vote Posesivo conscience - translation to English
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vote Posesivo conscience - translation to English

DISCRETIONARY VOTES, PARTICULARLY IN PARLIAMENTARY SYSTEMS
Free vote; Conscience Issues; Conscience issues; Conscious vote; Free votes; Vote of conscience

conscience         
  • [[Global warming]] protestors in Chicago 2008
  • [[Gao Zhisheng]] human rights lawyer abducted in China
  • [[Adam Smith]]: conscience shows what relates to ourselves in its proper shape and dimensions
  • [[Albert Einstein]] associated conscience with suprapersonal thoughts, feelings and aspirations.
  • Schopenhauer]] considered that the good conscience we experience after an unselfish act verifies that our true self exists outside our physical person
  • The medieval Persian philosopher [[Ibn Sina]] ([[Avicenna]]) developed a sensory deprivation thought experiment to explore the relationship between conscience and God
  • [[Henry David Thoreau]]: Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the least degree, resign his conscience to the legislator?
  • [[Marcus Aurelius]] bronze fragment, Louvre, Paris: "To move from one unselfish action to another with God in mind. Only there, delight and stillness."
  • [[Dietrich Bonhoeffer]] (1932)
  • J.S. Bach]]. Original page from Credo (Symbolum Nicenum) section of [[Mass in B minor]]
  • [[Charles Darwin]] thought that any animal endowed with well-marked social instincts would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as its intellectual powers approximated man's.
  • [[Anton Pavlovich Chekhov]]. Tretyakov Gallery.
  • Illustration of [[François Chifflart]] (1825–1901) for ''La Conscience'' (by [[Victor Hugo]])
  • [[Darfur]] [[refugee camp]] in [[Chad]]: a challenge to the world's conscience.
  • Protests in India against the [[2012 Delhi gang rape case]]
  • [[Fyodor Dostoevsky]], author of ''[[Crime and Punishment]]''
  • [[Eugène Delacroix]], ''[[Hamlet]] and Horatio in the Graveyard'' (1839, oil on canvas)
  • Amnesty International protects prisoners of conscience. Stamp from Faroe Islands, 1986.
  • Gandhi in Noakhali, 1946: civil resistance or [[satyagraha]]
  • Siddhartha]]''.
  • [[Immanuel Kant]]: the moral law within us has true infinity.
  • Internet Map. [[Ninian Smart]] predicts global communication will facilitate ''world conscience''.
  • Jan van Ruysbroeck]] viewed a pure conscience as facilitating "an outflowing losing of oneself in the abyss of that eternal object which is the highest and chief blessedness"
  • [[Jeremy Bentham]]: "[[Fanaticism]] never sleeps ... it is never stopped by ''conscience''; for it has pressed ''conscience'' into its service."
  • [[John Locke]] viewed the widespread social fact of conscience as a justification for natural rights.
  • [[John Ralston Saul]]: consumers risk turning over their conscience to technical experts and to the ideology of free markets
  • [[Lester Ott]], [[conscientious objector]] during the [[First World War]]
  • [[Nikiforos Lytras]], ''Antigone in front of the dead Polynices'' (1865), oil on canvas, National Gallery of Greece-Alexandros Soutzos Museum.
  • [[Nonviolent]] protestors in [[Washington, D.C.]] in 2010 opposed to the [[Iraq War]]
  • Gravesite of [[Anna Politkovskaya]] in Russia
  • A.H.]] 509 = 1115–1116. Ghazali's crisis of epistemological skepticism was resolved by "a light which God Most High cast into my breast ... the key to most knowledge."
  • NASA climate scientist [[James Hansen]] arrested in 2011 for civil disobedience against laws allowing a tar sands oil pipeline
  • [[Graffiti]] portrait in [[Ramallah]] of murdered Arab cartoon artist [[Naji al-Ali]]
  • Gravesite of [[Neda Agha-Soltan]] in Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in Iran
  • Underwater American [[nuclear test]] in the Pacific. Worldwide expressions of 'conscience' against such explosions caused the French Government to cease atmospheric tests at [[Mururoa]] for political reasons.
  • [[Peter Singer]]: distinguished between immature "traditional" and highly reasoned "critical" conscience
  • [[Samuel Johnson]] (1775) stated that "No man's conscience can tell him the right of another man."
  • Seated [[Buddha]], [[Gandhara]], 2nd century CE. The Buddha linked conscience with compassion for those who must endure cravings and suffering in the world until right conduct culminates in right mindfulness and right contemplation.
  • [[Sombrero Galaxy]]: A [[United Nations]] treaty declares [[Outer Space]] the [[common heritage of humanity]]. [[Garrett Hardin]] doubted the capacity of ''conscience'' to protect such commons areas
  • Benedict de Spinoza]]: moral problems and our emotional responses to them should be reasoned from the perspective of eternity.
  • [[Chiune Sugihara]] practised ''conscientious noncompliance'' in issuing visas to fleeing Jews in Lithuania in 1939
  • [[Qur’ān]] Sura 49. Surah al-Hujurat, 49:13 declares: "come to know each other, the noblest of you, in the sight of God, are the ones possessing taqwá".
  • On the Threshold of Eternity]]''.
  • War criminal [[Adolf Eichmann]] in passport used to enter Argentina: his conscience spoke with the "respectable voice" of the indoctrinated wartime German society that surrounded him.
  • Holman Hunt]], 1853
JUDGMENT THAT ASSISTS IN DISTINGUISHING RIGHT FROM WRONG
Scruple; Scrupulous; Scruples; Over-scrupulous; Pang of conscience
(n.) = consciencia, conciencia
Ex: The general conclusion was that librarians cannot avoid acting as censors, but should do so only with full awareness and a good conscience.
----
* conscience money = dinero para acallar la conciencia, dinero para acallar la consciencia
* conscience-stricken = atormentado
* nag at + the conscience = remorder la conciencia
* nagging conscience = gusanillo de la conciencia, el
* prick + conscience = remorder la conciencia
* prickling conscience = gusanillo de la conciencia, el
* prisoner of conscience = preso político, prisionero político
* salve + the conscience = acallar la voz de + Posesivo + conciencia
* search + Posesivo + conscience = examinar + Posesivo + conciencia
* stifle + conscience = acallar la conciencia
* sting of conscience, the = gusanillo de la conciencia, el
* subconscience = subconsciencia
* voice of conscience, the = voz de la conciencia, la
* vote + Posesivo + conscience = votar según la conciencia de Uno
spoilt         
  • Spoilt ballot paper from the [[2016 Kazakh legislative election]] reading "Бойкот Выборам" which means ''Boycott the elections.''
BALLOT THAT IS INVALID AND IS THUS NOT INCLUDED IN THE FINAL VOTE COUNT
Spoiled ballot; Spoiled vote; Spoilt ballot; Informal vote; Spoilt paper; Void vote; Null vote; Residual vote; Stray votes; Ballot spoiling; Spoilt; Informal ballot; Invalid vote; Stray vote; Rejected vote; Spoilt votes
pasado y participio pasado de spoil
prisoner of conscience         
  • Saudi Arabian Embassy]] in London against detention of Saudi blogger [[Raif Badawi]], 2017
ANYONE IMPRISONED FOR THEIR DEMOGRAPHICS, BELIEFS, OR THE NONVIOLENT EXPRESSION THEREOF
Prisoners of conscience; Prisoner of Conscience; Prisoner of consience
(n.) = preso político, prisionero político
Ex: They accepted the government's brazen lies stating that Ramón Colás, the co-founder of the library movement, has not been arrested as a prisoner of conscience.

Definition

free vote
¦ noun chiefly Brit. a parliamentary division in which members vote according to their own beliefs rather than following a party policy.

Wikipedia

Conscience vote

A conscience vote or free vote is a type of vote in a legislative body where legislators are allowed to vote according to their own personal conscience rather than according to an official line set down by their political party. In a parliamentary system, especially within the Westminster system, it can also be used to indicate crossbench members of a hung parliament where confidence and supply is provided to allow formation of a minority government but the right to vote on conscience is retained. Free votes are found in Canadian and some British legislative bodies; conscience votes are used in Australian and New Zealand legislative bodies.

Under the Westminster system, MPs who belong to a political party are usually required by that party to vote in accordance with the party line on significant legislation, on pain of censure or expulsion from the party. Sometimes a particular party member known as the party whip is responsible for maintaining this party discipline. However, in the case of a conscience vote, a party declines to dictate an official party line to follow and members may vote as they please. In countries where party discipline is less important and voting against one's party is more common, conscience votes are generally less important.

In most countries, conscience votes are quite rare and are often about issues which are very contentious, or a matter on which the members of any single party differ in their opinions; thus making it difficult for parties to formulate official policies. Usually, a conscience vote will be about religious, moral or ethical issues rather than about administrative or financial ones. Matters such as the prohibition of alcohol, abortion, homosexuality law reform and the legality of prostitution are often subject to conscience votes.

Sometimes a vote may be free for some parties but not for others. For instance, when the Conservative government of Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper proposed a motion to re-open the debate on Canada's same-sex marriage laws, his Conservatives and the opposition Liberals declared it a free vote for their members, while the Bloc Québécois and the New Democrats both maintained party discipline to defeat the measure.