0 past simple and past participle of reconcile
1 to find a way in which two situations or beliefs that are opposed to each other can agree and exist together:
However, research findings and theoretical developments are rarely reconciled or integrated with economic research.
The role of the villa might remain the space that enables contemplation to become an ethos, and for action to become reconciled with poetry.
They might be reconciled by specifying which types of media have what types of effects on which types of people.
A clinician and a social scientist independently abstracted each document, using a 397-item healthcare ethics taxonomy; a reconciled abstraction form was used for analysis.
This contradiction was routinely reconciled in the image of two kinds of ' deserving ' citizen, those who are productive citizen and those unable to help themselves.
First, our author argues, because maps, classifications, schemes and the like cannot be reconciled with change.
On the other hand, the judge's role is shaped by the normative obligation of neutrality as reconciled with the practical demands for efficiency.
Importantly, neither of these findings can be easily reconciled with a pragmatic account of the disambiguation effect.