considerateness การใช้
- Such considerateness was strong in the 1950s, many Chinese say.
- Christopher Stone suggests various gradations of what he calls " legal considerateness " that we could grant AI in the future.
- If anything, particularly over the last few decades, it was the summer folk who labored to exercise their anxious version of considerateness.
- Ernest Jones considered that " Schur was a perfect choice for a doctor . . . his considerateness, his untiring patience, and his resourcefulness were unsurpassable ".
- Not in terms of success or making money, but the productivity, the discipline, the inter-band relationships, the considerateness, the way it fits into all our lives.
- In a move that spoke both of considerateness and concern that the crisis could last a week, city authorities sat up a half-dozen portable toilets on one of the streets.
- In the academic journal " Philosophy & Public Affairs ", Calhoun delineates civility as an element of dialogue that sheds light on " basic moral attitudes of respect, tolerance, and considerateness ".
- Father Alexis Bachelot, who would hear Vignes in confession much later, wrote in a private letter : " Vignes was driven to leave his country after troubles caused by his loyalty, misunderstood considerateness, and too much facility to be of help ."
- For example, in Wittmer, the Seventh Circuit held that the warden of a boot camp prison had a compelling interest in using race as one factor in hiring a lieutenant when the prison camp had no black supervisors, the prison population was 70 percent black, the staff was " expected to treat the inmates with the same considerateness, or rather lack of considerateness, that a Marine sergeant treats recruits at Parris Island, " and expert testimony established that black inmates were " unlikely to play the correctional game of brutal drill sergeant and brutalized recruit unless there ( were ) some blacks in authority in the camp ."
- For example, in Wittmer, the Seventh Circuit held that the warden of a boot camp prison had a compelling interest in using race as one factor in hiring a lieutenant when the prison camp had no black supervisors, the prison population was 70 percent black, the staff was " expected to treat the inmates with the same considerateness, or rather lack of considerateness, that a Marine sergeant treats recruits at Parris Island, " and expert testimony established that black inmates were " unlikely to play the correctional game of brutal drill sergeant and brutalized recruit unless there ( were ) some blacks in authority in the camp ."