Logic
in sentence
1214 examples of Logic in a sentence
But if we follow the natural flow of algorithmic logic, a more meritocratic and communitarian culture will be inevitable.
The
logic
of current economic conditions implies that governments should be taking advantage of ultra-low interest rates to invest in infrastructure projects, which would both stimulate demand and improve the structure of the economy.
Of course, Sarkozy would be surprised to be told that the same
logic
should lead to a declaration of repentance by the French state to Algeria, not to mention to the Algerian soldiers who fought under the French banner, the so-called “Harkis,” many of whom were abandoned to a terrible fate when France left the country in a hurry.
Eliminate such practices, the
logic
goes, and officials will be unable to reap large rewards from economic growth – and thus will be less motivated to encourage it.
But there are holes in this logic, too.
The
logic
of a summer provocation was abundantly clear in 1914.
Vacation
logic
was also used to maximize bargaining power in recent cases of default or threatened default.
The
logic
behind the separation was absolutely clear: banks whose deposits were insured by the taxpayers should not be allowed to speculate with their depositors’ money.
The
logic
is used in designing everything from fences to fishing nets.
They look upon economics as an ideological battleground, where all views can be entertained without being confronted with logic, much less with facts.
Today, chess programs have become so good that even grandmasters sometimes struggle to understand the
logic
behind some of their moves.
Austerity’s underlying
logic
is that budget cuts, by reducing the debt burden and restoring confidence, ultimately enhance stability and support growth.
Perhaps there is no underlying foreign-policy logic, but only carelessness.
If there is a kind of logic, however weak, it seems to revolve around Iran and Israel, rather than Syria per se.
The metaphor comes from the famous mathematician and computer scientist Alan Turing, who, along with John von Neumann and other theoreticians, uncovered the link between the mathematics of whole numbers and
logic.
The puzzle is why neither the compelling self-destructive
logic
of autocratic rule nor the mounting evidence of deteriorating regime performance in China has persuaded even some of the most knowledgeable observers that the end of CCP rule is now a distinct possibility.
Of course, the
logic
behind calls to restrict our freedoms has a simplistic appeal: extremists use our freedoms to commit their crimes, so preventing the abuse of freedom requires curtailing freedom’s scope.
But now the West itself is rejecting the order that it created, often using the very same
logic
of sovereignty that the rising powers used.
The markets, in their wisdom, rejected this
logic
for more than a year.
In any case, Kudrin’s economic and financial
logic
is even more valid today than it was at his dismissal from office.
By this narrow logic, when it comes to the pharmaceutical industry, we should be unconcerned if drug firms’ share prices are boosted not by new discoveries, but by financial maneuvers, such as share buybacks or tax inversion.
This can be discerned in the data, though in the United States a large part of the increase in inequality is due not to this
logic
but to the rise of what Piketty calls “super-managers,” who earn extremely high salaries (though he does not tell us why).
But these criticisms reflect an inability to contemplate the current nature of armed conflict, which no longer follows the classical
logic
of military victory or defeat.
By this logic, international trade should be regulated not by rules and institutions, but through unilateral protectionist measures and arm-twisting.
The
logic
of Russia's presidential regime dictates that only the leader is permitted to control political institutions.
All other attempts to shape the political atmosphere and influence events, especially by a powerful oligarch, violate this
logic.
But the crowding-out
logic
applies only to conditions of full employment, conditions that clearly do not exist in most of Europe today.
If one side’s destruction is not so assured, the
logic
of MAD breaks down.
That is the
logic
that drove EU Council President Donald Tusk to declare that the UK has two options: hard Brexit or no Brexit.
It is also the
logic
behind member states’ refusal to engage in pre-negotiations or to accept a transitional arrangement.
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