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11 Sentences With "fallibly"

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

But where Kraftwerk seemed to jokingly transcending their humanity, James and his collaborator Johnny Clayton took an opposite tact, deconstructing images of the producer to look more and more fallibly human.
His Berenger resists becoming a rhinoceros not because he is so brave or noble, but because he is too idiosyncratic and fallibly human to ever feel comfortable in a leather hide.
As incarnated in that production, the reserved but emotionally ripe Olivia seemed to be woven out of starlight — when she walked it was as if she never touched the ground — and yet she was profoundly, fallibly human, too.
Elite decadence doesn't seem to be the story Packer set out to tell, but he's too gifted a writer to fail to notice it ("A whole class of people in Washington and New York sent other people's children to fight in Afghanistan and Iraq while they found ways to get rich"), even if his affection for his protagonist means that Holbrooke emerges in this account as flawed, yes, and fallibly human, of course, but ultimately meaning well.
The peace of "heavenly Canaan" still hovers above Ulro's chaos, but Los fallibly builds Golgonooza which becomes the structure of "Religion Hid in War". The harlot-dragon reigns.
It is most important in poetry, but also used in prose for emphasis and aesthetic gain. Example: The fallibly irrevocable cat met its intrinsic match in the oppositional form of a dog.
3 His writings on the practice of science influenced Thomas Kuhn and Paul Feyerabend. Polanyi rejected the claim by British Empiricists that experience can be reduced into sense data, but he also rejects the notion that "indwelling" within (sometimes incompatible) interpretative frameworks traps us within them. Our tacit awareness connects us, albeit fallibly, with reality. It supplies us with the context within which our articulations have meaning.
However, this depends upon one's view of structure, which differs between Giddens and Archer. Hence if strata in social reality have different ontologies, then they must be viewed as a dualism. Moreover, agents have causal power, and ultimate concerns which they try to fallibly put into practice. Mole and Mole propose entrepreneurship as the study of the interplay between the structures of a society and the agents within it.
Non-Sabbatarians and some first-day Sabbatarians believe Hebrews 8 indicates Sabbath-keeping is not mandatory, because "in that he saith, a new covenant, he hath made the first old" ( KJV; or "obsolete" NIV). Seventh-day Sabbatarians and strict first-day Sabbatarians believe Hebrews 8 indicates the Law of God (including Sabbath) remains on the hearts of God's people to be kept, but not fallibly as in the older covenant ().
David William Brown (born 1 July 1948) is an Anglican priest and British scholar of philosophy, theology, religion, and the arts. He taught at the universities of Oxford, Durham, and St. Andrews before retiring in 2015. He is well-known for his "non-punitive theory of purgatory, his defense of specific versions of social Trinitarianism and kenotic Christology, his distinctive theory of divine revelation as mediated fallibly through both tradition and imagination, and his proposals regarding a pervasive sacramentality discerned in nature and human culture alike." From the editor’s introduction to David Brown, God in a Single Vision: Integrating Philosophy and Theology, ed.
John F. Kennedys presidency became inextricably linked to Camelot after his wife, Jacqueline Kennedy, revealed in a Life article following his assassination that the Broadway cast recording had been one of his favorite records, particularly the song "Camelot" and the lines "Don't let it be forgot/That once there was a spot/For one brief shining moment/that was known as Camelot." Davidson, in The Reel Arthur, notes that there are no true correspondences between Kennedy and Arthurian characters, which was fortunate considering the film centered around an adulterous love triangle. In creating the association between Kennedy's presidency and Camelot, Jackie Kennedy connected her husband to the hope, goodness, and glamour of Camelot. She wanted her husband to be remembered as "well-meaning, fallibly human but ultimately idealistic," devoted to his country's interests above his own.

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