nothing to choose between

English

Phrase

nothing to choose between

  1. effectively no difference between
    • 1883 James Fitzjames Stephen A History of the Criminal Law of England
      It seems to me that there is nothing to choose between the two men, and, that cases may be put in which reckless indifference to the fate of a person intentionally subjected to deadly injury is, if possible, morally worse than an actual intent to kill.
    • 2012 Communicating Risks to the Public: International Perspectives page 169
      A natural consequence of this view is sheer agnosticism or scepticism: if a news story is totally balanced, there is nothing to choose between the two positions.

References

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