Mutuality in a sentence as a noun

LOL, I assume they are paid = a high degree of mutuality.

Often tech hires have a mutuality clause. Were you hired and paid on a monthly basis?

Trust always depends on mutuality. DRM means they don't trust you by default assuming you are going to use the content illegally.

I think in a healthy way I am re-thinking the mutuality of friendship. I will invest my energies more wisely going forward.

Something should gate that, probably through the mutuality of having each other on each other's contact list.

This is the subject of MLK's writing on justice and mutuality, that 'an injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere' as well as Niemöller's poem about 'first they came for&;&.' .

They didn't say one way or the other whether the language was pure FP, but I don't think any of the examples featured mutuality

"the Chinese language has no word for *mutuality*" Did you mean what you said seriously/literally? Or is it a phishing question to see which commenter speaks Chinese?

Successful relationships require mutuality, not "you need to impress me".

Applying mutuality principle: how can we mutually benefit from our mistakes? 4.

I don't know - my personal solution to this problem is one of reciprocity and mutuality in my business etiquette. If I'm going to spend all day working at a coffee shop, I'm going to buy a fair bit of stuff, too.

> I see that you do not understand mutuality. There is no mutuality, in contract terms, if I or my agent have not communicated with you or your agent A contract can be formed with one way communication.

Economic models can vary widely depending on whether they're based around mutuality or extraction of rents.

> mutuality or extraction of rents. bigger governments create more rent opportunities.

We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.”

We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.

Dr. Ilan Diamant argues that organizations depend on trust and good faith: "Relations in which we feel that we are being used, in which there is no mutuality, are dangerous. When hitches like that arise they need to be corrected immediately, not at the level of the employee but at the level of the system."

The self-organisation described is not pure mutuality, it's just delegation from the shareholders, who currently trust that the organisation's self-organising will most likely give them the best return. Ultimately they have the right to reorganise you.

We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny.” I have always found a profound parallel between that quote and the seventh principle of the Unitarian Universalist Association – that we affirm and promote respect for the interdependent web of all life, of which we are a part.

Maybe not single out China, but many people think China is particularly untrustworthy: they insist Chinese law is used outside China, and lecture people how they should refer to China in public; they operate concentration camps; the Chinese language has no word for *mutuality*, China benefits from free speech and access to institutions in the West but doesn't allow the same in China for journalists or businessmen; China treats Chinese-speaking minority in Western countries as Chinese citizens, and even blackmails them by threating their family; Winnie the Pooh is extremely thin-skinned and can have games like Devotion removed from Steam and GOG even after the reference is removed from the secret area in the game; there are many instances where businesses with Chinese shareholders were pressured not to publish anything mildly critical of China. BBC team visiting China investigating covid19 faced obstacles reminiscent of The Truman Show; WHO scientists investigating covid19 recently not permitted into China; China doesn't even formally frown at corruption; Journalists disappear or regularly get sentences in China; Western liberal democracies have flaws, but I'll take Western values over Chinese values, thank you very much.

Mutuality definitions

noun

a reciprocality of sentiments; "the mutuality of their affection was obvious"

See also: mutualness

noun

a reciprocal relation between interdependent entities (objects or individuals or groups)

See also: interdependence interdependency