Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

5 Sentences With "concerning oneself"

How to use concerning oneself in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "concerning oneself" and check conjugation/comparative form for "concerning oneself". Mastering all the usages of "concerning oneself" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Not for shift work over several hours. The tables were also created for survival possibilities during an acute (akutt) evacuation—not necessarily concerning oneself with issues of long-term health. Authors Kristin Øye Gjerde and Helge Ryggvik indicate that several international companies often competed in pressing (å presse) the tables further. Status was acquired by beating the records.
Spare elegance is evident in darkling serenity with a hint of sparkle. Implicity allows depth of feeling to be visible through spare surface design thereby manifesting the invisible core that offers new meanings with each encounter. The person of shibui modesty exalts excellence via taking time to learn, watch, read, understand, develop, think, and merges into understatement and silence concerning oneself. Naturalness conveys spontaneity in unforced growth.
It is claimed that one of Bach's gavottes must be played fast > and another one slowly. But tempo is not independent! ... I think that > concerning oneself purely with historic performance practice and the attempt > to reproduce the sound of older styles of music-making is limiting and no > indication of progress. Mendelssohn and Schumann tried to introduce Bach > into their own period, as did Liszt with his transcriptions and Busoni with > his arrangements.
Articles 29 to 32 guarantee essential aspects of due process. Article 29 covers the rights to fair trial and to an effective remedy as provided for in articles six and thirteen of the ECHR. Specifically, it guarantees the right to be treated equally and fairly within a reasonable time in legal or administrative proceedings, the right to be heard, and the right of indigents to free legal representation (generally realised through appointed private counsel). The right to be heard notably covers the right to be informed about and to participate in all proceedings concerning oneself, the right to offer and to examine evidence (such as to call and question witnesses) and the right to a well-reasoned decision.
Evans famously considers the phenomenon of immunity to error through misidentification—a phenomenon of certain types of judgment in which one cannot be wrong about which object the judgment is about by misidentifying it (see his 1982, especially §6.6 & §7.2). This phenomenon may be exemplified by the incoherence of the following judgment (upon feeling pain): "Someone seems to be feeling pain, but is it I who is feeling the pain?". While this phenomenon has been noticed by philosophers before, Evans argues that they have tended to think that it only applies to judgments concerning oneself and one's conscious experiences, and so they have failed to recognise that it is a more general phenomenon that can occur in any sort of demonstrative judgment. Furthermore, he would charge philosophers such as Ludwig Wittgenstein (in his Blue and Brown Books [1958]) and Elizabeth Anscombe (in her "The First Person" [1975]) for having wrongly concluded that such cases show that the first- person pronoun "I" does not refer to anything.

No results under this filter, show 5 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.