Judgment
in sentence
802 examples of Judgment in a sentence
His bravery in combat attests to his patriotism, courage, and toughness, but his
judgment
has been found sorely lacking time and time again over his career.
Of course, unlike the value of new friendships, the importance of economic migration is not a personal
judgment.
Their works distill the complexity of ethical questions that are too important to be safely entrusted to an overarching theory – questions that call for empathy and good judgment, which are developed through experience and cannot be formalized.
That is why the quantitative rigor, policy focus, and logic of economics must be supplemented with the empathy, judgment, and wisdom that defines the humanities at their best.
Total mortality was in the tens of millions, and stupefied contemporaries were certain they were living on the verge of the last
judgment.
“Over the long run” is a necessary proviso, because only time can deliver the final
judgment.
In both instances, the long run arrived rather quickly to render
judgment
on sheer folly.
And here is another painful thought that Harvard historian Niall Ferguson often emphasizes: many of the leaders and legislators who are passing
judgment
on new rules for banks are the same leaders and legislators who oversaw the regulation in the run-up to the financial crisis.
Since many of the elderly have much to contribute to the economy through their experience and judgment, their choice between work and retirement should not be skewed and biased by government mandates and financial incentives.
His years as SG (1997-2006) were marked by political judgment, tact, and integrity.
Within those constraints, American managers were supposed to exercise considerably more discretion than their foreign counterparts, so that they could use their business
judgment
without being shackled and second-guessed.
Whether these precautionary principles are satisfied in Libya requires expert
judgment
of the specifics of the situation.
In 1774 Edmund Burke, who had just been elected to Parliament for Bristol, told his electors that, while their wishes would have great weight with him, and their opinions would have his high respect, he would not sacrifice to them his unbiased opinion, mature judgment, or enlightened conscience.
“Your representative owes you,” he said, in an oft-quoted sentence, “not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion.”
Burke was a conservative whose insistence on elected representatives’ duty to exercise their own
judgment
was grounded in the belief that they are likely to be better informed and wiser than their constituents, and will restrain their excesses.
On the specific question of what British Members of Parliament should do given the outcome of the referendum, Burke would argue that they should vote in accordance with their unbiased opinion, mature judgment, and enlightened conscience.
In due course, the Treasury would reach a
judgment
that would be technically expert, economically impartial, and politically neutral.
At the end of the day, it’s a
judgment
call.
It's a matter of judgment, and others might disagree, but in my view the lucky factory farmed pigs are those shot on the farm.
I think this
judgment
is wrong.
Economic debates also frequently place in opposition to one another those who emphasize unconstrained
judgment
and those who regard consistency as the gold standard of good policy.
But ensuring that "justice is done," as US Secretary of State Colin Powell promised, means that
judgment
must not stop at the low-ranking soldiers who were foolish enough to pose for demented snapshots.
A similar rush to
judgment
occurred in the wake of massive tornado outbreaks in the US in recent years, even though the scientific literature does not offer strong support for such a connection.
Were these decisions the result of hubris and errors in
judgment
or the product of flawed incentives?
A North Korea with the ability to threaten the US homeland might conclude it had little to fear from the US military, a
judgment
that could lead it to launch a conventional, non-nuclear attack on South Korea.
The
judgment
by the German court is the less spectacular of the two, but it addresses the heart of the ECB’s interpretation of the Maastricht Treaty.
First came the resignation of IMF chief economist Michael Mussa, a formidable University of Chicago-educated economist renowned for good
judgment.
A person in the manic phase of bipolar disorder has, in addition to serious, even life-threatening lapses in judgment, an extraordinary sense of well-being that the mentally well rarely, if ever, experience.
On the other hand, 62% thought he had poor
judgment
and 65% considered him reckless.
Their work had to do with
judgment
and decision-making – what makes our thoughts and actions rational or irrational.
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