inherent (exact matches only)
In his introduction to “The Landmark Thucydides,” an amply annotated reprint of a Victorian translation of the History, he sneers at the “veneer of culture” that war inevitably strips away, showing us up “for what we really are.” In “Carnage and Culture,” his 2001 study arguing that Western warfare is superior to that of all other cultures, he says: There is an inherent truth of battle.
Ideology aside, he apparently maintains the illusions that structured his political successes even if they never had very much truth in them; to this day, as one example, he speaks of Gorbachev's dissolution of the Soviet Union as unnecessary, ``a mistake.'' In short, there was no fatal contradiction inherent in the Soviet system that brought it down, and so there is nothing in the Castro system or in his take on reality that is creating the painful poverty of the island.
There is danger inherent in too much exposure, says Jamaica-born Marlon Hill, who practices entertainment law in Miami.
Consequently, for me to sit at my laptop and tell thousands of readers that the following releases unequivocally are The Best Records of the Year is not only presumptuous but an act of egotism that goes beyond the usual level of self-importance inherent in the job of pop music critic.
¶Sweet and Sour: Cathy Daley, Shannon Oksanen, Kathy Slade, Althea Thauberger, Janet Werner, explore culturally-constructed dualities inherent in the nature of girls and women, to Jan.
Perhaps she chose to destroy her body out of a profound sadness at the eventual dissolution of her thirty-year romantic relationship with my father; perhaps she chose to disappear her body out of her interest in the discipline inherent in self-abnegation.
The Focus article, however, inspired widespread skepticism—partly because the story of a top secret KGB archive exfiltrated from a Russian dacha seemed inherently improbable, partly because the only detailed example given by Focus of the intelligence it contained was the sensational allegation that the former Chancellor, Willy Brandt, "the icon of Germany's Social Democrats," had been a Soviet spy during the Second World War.
In vitro fertilization and reproductive technologies were so new that they were inherently experimental.
There is nothing inherently demeaning to marriage when it happens at the drive-thru by an Elvis impersonator.
When the demand is so low, fewer hard-working cylinders are inherently more efficient than the full complement of lightly loaded cylinders.
His "deep anxiety" about its reception proves justified, his "sense that worldly glamour and universal praise would never be offered to him". He is forced to make do with "the comfort of knowing that his life depended not on the multitude but on remaining himself". The rest of the story dramatises the frustrations and betrayals inherent in such comfort.
The investigation of Silverman was later taken over by the State Attorney General's Office since the District Attorney's Office, an integral part of the Superior Court system, had an inherent conflict of interest in protecting the reputation of the system.
''Ban [steroids] because you don't like them," Simon Eassom concludes in high smarty-pants mode, ''but you won't find reasons inherent in what baseball actually is that make their use inherently wrong."
To his credit, Pollack doesn't gloss over the frustrations, fits and starts inherent in the project.
More examples in news.google.com [inherent]