Good analogy there also with the temple.
Ah,
good analogy there, giving people a break that others won't get in order to help them feed their addiction.
Not exact matches
Ries gives an
analogy to explain the concept
better: «You don't ask your car's GPS where you want to go, you tell it where you want to go and it helps you get
there.
There's a
good analogy between running a company and driving on the freeway in a fog.
Nice
analogy... the kids grow up and give up the Teddy Bear, and replace it with God so they can sleep
better at night knowing
there's no bogyman out to get them... and that Teddy (er... God) would protect them from things that go bump in the night.
(
There's probably a
better analogy but that's all that is coming to mind at the moment.)
There's nothing as leveling as a good ass - analogy, is t
There's nothing as leveling as a
good ass -
analogy, is
therethere?
Returning now to Pike, we can see that
there is yet another problem with his driving
analogy, as
well as his other example of a government commission with a veto power analogous to divine over-power.
The
best analogy I can come up with is this: it would be just like
there being alternate steps different people could take in assembling a Ferrari.
If that sounds harsh, I want to point out that
there is actually no specific
analogy of God to be found in this book, let alone any help in distinguishing between
better and worse
analogies.
One might say
there's a nice
analogy between SCOTUS opinions and holy texts, in that if the edicts don't appeal to some self - evident consensus, for
better or worse, they'll be re-intepreted to do so.
However, I believe that
there is a notion in process philosophy by which one could, using the same self - body
analogy, more adequately explain what would constitute a «special» act of God, and thereby
better explain how Jesus could be God's decisive act.
Yet
there is an
analogy between our knowing and God's because an all -
good God made the universe and revealed the mystery of His love through it.
And of COURSE
there are artificial stimulants to emotions, and pretty much anything else... That's actually a
good analogy of sin.
No S, the
analogy was simply to show that one of the runners is the
best, and you'd call that runner a «pr*ck» because you don't want
there to be a
best one.
(If
there can be any question or an
analogy, the circumstance of the death of Pythagoras furnishes it, for the silence which he had always maintained he had to carry through in his last moment, and therefore [being compelled to speak] he said, «It is
better to be put to death than to speak» [cf. Diogenes Laertius, viii.
There is no
good analogy in creation, but some have likened the Trinity to the three forms of water, ice, water, and steam, while others have equated it to the light and heat of the sun.
There are
good analogies to explain the effects of sin, the attitude of God towards the sinner, and the priest, which would do much to reassure the nervous.
A
good religion (or religious experience) needs the ability for one to contest the religion's premises in the first place and, if it turns out to not work, then, to use a different medical
analogy,
there needs to be an exploration of other treatments that aren't going to wreck the system.
For it denies that
there is any
analogy between divine and human goodness themselves; it asserts only that divine goodness is to God's nature as human goodness is to man's nature — in other words, that each is
good in away appropriate to its own nature.
Sorry Terry, whereas you are correct in you
analogy of Kroenke & Sons et al turning this once great football club into a money making conglomorate — as with all EPL clubs for that matter these days, such is the word «progress» for want of a
better description, I'm afraid
there is a lot of truth in the comments above.
Okay, so we all know that
there are some
good and let's be honest some terrible
analogies in football and more so in Campus Leagues!
Yes, I accepted it because quite frankly
there's no satisfaction in prolonging the hurt, nor is
there any reward in being a total bitch, or hanging onto stale bread — he's Boomer - crusty, so the
analogy is appropriate — but much like the child who continues to lick her wounds
well after the princess Band Aid has been applied, the ouchie remains.
To use a medical
analogy,
there is not much we can do about pathogens such as bacteria or viruses already in our environment, but we can take steps to boost our immune system so we can
better resist these pathogens when we come into contact with them.
This is where my
analogy breaks down, because
there is nothing
better than vintage Paul Newman and Robert Redford, and I'm not going to pretend that my new mascara is.
On the one hand, it's not like Eastwood to take the piss out of his own work, but on the other, what
better analogy for his adaptation process can
there be than the conversion of a sky - blue all - American songbook to a shit - brown sung résumé, rendered all in blacks and greys save for the odd splash of salmon and the occasional scrap of tweed?
Roger Spottiswoode Oh mate it's brilliant this one «cos it's got Jonathan Pryce chewing the scenery in wonderful style and Michelle Yeoh rocks up as my favourite Bond girl and Gotz Otto as the villain's «heavy» is really
good and Vincent Schiavelli has an hilarious and brutal cameo and David Arnold's music is awesome and the real world
analogies are more relevant today than ever and it's just brilliant in fact it's my favourite Bond so
there.
Prothero's point, aided by cogent summaries of the world's major diaspora religions, is that while
there is some overlap about goodness and an ideal world,
there are specific reasons why religions emerged the way they did for very different purposes (his sports
analogy is a
good one — most sports have a score - keeping system, but runs are very different than goals or crossing a finish line), obscuring the real and often hostile fissures between them.
Prothero's point, aided by cogent summaries of the world's major diaspora religions, is that while
there is some overlap about goodness and an ideal world,
there are specific reasons why religions emerged the way they did for very different purposes (his sports
analogy is a
good one — most sports have a score - keeping system, but runs are v
To use another
analogy, Kozlowski is first telling us that
there are highway robbers out
there, but instead of concluding with «so watch out for those highway robbers,» he's saying «this is all the fault of the people who say highways are a
good thing.»
There are other rules out there that adjust for volatility and momentum effect that have done better in the past, but those two effects are being more heavily traded on now relative to the past, which may invalidate the analogy from history to the fu
There are other rules out
there that adjust for volatility and momentum effect that have done better in the past, but those two effects are being more heavily traded on now relative to the past, which may invalidate the analogy from history to the fu
there that adjust for volatility and momentum effect that have done
better in the past, but those two effects are being more heavily traded on now relative to the past, which may invalidate the
analogy from history to the future.
«
There aren't very
good analogies,» University of Maryland arms - control expert John Steinbruner told me.
Whatever the reason for Delingpole's hesitance,
there are many
good reasons for not accepting Nurse's
analogy.
But what with evidence somewhat lacking on positive CO2 feed backs, the present temperature plateau continuing, model projections of warming way out with observation, the
analogy appears a bit,
well, Ehrlichean, seems to me.And then
there's the bleeding of economies by costs of CO2 reduction measures and subsidizing ineffectual, (evidence indicates even un-environmental) renewable energy policies, no gain for lotsa» pain.
By the way,
there is sort of an
analogy here to the stock market: It is often noted by the sort of people who write mutual fund reports that if you just missed a few short periods of time in the market over the last few decades (e.g., say, the N
best weeks where N is a fairly small number), you would have missed out on nearly all of the stock market gains.
Eli, Without disagreeing with anything you said, particularly about consensus and coherence, let me suggest
there is a
better analogy than chess.
Also,
there is no crime, so maybe the boy crying wolf is a
better analogy for what goes on here.
The
analogy would be whether or not
there is a 99.9... % or x % chance that a policy regarding traffic accidents would be a net
good.
Members of the British Association for the Advancement of Science had been complaining about the lack of a
good term at recent meetings, Whewell reported in his review; alluding to himself, he noted that «some ingenious gentleman proposed that, by
analogy with artist, they might form [the word] scientist, and added that
there could be no scruple in making free with this term since we already have such words as economist, and atheist — but this was not generally palatable».
To stick with the Netflix theme,
there's a Black Mirror episode that provides a
good analogy (skip this paragraph if you don't want spoilers).
There's one part of this report of the 355 pages I would recommend to our listeners but the legal profession is the healthcare section because I suspect that it might be the
best analogy for the legal profession or is at least worth asking the question whether it is the
best analogy for the legal profession.
Where
there is a conflicting interest, the question is whether
there is a
better alternative for the client or, by
analogy, for the public interest.
Is
there an
analogy to a political lobbyist's seeking a change in the law for his / her client, by providing: (1) campaign funds to the politicians in power; and, (2) very
good paying executive jobs when those politicians retire?
But does that really understand the process by which it is generated and is
there a
better analogy in the IRS codes?
While that
analogy is unfair,
there's definitely a whiff of rush - job about the FFZero1, and
well there might be, given it went from sketch to Las Vegas strip in 4 months.
To bring it back to our dating
analogy from earlier... a
well written cover letter is a little bit like a friend meeting with your date and telling them all the
best things about you before you even get
there.