Sentences with phrase «draws same conclusions»

Using this lens, we draw the same conclusion: It's very early — the equivalent of where the internet was in the early to mid-1990s.
Gettlemen watches a ton of tape and if he draws the same conclusion get ready for Barkley.
«Mustafi seems to still be making the same mistakes he made earlier this season,» Keown said about the German, drawing the same conclusion as many others.
For example, this study concluded that eating an apple without the fiber (which is what occurs with juicing) drastically reduced the apple's health benefits (7), and other studies have drawn this same conclusion.
We watch, laugh and quickly draw the same conclusions: Donald Trump - sized wallet, paid escort, daddy figure.
Maybe you're drawing the same conclusion we did: consumers in the dating space need an advocate.
I should have drawn that same conclusion.»»
I understand now that his sense of betrayal shook his world — he didn't have the facts, and could only draw the same conclusion as everyone else did about why she was keeping silent about the facts.
Perhaps the cleansed and trended data will bear him out, but there are a couple of points where I'm not necessarily drawing the same conclusions he is when looking at the same data.
I give you numerous links to credible forums and information websites so you can draw the same conclusions I did about the quality of their information.
But investors drew the same conclusion in 1999... and they were dead wrong.
It's like you're saying the same thing as me, but not drawing the same conclusion.
With no other obvious function, it's safe to assume players will draw the same conclusion.
Their work built on earlier analysis drawing the same conclusion.
I find it hard to draw the same conclusion in looking at my coverage, which has long included the voices of researchers challenging the predominant line of thinking on climate science, among them Roger Pielke Sr., Richard Lindzen, who was quoted in the 2006 article you read, John Christy, Ivar Giaever (a Nobelist who rejects the science pointing to dangerous greenhouse warming) and others.
They are all reading the (scientific) writing on the wall and drawing the same conclusions: climate change is not a hoax, it's real and it's going to cost everyone a lot of money.
I'm not meaning to be alarmist but if you surfed / sat on the same beach almost every day in CA for the last 30 years you would draw the same conclusion.
For example, his Figure 3 presents the same data in the same way as my Figure 1, and he draws the same conclusion from it as we do in our paper.
Mann et al in fact drew those same conclusions in their most recent work on this problem (PNAS, 2008).
Any GC who has reviewed data from TyMetrix would quickly draw the same conclusion, as a large firm lawyer with 20 - years experience in, say, Minneapolis often has a lower billing rate than a second - year at a mega-firm in NYC.
I was one of those who made a written submission to the LSBC — drawing the same conclusions as you did — and I applaud your vote.
The HRE article drew the same conclusion.

Not exact matches

Now, you can see that different conclusions can be drawn from the same market information.
It's the same conclusion one can draw from Bethany McLean and Joe Nocera's excellent new book about the mortgage crisis, All the Devils Are Here: the real surprise isn't that there's a new scam being run, but that there are so many willing participants.
A secular astronomer and a Jesuit astronomer study the exact same natural phenomena and draw the same scientific conclusions using the same strict scientific method.
Camus draws much the same conclusion: that life may not have any real meaning, but is worth living anyway.
To rush biblical statements into this arena, as though they were of the same order as Charles Darwin's Origin of Species or Stephen Jay Gould's The Panda's Thumb, or as though scientific conclusions could be drawn from them, is to be very confused about what it is the Genesis materials are teaching.
William Chip and I draw different inferences and conclusions from the same data set.
That is the same thing you are saying, going from one thing to a completely disconnected conclusion, where no conclusion can be drawn.
Go look up for yourselves secular studies on how much an average (this means typical, as opposed to your very ILLOGICAL use of anecdotal evidence to draw conclusions or simply spouting the same thing you read in a combox somewhere) Christian gives of his own time and treasure to charitable causes versus an average atheist.
The only logical conclusion to be drawn from this is that, in one and the same institution, God assigned two complementary purposes to marriage; but wished, in separate narratives, to stress first one end and then the other, so that we could better understand the synthesis, harmony and interdependence of these two ends.
The conclusion to be drawn is that all human beings, males and females alike, bear the same image of God and the same human nature.
An astronomy expert explains that he draws on the same data as his secular colleagues, but arrives at different conclusions because «I start from the assumption of biblical truth and they do not.»
Because you can analyze all you want, but if you're simply going to be subjective in your analysis then the conclusion you draw will likely be the same one you drew when you initially had a knee jerk get Wenger out reaction.
It's always dangerous to draw conclusions from a single game, but these are the times we live in, and «wait and see» is going the same way as the dodo.
The obvious conclusion any thinking person should draw let alone one paid 8 million quid is that quality makes a difference at the top of EPL and the team needs a defensive midfielder at the same level as santi or alexi... Coquellin did a great job yday but he isn't that quality....
However, they sometimes draw different conclusions about the safety of home, birth center or hospital birth, even when they read the same studies.
Even with all factors being the same, remember that every birth is different though so it is hard to draw any real conclusions from previous experiences.
She was seeking your validation that she'd learned something from what she'd been observing about step relationships and she wanted you to confirm that was drawing logical conclusions based upon her having learned that step brothers are brothers who don't have the same parents as she does.
In order to draw any conclusion about the differences between home and hospital births from the Canadian study, the home birth outcomes should have been compared with hospital outcomes only of women satisfying the same exclusion criteria.
At the same time, Blanche Lincoln survived (for now) and the Dems held on to John Murtha's old House seat in a Republican - leaning area, where again observers will try to draw grand conclusions from the fact that Mark Critz found it necessary to run against Obama's healthcare plan.
These contradictory conclusions were drawn from virtually the same polling data, gathered from some 400 would - be voters in late July.
At the same time, it's a mistake to draw any broader conclusions from the outcome in next Tuesday's vote as to who may win control of the narrowly divided state Senate.
The worst conclusion to draw from the parliamentary expenses scandal would be, as the cliche has it, that «politicians are all the same».
«People then draw conclusions that the monkeys are not doing the same thing as humans because they are monkeys and not humans.
It's a hard process, because a lot of different conclusions can be drawn from the same fossils.
Kuller and others are also concerned that if the proportion of black people included in studies is the same as that in the overall population — about 12 per cent — there will be too few in any one study to allow separate conclusions to be drawn about them.
Among women, researchers were unable to draw firm conclusions due to low statistical power, though in general they found the same trends.
The researchers caution that it's impossible to draw broad conclusions about Neandertal life histories from this one sample, such as whether Neandertals weaned their children earlier or later than modern humans who lived at the same time, or whether Neandertal children grew up faster, as some earlier studies have suggested — questions that could heavily bear on why Neandertals could not keep up with modern humans in the survival sweepstakes.
Jonathan Katz of Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, suspects they may all have the same cause, but Frail says he would be reluctant to draw broad conclusions based on one sample.
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