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: --
These contrasting views can be reconciled by the fact that both support the premise that distance causes reduction in genetic cohesion, albeit for different reasons.
How may this seemingly contradictory evidence be reconciled?
While he is technically correct that some studies demonstrate abnormalities and some do not, these differences are easily reconciled within a meaningful framework.
However, for social choice with non-transitive indifference equal value of life principles may be reconciled with this requirement.
Seeming experimental discrepancies may thus be reconciled after the structural properties of experimental stimuli are examined.
It demonstrates that structure sharing and resource sensitivity can be reconciled without giving up or relaxing either notion.
In political speeches and policy documents the tensions between equity, need and choice are reconciled into a seamless narrative of the move towards modernity.
Importantly, neither of these findings can be easily reconciled with a pragmatic account of the disambiguation effect.