Judging in a sentence as a noun

I'll try and comment on a few of these, judging from my experience with how things transpired here.

It's hard not to feel it smacks of myopia, of judging others through the wrong side of the binoculars.

I thought this feeling was extremely common, but judging by what gets to the front of HN I'm in the minority here.

Part of being intelligent and shrewd is listening to the words that people say, and judging arguments based on their merit.

The submitted site seems to be having trouble keeping up with the referrals from Hacker News, judging by its response time.

I think it's awfully premature to go around judging who is 'the bad guy', and that it's quite possible both or neither of them have done less than stellar things.

If they allow some illegal behavior and not some other, they are actually judging the morality of an act, and not if it respect laws.

What evidence is there that these particular women are sexist?You are judging particular people based on statistics that you think you know about groups of people.

He must be on the interstate, judging from the road gradient we can hear.- Dick joins from his laptop, where the microphone is conveniently part of the same physical device as the keyboard.

So Microsoft is peeking into private folders, and judging the contents based on political and religious values not inscribed in any law?

Judging definitions

noun

the cognitive process of reaching a decision or drawing conclusions

See also: judgment judgement