.

The biases underlying these notions can lead some human rights advocates to favor "perfect victims" in advocacy and publicity campaigns, and consequently to disregard injustices faced by other marginalized individuals who may inspire more ambivalent and complicated responses from the public.

Up close the two are indistinguishable, underlying his notion of the cosmos as a unified whole comprising "the same material".

In light of the difference between cultural suppositions underlying the notion of face, it is important to notice the possibility in any cultural setting of a person being embarrassed by the behavior of another person with whom they are in some way connected or associated.

The values underlying any notion of tolerable risk may not be shared by everyone; in fact much research on risk analysis and societal reactions to different threats highlights the differences between institutional responses such as regulation and public responses (Barnes 2002).

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