On the previous time trial, he had been outclassed by Ullrich and suddenly looked fallible. |
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It's easy to make him too perfect and aloof, but if he's too fallible then he's not Superman. |
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Do we want a hero with universal vision, or would we prefer a fallible creature, confusing and confused? |
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Furthermore, one does not have to look far to see that their judgments are all too frequently fallible. |
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Doctors are no longer remote gods of the white coat but increasingly hassled and fallible human beings. |
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Sometimes we fail simply because we are poor, dumb, fallible, feckless human beings whose best-laid schemes gang aft agley. |
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But the system is far from fallible and the reality is somewhat disgusting. |
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In order to savour the flashing returns and the artistic volleys, we must suffer the faltering second serve and the fallible forehand. |
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However, concern has also been expressed that existing security measures are fallible. |
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This made no philosophical sense, because human justice is both finite and fallible. |
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How can you force such people to leave on the strength of a fallible weather forecast? |
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However strongly a person may feel that he or she is right, human memory is notoriously fallible. |
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They now say that clinical trials are misused, abused, misleading, biased, and fallible. |
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There had been a moment when he looked fallible, when trying to reach for a Paul Millar free-kick. |
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We human beings are fallible creatures, and we have a habit of seeing only the survivors of a set of experiences. |
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No one could imagine Margaret Thatcher appearing on television to admit that she was fallible. |
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But, like all living creatures, birds are fallible even without the storms and transoceanic journeys. |
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Her priests and ordinands are fallible human beings, but they are serious about their faith and committed to their calling. |
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They have shown how fallible is our belief in the centrality of human values. |
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But the expert rules are fallible, and there will always be false positives and false negatives. |
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The state has no innate moral compass to guide it and the people who should be its guide are all too fallible. |
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But we do the best we can in elections, with limited information and fallible judgment. |
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We cannot prevent ourselves from falling ill, humans are too fallible, and we love doing things that damage us. |
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For Hayek, the schemes of fallible human beings are more likely to end in disaster than to solve any problems. |
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And anyway, if Brecht did not want us to feel for Mother Courage, why did he make her so richly shaded and humanly fallible? |
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It was the rest of him that was made of fallible human clay. |
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How can a devotee of Chaucer feel otherwise when the liturgy recalls what the church historically is-a parade of human beings fallible and peccable? |
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Dr Martin Luther King Jr was also at times as fallible as the next human. |
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While the authors never suggest that the judges in question were bad, their work does find judges to be fallible when it comes to ignoring inadmissible evidence. |
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So managers of big corporations understandably seek to replace fallible or potentially dishonest employees with machines. |
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We may have almost demiurgic power over it, but we can rely only on our fallible good wills to guide us in our constructions. |
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Given the financial system's fallibility, regulation is bound to be fallible too. |
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We have argued before that rigorous security screening would eliminate the need for this fallible polygraph process. |
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That said, it was the Norwich defence that undermined them here, with both centre-halves and the goalkeeper, John Ruddy, fallible. |
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Eventually neutral umpires were brought in to eliminate the issue of home bias. But the naked eye is still fallible. |
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Its constitution rests on the notion that the people in charge are fallible. |
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Let me go back, I have made one little error, reminding me of my fallible human nature. |
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Let us not be arrogant owners of the earth, but fallible administrators: tomorrow's children will ask us to account for our use of the earth. |
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We are relying to a great extent on the fallible or human character of the first test, but not for the second, I understand. |
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It is very important for accountability because this piece of legislation, along with all legislation, is fallible. |
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The purpose of allowing a witness to reread his or her statements is to help to «refresh» potentially fallible memories. |
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We are very fallible as in previous legislation, so it is very important that the element of accountability be put in. |
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As long as human justice remains fallible, the risk of executing the innocent can never be eliminated. |
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She is fallible, and I believe what she has stated is confusing, and it's causing a major, major problem for this. |
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Discussions give us a chance to test our own fallible beliefs against the facts and the logic of our interlocutors. |
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Consistent monitoring and enforcement of standards can be both expensive and fallible. |
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It recognises that prevention efforts notwithstanding, road users will remain fallible and crashes will occur. |
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Because human knowledge is so limited and fallible, the order we perceive in society would seem to be an unintended consequence of private decisions driven by self-love. |
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A wine consumption map of the U.S. is as fallible as that wine map of Europe. |
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In fairness, like glossies anywhere, French tabloids are fallible, prone to playing up alleged trysts that fall flat. |
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They reveal an altogether vulnerable, fallible person with ambition, passion, and doubt. |
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They are not ethereal beings but fallible, the same as the rest of us. |
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But it just goes to show how fallible presumptions and assumptions can be. |
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The masters of war, it turns out, are as fallible as the rest of us. |
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But you have 800 people in a battalion, and you just don't have the time to be doing that, so you'd be doing it by questionnaires, and questionnaires are fallible. |
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The Church is divine and holy in its origin and vocation, but it is unmistakably human because it has been entrusted to a fallible and sinful humanity. |
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Even the most motivated employees are fallible and may make mistakes. |
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It is therefore essential, from an ethical point of view, to keep affirming that technology is fallible and to forbid automatic decision making, especially in domains such as security and justice. |
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Juries are occasionally perverse, frequently fallible and invariably slow. |
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Not only because all humans including ourselves are fallible, weak and liable to make mistakes, but more importantly because none of us, individually or together, is powerful or all-knowing enough to save the world. |
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But fallible humans, with their fallen nature, will demand cakes and ale. |
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He notes: It was included in the Charter for a very good reason: a belief that there should be a parliamentary check on a fallible judiciarys decisions on the metes and bounds of our fundamental rights and freedoms. |
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It just makes you unfashionably fallible like everybody else. |
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Moreover, I have often pointed out that any such refutation is fallible. |
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