Example sentences of "it is argue that [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In other words , it is to argue that the problem is a technical problem which admits of a technical solution .
2 It is argued that a Europe must become a Europe of the regions not just a Europe of nation states .
3 If it is argued that a man has a moral duty to obey the law and that to break the law of the land is a violation of one 's duty to one 's country , then one has only to point to instances of government policy where it would clearly be immoral to obey the law of the land .
4 Ignoring problems of congestion , it is argued that a welfare optimum requires
5 Specifically , it is argued that a Community with twenty or twenty-five members would need substantial reform in order to operate effectively : agreement among so many would prove too elusive under present forms .
6 Sometimes it is argued that the interests of the shareholders can provide the directors of the company with a purely objective standard on which to base their decisions if the interests of the shareholders are equated with profit-maximization .
7 It is argued that the lobby is used to channel dis-information to a gullible public .
8 There are other fragrance sources and it is argued that the relationship is not mutually obligatory but as all the euglossine genera are involved , it is suggested that the orchids have exploited a pre-existent behaviour pattern in the bees .
9 It is argued that the UK in the 1980s showed a similar transformation .
10 Perhaps paradoxically , it is argued that the money supply should not be manipulated by the monetary authorities on a short-term basis because the existence of such lags would make the effect of monetary policy uncertain , although powerful .
11 First it is argued that the privilege granted to companies of limited liability violates the Christian concept of personal responsibility for one 's actions .
12 It is argued that the inclusion of overhead costs , which have to be absorbed into the product using some arbitrary basis , can distort product costs .
13 It is argued that the law is selectively enforced in the interests of the ruling classes — an issue dealt with more fully in Chapter 4 .
14 It is argued that the law results in employers unwillingly or unwittingly engaging or promoting minorities , regardless of their abilities or qualifications , and whether or not they are the best person for the job .
15 It is argued that the contribution that the technicians make to the industry will be severely limited due to their lack of training in computer aided design .
16 Using examples such as these , it is argued that the processes by which statistics are produced , or not produced , and the way they are presented , follow a pattern that is organized around the exploitation of one class and sex by another in capitalist society ( Irvine , Miles , and Evans 1979 ) .
17 At Cocha Cashu , 12 species provided 80% of the animal biomass with food and it is argued that the carrying capacity of the forest is governed by the abundance of these species , the most important of them being figs .
18 It is argued that the country ‘ can not afford ’ such a high level of social service expenditure .
19 It is argued that the Lamont onslaught had all the hallmarks of an embittered man seeking revenge , particularly as he chose the day when he knew the Prime Minister would be on the defensive , and needing all the support he could summon .
20 It is argued that the Lords provides an important opportunity for more careful consideration of legislation that has been steamrollered through the Commons , and that it provides high-class debates .
21 At the same time it is argued that the ability of law to order social and political reality has decreased to a surprising extent .
22 It is argued that the year 1960 also saw the recognition of Le Duan as second in the hierarchy to Ho , representing the new generation of leaders .
23 In this and other ant-inhabited species of Piper in Costa Rica , the ants remove encroaching climbers and it is argued that the plants absorb nutrients from the decaying nest material of the ants .
24 It is argued that the distinctions noted earlier are by no means clear and that behaviour can not be identified in isolation from speech and so-called " internal mental states " .
25 It is argued that the vacuum which this created permitted the Labour Party to emerge .
26 If there were not an expectation that the spot price at delivery will be higher than the current price of the futures contract , it is argued that the number of those who wish to hold a short position ( for instance , producers of the underlying physical asset hedging their risks ) would exceed the number who wish to hold a long position in the futures contract ( for instance , speculators ) .
27 In both , it is argued that the basis of moral principles in this has been , is and should be , Christianity .
28 It is argued that the basis of natural justice was the desire of the ordinary courts to maintain control over adjudication , and to impose their own types of procedures on those subject to judicial control .
29 In climatology the system has been adopted as providing a suitable framework and appears as the introductory foundation for Causes of Climate ( Lockwood , 1979a ) , where it is argued that the application of systems theory and mathematics has completely changed the subject of climatology .
30 Thus it is argued that the gain in profits of changing prices may only be of second order , whereas the welfare losses from the resulting rigidities may be of first order .
  Next page