Sentences with phrase «simple examples exist»

Simple examples exist today, like co-generation power plants that use their waste heat to generate energy to heat and cool homes, or in a particularly popular example given that evening, the Brooklyn Brewery sharing its waste for livestock feed or energy generation.

Not exact matches

In particular, the denial that epistemology is wholly prior to ontology; the denial that we can have an absolutely certain starting point; the idea that those elements of experience thought by most people to be primitive givens are in fact physiologically, personally, and socially constructed; the idea that all of our descriptions of our observations involve culturally conditioned interpretations; the idea that our interpretations, and the focus of our conscious attention, are conditioned by our purposes; the idea that the so - called scientific method does not guarantee neutral, purely objective, truths; and the idea that most of our ideas do not correspond to things beyond ourselves in any simple, straightforward way (for example, red as we see it does not exist in the «red brick» itself).
That non-Markov machines exist is shown by a simple example: the magnetization of a piece of iron immersed in an oscillating magnetic field depends on the values of the external field in the past, as well as in the present.
And of course things are not so comfortably arranged that the theoretician can find the higher speculations and more sophisticated practice existing exclusively in the circles of the highest spirituality — among scholars, for example — and then observe the masses abiding in the simple spirit worship of their fathers.
Here's another example: It's all very simple — you don't know that other minds and evidence exist but you claim to know.
Rhology — «Here's another example: It's all very simple — you don't know that other minds and evidence exist but you claim to know.»
Cute, carino, pretty, jolie a thousand words to a single meaning, sweet words, cute as the outfits associated with them, pastel colors withtouches of white lace and macramé (a bit like my blue jumpsuit, the perfect example of cute outfit), cute looks perfect for summer, fresh and colorful, perfectfor the long summer days, those in which the sky is as blue as the sea, those days when it's hard to recognize the horizon getting lost in the waves and seagulls suspended between earth and sky, so I think this is my place, one in which everything is more simple, where it is easy to get lost in a thought and where problems do not exist anymore.
Using a resource like MINTclass» Markbooks module, for example, means that teachers can integrate existing class information and create simple and effective markbooks that keep tests or homework results in one place.
Within economics modelling, attempts to model the feedback mechanisms that occur in the real economy are also really difficult — we know, for example, that investment in new technologies will act as an incentive for the existing technologies it hopes to substitute to become more efficient (the sailing ship effect — i.e. in the 50 years after the introduction of the steam ship, sailing ships made more efficiency improvements than they had in the previous 3 centuries) but how to quantify something even as simple as this is not easy BUT we have learnt a few ways to give sensible (order of magnitude) figures with time lags, the learning by doing effect and phased - in substitution effects based on massive amounts of data.
General Introduction Two Main Goals Identifying Patterns in Time Series Data Systematic pattern and random noise Two general aspects of time series patterns Trend Analysis Analysis of Seasonality ARIMA (Box & Jenkins) and Autocorrelations General Introduction Two Common Processes ARIMA Methodology Identification Phase Parameter Estimation Evaluation of the Model Interrupted Time Series Exponential Smoothing General Introduction Simple Exponential Smoothing Choosing the Best Value for Parameter a (alpha) Indices of Lack of Fit (Error) Seasonal and Non-seasonal Models With or Without Trend Seasonal Decomposition (Census I) General Introduction Computations X-11 Census method II seasonal adjustment Seasonal Adjustment: Basic Ideas and Terms The Census II Method Results Tables Computed by the X-11 Method Specific Description of all Results Tables Computed by the X-11 Method Distributed Lags Analysis General Purpose General Model Almon Distributed Lag Single Spectrum (Fourier) Analysis Cross-spectrum Analysis General Introduction Basic Notation and Principles Results for Each Variable The Cross-periodogram, Cross-density, Quadrature - density, and Cross-amplitude Squared Coherency, Gain, and Phase Shift How the Example Data were Created Spectrum Analysis — Basic Notations and Principles Frequency and Period The General Structural Model A Simple Example Periodogram The Problem of Leakage Padding the Time Series Tapering Data Windows and Spectral Density Estimates Preparing the Data for Analysis Results when no Periodicity in the Series Exists Fast Fourier Transformations General Introduction Computation of FFT in Time Series
«The first is that neither the quality bar that broadsheet newspapers regularly apply to scientific evidence, nor the simple concept of balance, appear to exist in all of your paper's reporting on climate change (although we note, for example, that your coverage at the close of the Paris climate summit was both balanced and comprehensive).
For example, the much discussed and hyped (in some quarters) new category of «dependant contractor» actually appears on the surface to be a simple re-naming of the existing category of worker and therefore is an important but none the less slightly damp squib of a development.
For example, there might be a simple counterclaim on a related, or unrelated, matter; or it might be possible to challenge the validity of the right in some way — for registered rights there are usually well defined ways in which this can be done; however, for unregistered rights the terrain is often more uncertain and so more unusual points will often have to be contemplated, (eg, challenging whether or not the claimant exists as a matter of law, and so has a locus standi to bring the proceedings: this last suggestion might seem farfetched, but it has been used successfully on more than one occasion).
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