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There was an account of psychology that was taken to show man as irredeemably selfish.
ECONOMIST: Britain��s first modern philosopher
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It can then impose conditions, or even order mergers unpicked if it thinks them irredeemably anti-competitive.
ECONOMIST: Competition policy in Brazil
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Dorsey yearns to create streamlined beauty out of giant ungainly systems that at first glance appear to be irredeemably chaotic.
WSJ: Simplicity and Order for All | Innovator of the Year 2012 Technology
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When it came to designing this space, there are probably a dozen ways in which it could have slipped irredeemably into tackiness.
FORBES: Just the ticket
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On the one hand, the collapse of the financial system has been taken as proof that bankers are incorrigibly, irredeemably naughty children.
BBC: If banks are treated as naughty kids...
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That should lay to rest the myth that Germany is irredeemably anti-consumer (although quality of service still leaves much to be desired).
ECONOMIST: A changing relationship between a nation and its clocks
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Certainly, hardliners in India, convinced that Pakistan is irredeemably wedded to the Kashmir insurgency and to causing terror in Indian cities, think the peace process is doomed.
ECONOMIST: India and Pakistan
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Or was he supposed to pass up the chance in 2004 to sell Rupert Murdoch some cheap insurance against charges that his media empire is irredeemably biased?
FORBES: Don't Hate On Al Gore for His $30 Million Apple Score
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It is the object of endless lectures about taxes and wages that are too high, welfare and pension benefits that are too generous, east German states that have become subsidy junkies and a labour market that is irredeemably sclerotic.
ECONOMIST: The German economy
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Whether or not he actually said "God is in the details, " the deceptive simplicity (nothing is more difficult than simplicity) of his rigorously stripped-down style -- "almost nothing, " in his own words again -- suffered a dizzying decline from exquisite to pedestrian to irredeemably banal in the hands of those who exploited it as a cheap, uncomplicated and highly profitable way to put up big commercial buildings.
WSJ: How Less Became More