Sentences with phrase «at least i think things»

At least I think things are done differently here as I've never come across this topic before.

Not exact matches

And I've noticed at least one thing about the Plasticity platform that made me think it could lead to positive changes in our workplace.
At the ery least, doing business requires a degree of mutual respect, embodied in our commitment to getting things from others by offering them what we think they want in return.
These «little» leaders who are drinking their own Kool - Aid and who think you can fool all of the people at least some of the time (while you're trying to figure things out) are on their way to a rude awakening and an abrupt collision.
Then I started to think of it in terms of probability, which is when that poker craze happened — at least in Canada — where poker became a thing and people were talking about odds and stuff.
«It's one of the things that makes me optimistic about America because when I look at what we have accomplished using half our talent for a couple of centuries, and now I think of doubling the talent that is effectively employed — or at least has the chance to be — it makes me very optimistic about this country,» Buffett says.
I guarantee you've been in at least one meeting where someone says, «Look, I don't think this is the right thing to do, but I've been told we're going to do it anyway.
They're outliers on at least a handful of spectrums; maybe you're extremely intelligent or highly outgoing and charismatic, or maybe you are compulsive and tend to jump into things without thinking.
«But at least I want to understand your thinking why this problem is the right problem and the way to solve the problem in the market and your flexibility to move things around as the market demand changes and ultimately converges between the product and the market fit.»
You can always make up a good story about something you think you've learned, and no matter how bad things are going, you can always find at least one chart in Google Analytics that is up and to the right.
I don't think things will get better until the inflation target is raised, at least there is an increasing number of influential people talking about it.
I can tell you one thing for certain, I'm not going to sit back on my wooden stool in my empty house thinking smugly that I may not be enjoying a nice drive, but at least my bank account has eight zeroes.
If I, a mere mortal, can at least think of a better way, why could the all powerful thing not make it so?
This time I think I am laughing at myself for some of the things I adhered to strongly (and can at least still be tempted to adhere to) either of my own volition or through cultural influences.
I do admit that McCain is a very good man though and I would have trusted him to at least do the right things on most accounts except he tends to be a Neo-con which I think Amnerica has no place pushing Democracy (or anything for that matter) by military force.
She was actually named after yeast FUNGUS and a plant; Again, I need to do more research, but in order to take a article seriously, you need to address the source first This woman, as educated as she MAY be, (having a degree, and knowing how to use it are two different things) spent her earliest, most developmentally crucial years under the direction of at least one parent who thought NOTHING of saddling their kid with this name.
And once I started going to therapists and doing all this work to undo — or at least to examine that stuff — I slowly started finding that at the end of the day I have all of these big questions, and yeah, I don't really know how clearly I believe all the things I used to, but at the bottom of all of that, I think I'm a believer.
So at least to some, one would think they have a view that man has dominion over all other living things.
its not sad, it might be scary for you to believe things just are but at least we do not go through life doing good out of fear of god, we do not go through life thinking the after life will be better.
I think that one thing at least we can learn is not to respond to others in the same way when they disagree with us.
But one thing I don't think will ever change, but again, I absolutely believe that at least one person at sometime over another, chose to either be religious, or go from typical belief status to fanatical for the wrong reason (s).
And I have thought about doing this for at least a year and a half today, I woke up and thought «You keep begging God for help but when you feel a direction to go, you don't do it, You stop / fear that things will be worse, And they are worse for your non-actions.
But I get you in that we need anough peace and confidence in «where I think things might be at the moment» to at least live our lives.
Perhaps the culture of religion (at least as I have experienced it) so muddies our thinking concerning this thing called love.
Pixley charges Whitehead's thought with three things: (1) that it is «at the very least... open to appropriation for counterrevolutionary purposes;» (2) that «Justice shines by its absence» from Whitehead's list of five cultural aims as the measure of civilized life; and (3) that Whitehead's philosophy contains within it latent counterrevolutionary tendencies.»
the media, gov» t, retail, etc... Manipulation is also used a lot by people who belive in something and when they think other people should believe in the same thing... We've all been guilty of this... at least I have anyways... keep on rocking the boat Dave!
In short, I think humans ruin things by their nature, and they even ruin things that are meant to (or at least have the potential to) save them.
I think there are at least one thing to consider: how you say things.
I think its a good thing that there is a trend of college students that are rethinking hookups, and at least waiting for a more substantial relationship to have $ ex.
You do not understand everything the Christian church teaches, you say, and some things that you think you do understand you do not believe, but you at least see enough in the kind of faith and life for which Christianity stands so that you would like to do something about it.
Speaking on whether the letter will help he said: «I think we have experienced in the past that if there's international people speaking out about these things then some governments at least do take notice.»
It is so easy for people to judge, but till you have something like this happens in our life, then we can understand, my son ended his life 6 years ago, we had no sign of anything, any of all the parents or not parents pointing the finger at this family, shame on you cuz, things happen when you least expect them, if we had known what to do, do you think we would not have done it.
At the same time, Stove maintains that «Darwinism says many things, especially about our species, which are too obviously false to be believed by an educated person; or at least by an educated person who retains any capacity at all for critical thought.&raquAt the same time, Stove maintains that «Darwinism says many things, especially about our species, which are too obviously false to be believed by an educated person; or at least by an educated person who retains any capacity at all for critical thought.&raquat least by an educated person who retains any capacity at all for critical thought.&raquat all for critical thought
Some people say that change isn't possible, but he thinks that with God all things are, and he at least wants to try to do his part.
At the least, I thought, I would be challenged to see things differently.
A modern critical - thinking treatment of US history would be more sympathetic towards the indians and at least would examine the British point of view during the War of Independence, things that our grandparents wouldn't have been exposed to.
But Meilaender reminded me that Christianity does not think of death as natural, at least not in the ultimate scheme of things.
Essentially, this is a set of sexual Geneva conventions: You never knew it, but not only do you have the right to minimal standards of treatment if you ever become a prisoner of war, but when you were five, you had the right to learn at school all kinds of things about what some people like to do in bed, and if your parents thought that really they'd rather you didn't hear about that stuff at school, or at least not yet, they were... well, they were violating your rights.
Hegel was wrong, so far as I can tell, about most things, but he was right at least about this: the movement of thought is, in the sense just mentioned, dialectical.
were at least as subtle, coherent and devoutly held as anything homegrown, and those who did not learn from World War II and the decolonial period not to identify cultural - linguistic traditions with Christianity, are learning from contemporary cross-cultural exposures that many things thought to be unique are in fact quite common.
The thought of every piece of private property — inherent in each piece as such — is at least turned against all wealthier private property in the form of envy and the urge to reduce things to a common level, so that this envy and urge even constitute the essence of competition.
I'm not morally free, either — I think it takes someone much stronger and more - disciplined than I to attain such a thing, however I've managed to cull up a few ideas that make moral freedom at least understandable.
At least he was sincere and thought he was doing a good thing.
I think for the majority of believers who sub.scribe to any particular faith, an ecu.minical service can be a dis.app.ointing thing... Not to say it isn't right for those who believe that all religions point the same way or something similar, but at least as a Christian I can say an ecu.min.ical service is not a place to go for a sermon.
However I think at least for my own sake I need to voice a few things.
We seek (to borrow a line of thought from Kierkegaard) to make things easier; Lewis always seemed, by contrast, to be determined (like Kierkegaard himself to offer as his contribution to make things harder — or, at least (to be fair) not to soft - peddle or back away from the difficulties that Whitehead's thought presented.
We Are the Change We Seek: The Speeches of Barack Obamaedited by e. j. dionne jr. and joy - ann reidbloomsbury, 376 pages, $ 25 The one thing we know about Barack Obama — at least, we think we know it — is that he is a great orator.
The beliefs are just so far out there for me, that whenever I see someone in ardent support of them I have to think they're a troll, because I don't know how they could possibly believe or accept that (there are a few exceptions of people who pt things very well, cite supporting evidence, and are consistent and coherent - I don't agree with them, but I can at least understand what they're saying)
Doc, I think we can agree, at least, on one thing.
So, I asked you to nail down at least one thing that you thought was essential and you denied there was any requirement for faith by saying, «It just is».
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