Yet Rue's words made sense: one could not oppose violence with violence.
2
He said a common sense approach to the Covid-19 situation was needed.
3
She said the bylaw takes a common sense approach to the problem.
4
Good management that combined business sense with investments in health and education.
5
Building a nuclear power plant in the United Kingdom makes simple sense.
1
The sensation of the crisis affected the atmosphere of the entire house.
2
For good? The question produced an odd, tight sensation in his windpipe.
3
The sensation is quite liberating, actually, for the good Sister and I.
4
Death is the end of all things-ofconsciousness; of sensation; of happiness.
5
The affair was known in the sensation press as the 'Bermondsey Horror'.
1
The nodes brought them sentience, the supergiant's surplus energy brings them transcendence.
2
Only our passage was soundless, and we ourselves disembodied points of sentience.
3
If not, where did our intelligence, sentience, emotions, and morality come from?
4
To do these things, Mancuso argues, plants have developed smarts and sentience.
5
But sentience was a gift, a gift AIs appreciated all too well.
1
This is yet one more sensoryfaculty which evolution might well have left us, for our greater advantage.
1
Rutherford paced up and down the room in a stress of sentiency.
2
But in all the stillness, what sentiency, what passion-asin her heart!
3
And I remember what another pessimist of sentiency has uttered: Transient are all.
4
There was rather a memorable moment of sentiency just there.
5
When a breath of wind came, it was like a hot breath of some fierce sentiency.
6
With this idea of a primordial substance there is necessarily associated the idea of a universal sentiency.
7
It is only with the rise of sentiency in the animal world that the subject-matter of ethics originates.
8
But that this sentiency goes as far as the poet describes, is of course pure fancy.]
9
It was tenanted by a being all sentiency, which saw him through her visor as a passer-by in a gallery.
10
Presently a warm glow flowed up into Skag's feet, filling his person and extending his physical sentiency into her body.
11
All matter, according to Buddhism, represents aggregated sentiency, making, by its inherent tendencies, toward conditions of pain or pleasure, evil or good.
12
To many minds such a faith will seem incompatible with belief in the ultimate destruction of sentiency amid the general doom of the material universe.
13
To Buddhist conception all matter is sentient,-thesentiency varying according to condition: "even rocks and stones," a Japanese Buddhist text declares, "can worship Buddha."
14
Rutherford paced up and down the room in a stress of sentiency.
15
But in all the stillness, what sentiency, what passion-asin her heart!
16
And I remember what another pessimist of sentiency has uttered: Transient are all.