Berlinski notes Dembski's extensive academic training, but overlooks Dembski's documented penchant for invidious comparisons. |
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Such stressors are potentially invidious not least because people may not experience these as unpleasant or be conscious of their effects. |
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Schumacher is in an invidious position, but as a team player he must take the rough with the smooth. |
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Comparisons with the likes of shouting prancers such as him are so invidious that I won't pursue them. |
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The most invidious policy was rotating officers out of infantry companies after six months when grunts had no such option. |
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But those singled out for disfavor can be forgiven for suspecting more invidious forces at work. |
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Affirmative action, for them, was no less invidious than traditional race discrimination against disadvantaged minorities. |
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It would be invidious to undertake a half-baked presentation and evidence and half-baked cross examination. |
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Despite the hullabaloo, and the invidious position into which he has allowed himself to be manoeuvred, it looks as if he will hold on to his job. |
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It would mean an extensive liberalisation of the curriculum and help break down the invidious barrier between academic and vocational education. |
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So comparisons are a bit invidious at times and I realise why we struggle with that. |
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This question seems a valid one, but one should remember that such a stance might put the possessor of the truth in an invidious situation. |
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The chairman is in an invidious position but he did McLeish no favours last week. |
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I find myself in the invidious position of having to go out and ask whoever it is if they would mind waiting five minutes. |
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The new levy would have precisely the same invidious impact on newspapers and the electronic media. |
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The novice manager accepts he finds himself in an invidious position following in the footsteps of a man who could have achieved no more. |
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The term brings to mind, rather, the importance of kinship relations in primitive societies, and provokes an invidious comparison to England. |
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There is patently no legitimate overriding purpose independent of invidious racial discrimination which justifies this classification. |
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In reality, of course, all such comparisons are invidious, and the loss of any human being is tragic. |
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England is not best understood by invidious comparison with France. |
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The British media is in a bit of an invidious position, in that we've got our editors in London saying, Well, we've got carte blanche, we can print what we like. |
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There is enormous support for these men who have been jailed because they have come across as sincere men who have been put in the most invidious position. |
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The recent longstanding salary dispute, now happily resolved by government action, was unsettling and helped place universities and funding councils in an invidious position. |
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Were it to come to trial, it would put the Lords, as judges, in an invidious position, and exposes them to the charge that they are overriding the will of the Commons. |
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The conference also provides a platform for highlighting casteism as a form of invidious discrimination and an international human rights violation. |
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I have nothing to say about these principles of invidious discrimination. |
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Constant anxious attention to her appearance becomes a major part of woman's life, a source of frustration, unflagging investment and invidious comparison. |
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The rationale behind prohibiting some exercises of discretion is that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects people against invidious discrimination. |
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I met a lot of people and generalisations are always invidious. |
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The payment of allowances has given poor families an invidious choice between keeping their children in the cantonment and losing income. |
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So that would mean trusting some countries and not others, I suggest: an invidious choice for a court to make. |
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Victims of crime and their families remain in an invidious position in the administration of justice: the courts in particular. |
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Financially, they will be in a totally invidious position compared to other farmers in all parts of the other 24 EU Member States. |
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The argument that this would have been an interference into the internal decision making process of a member state would seem to be invidious. |
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This belief was patently erroneous, and it produced an invidious comparison for Magnola. |
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This potentially creates an invidious split between home and overseas workers, both of whom in different ways can suffer from these arrangements. |
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Indeed the potentially fatal consequences are far more invidious and graver than many other actions prohibited by the Criminal Code. |
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Thus, hand fasted relationships could be broken as they were not sanctified by Holy Church, a nasty invidious Norman custom that was just coming in. |
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Tevi Troy eschews any invidious mention of right-of-center think tanks in his critique. |
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The drive toward nihilism is invidious, and it adds a substantial layer of risk to the financial world and markets. |
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To do so might be invidious in more than one case. |
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Furthermore, singling out the Council of Europe could be seen as invidious given that a number of those countries which the Union would wish to include in the proposed relationship are not members of the Council of Europe. |
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Now they are in the invidious position of being unable to put to sea in order to catch the meagre amounts of fish they are still allowed to land, because the cost of fuel makes it unprofitable before they start. |
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Speaking at the end of a series of presentations is always an invidious position because all the things you're going to say have already been said, and you're left wondering what on earth to say. |
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For that reason, serving members would find it invidious to apply for posts in the new Appeals Tribunal, while discharging their current responsibilities as members of the Administrative Tribunal. |
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It is the Committee's view that these problems have the potential to impair Canada's efforts to control this most invidious form of organized crime. |
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I happen to oppose the amendments but it seems to be that we have been put in an invidious position, asking us to vote on amendments which we have not had an opportunity to debate. |
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Given a history in which invidious distinctions were used as instruments of oppression, it is natural to ask whether an exhibition defined by race just perpetuates an outmoded way of thinking. |
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And, lest I forget, or anyone else forgets, the only reason Sabey is in this invidious position is because the evidence against him was handed to the police by his employers, Rupert's Murdoch's News Corporation. |
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The Rapporteur considers that to engage in litigation, whether before criminal or constitutional courts, places the Ombudsman in an invidious situation. |
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Intolerance, persecution, and proselytism are invidious and ill-sounding terms, never long absent from the mouths of anti-Catholic controversialists. |
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