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Discover Ludwig"wide notion" is a correct and usable part of a sentence in written English.
You can use it when referring to a concept or idea that is comprehensive in scope. For example, "This new policy encompasses a wide notion of workplace safety."
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Additional research, using a wide notion of aggression, documents that a good deal of harmful behaviour if not the bulk targets popular adolescents in addition to isolated adolescents.
The wide notion of discovery is mostly deployed in sociological accounts of scientific practice.
The wide notion is required to account for the difference in reference between English and Twin-English 'water'; the narrow notion is needed, first and foremost, to account for the relation between a subject's beliefs and her behavior.
We deliberately choose a comparably wide notion of governance and do not restrict it for instance to intentional action (cf. [28]), since that would rule out exactly a number of modes of governance that are essential to our argument.
Similar(55)
No such cataclysmic weather troubles the Paris of "Happenstance," though there is some rain, but Mr. Firode is quite taken with the wide-eyed notion of cause and effect that the original title metaphorically suggests.
The importance of what might be called "debt justice" to a wider notion of fairness is not limited to Christianity and Judaism.
This is clearly a narrowing of a wider notion of logical consequence.
It might be impossible to be cynical about Alice Pyne and the generous folks who have rallied to her comfort — but as for the wider notion of a good and noble "Internet community"?
Feyerabend characterized this wider notion of incommensurability as a historical, anthropological thesis (1975, 271), but also applied it to different stages of the development of thought and perception in the individual (1975, 274).
A wider notion of the normativity of meaning, ME normativism, appeared on the philosophical scene more recently, and is associated with Saul Kripke's book on Wittgenstein's rule-following considerations (Kripke 1982).
This sums up Williams' case for thinking that the wider notion of praise and blame is tenable in a way that the narrower notion is not because of its dependence on a questionably "pure" account of the voluntary (1985: 194; cp. MSH Essays 1 3).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com