0 to form an opinion about a situation or a person before knowing or considering all of the facts -- (未經了解全部情況)對…預先作出判斷,憑預想判斷
But the requisite set of concepts should not be prejudged.
If a case was not necessarily judged purely on its merits in the antebellum period, neither was it prejudged before it came to court.
Much of the remaining burden of the book is an attempt to characterize what those types of information might be, without prejudging their innateness.
Our present instruments prejudge what is salient for community respondents who experience traumatic events, be they individual traumas or community-wide disasters.
It prejudges the outcome of metacognition experiments with monkeys.
I do not wish to prejudge the question of what does and what does not belong to the law.
Nonetheless, not to prejudge these matters, we simply render the sixth criterion as the capacity for intellectual combination.
Moreover, how to choose samples that do not prejudge the outcome?