Sentences with phrase «asking than the answer»

Pairing photographs alongside her films as part of her practice, Prager presents an eerie, alternative world where more questions are asked than answered.
This question is easier asked than answered.

Not exact matches

Ask questions rather than provide answers, because that will teach your employees to think for themselves.
Jeff Widman, CEO of Brand Glue, a consulting company based in Mountain View, California, offers the advice to «Put the question first, rather than last» and to «ask a question where people don't need to click through a link to give you an answer
It might sound like I'm talking about marriage rather than business but how you know when you've found the right investor might be answered in part by the questions asked.
Inquisitive millennials are more likely to Google the answers to nagging questions rather than asking a human for help, according to results from a new survey.
Take 38 - year - old software engineer and blogger, «Mrs. BITA,» who asked to remain anonymous, of «Bayalis Is The Answer»: From 2008, when she first started using Amazon, to 2016, she managed to spend $ 41,000 on more than 1,400 items.
On the new Echo speaker, the one that is a bit more plump and sounds better than the original Echo, you can talk from across the room and ask about musical artists, the weather, or even ask weird questions and you'll probably get a pretty good answer.
Ask the first question every business must be able to answer: «Why should a potential client buy my product or services rather than those of my competitors?»
As Priceline.com cofounder Jeff Hoffman, co-author of, SCALE: 7 Proven Principles to Grow Your Business and Get Your Life Back, likes to say, «Your business plan is more about the questions you ask and get yourself to struggle with than it is about finding the «right» answer
He brought up one question that stood out to him about what the government planned to do next, only to be asked by more than one person to answer it directly, once and for all.
Perhaps because of that darned cell phone, it's easier to ask for answers than it is to stand behind your own opinion.
Evans rings off some simple rules: don't buy anything you're pressured to buy or don't understand; ask the seller for their qualifications and track record, and if they don't give satisfactory answers, don't buy; don't invest more money than you can stand to lose, and never invest it all in one deal; avoid anything with an offshore element to it («That means your money's never coming back»); and seek out an unbiased second opinion, say, from your accountant or bank manager.
Rather than asking where people want to be in five years, ask them where they don't want to be, because they are unlikely to have a canned answer prepared.
First, what you're about to ask is going to take longer than a minute to answer.
Well, rather than continuing on ad nauseam after asking an important qualifying question in hopes of nudging your prospect's answer in a particular direction, you're letting reality sink in.
He created a list of answers to frequently asked questions about polarized sunglasses, and that FAQ has been viewed more than 14,000 times.
Whatever the reason, sometimes they'll ask a different question than the one they really want you to answer.
(Barron's) • In Search of the Perfect Recession Indicator (Philosophical Economics) • A Fireside Chat With Charlie Munger (MoneyBeat) • Complexity theory and financial regulation (Science) • Five Pieces of Conventional Wisdom That Make Smart Investors Look Dumb (CFA Institute) • This Lawyer Is Hollywood's Complete Divorce Solution (Bloomberg) • Curiosity update, sols 1218 - 1249: Digging in the sand at Mar's Bagnold Dunes (Planetary Society) • The Plot to Take Down a Fox News Analyst (NYT) • Ask the aged: Who better to answer questions about the purpose of life than someone who has been living theirs for a long time?
I can only tell you that he answers more than I asked for and ALWAYS spent more times to make sure I have all my questions answers and understood.
Pressed on why he didn't inform users, in 2015, when Facebook says it found out about this policy breach, Zuckerberg avoided a direct answer — instead fixing on what the company did (asked Cambridge Analytica and the developer whose app was used to suck out data to delete the data)-- rather than explaining the thinking behind the thing it did not do (tell affected Facebook users their personal information had been misappropriated).
Ask even the most successful sales professionals if they had always envisioned a sales career, and more often than not, the answer will be no.
Even if you're answering these questions only for yourself, your co-founders, or the guy sitting next to you on the plane (hey, he asked), your company's origin story has more power than you might imagine.
Back then, when I asked this top producer how to become successful, he answered (and I'm paraphrasing here to the best of my memory) that I should not waste any more than 10 to 15 minutes making asset allocation decisions once I closed on a large account.
Asking those questions is often more important than coming up with precise answers.
«The answer may be entirely innocent,» Mr. Denton said, musing on the question of whether Mr. Harder was paid by someone other than Mr. Hogan, «but I think in order for people to understand what's going on here, what the stakes are, I think it's important that it be out in public, or at least that he'd be asked the question in public.»
Did you know that a truly comprehensive retirement calculator can do A LOT more than answer the questions most of us know to ask: When you can retire?
If we're living in a low - rate world, and our only option other than holding cash is to buy the S&P at 30 times earnings, or a 30 year treasury at 2 %, or whatever other shitty deal is on offer, and you ask me what we should do, I can only answer the question by asking whether there will continue to be a ready supply of buyers at those valuations into the future.
He asks three questions that he thinks the atheist can not answer: Why is there something rather than nothing?
It is not the most immediate answer that comes to mind, but what God asks us to put first, rather than last, in the study of divinity, is worship.
So anyone else want to try their hand at an answer other than «Ask Satan.»?
Rather than assuming and stating as fact that BC is dogmatic in his assertions because he secretly harbors doubts which he is attempting to either drown out by increasing his volume or find answers for by remaining on this site, NP asks him if that might be the case.
It is easier to ask these questions than to answer them and even the most likely answer remains relative to the individual offering it.
And I answer, «I don't know» more often than I'd like, admitting to my kids that many of the questions they ask, I still ask, too.
As for why Jesus asked questions, it was for the same reason that Socrates did: people value answers more if they find them themselves than if you give them the answers.
Philosophers often compare Jesus to Socrates because Socrates was also more interested in getting us to ask the right questions of ourselves than spoon - feeding superficial, simplistic answers.
One major reason that institutions are inherently conservative is that continuing in existing ruts is far easier and less demanding than asking searching questions and allowing ourselves to be reshaped by the answers.
It wasn't the summer that brought an end to my doubt, but it was the summer I encountered a different Jesus, a Jesus who requires more from me than intellectual assent and emotional allegiance; a Jesus who associated with sinners and infuriated the religious; a Jesus who broke the rules and refused to cast the first stone; a Jesus who gravitated toward sick people and crazy people, homeless people and hopeless people; a Jesus who preferred story to exposition and metaphor to syllogism; a Jesus who answered questions with more questions, and demands for proof with demands for faith... a Jesus who healed each person differently and saved each person differently; a Jesus who had no list of beliefs to check off, no doctrinal statements to sign, no surefire way to tell who was «in» and who was «out»; a Jesus who loved after being betrayed, healed after being hurt, and forgave while being nailed to a tree; a Jesus who asked his disciples to do the same...
But it is easy to become enthralled in the questions, such that it becomes more desirable to ask questions rather than really look for the answers.
Martin Copenhaver writes in his book «Jesus is the Question» In the 4 canonical Gospels Jesus asks many more questions than he answers.
cit., pp. 260 - 262) In the Old Testament, accordingly, when Jacob asked the superhuman wrestler his name, he was rebuffed; (Genesis 32 - 29) when Manoah asked «the angel of Yahweh» for his name, the answer was, «Wherefore askest thou after my name, seeing it is secret»; (Judges 13:17 - 18 [marginal reading]-RRB- and when Moses sought to learn Yahweh's name, he received no clearer reply than «I AM THAT I AM.»
You have been asked some very specific questions science in the Quran, and rather than answer, you cowardly dodge all over again.
And learning to answer questions, rather than providing answers to questions the other hasn't yet asked.
Evolution has more holes than cheese, when you ask questions like, how did this happen in spite of the laws of physics, the answer is I do not know.
If you were to ask exactly what the life of the mind consists in, there is no clearer answer than to play through the Art of Fugue.
Also have a problem with the writer» answer to the posted question below: Q: stew4248 asks: How is this any different than religious divisiveness?
Rorty's answer is somewhat glib: «The reason I like Hirsch's book better than Bloom's is that it mostly stays away from philosophy and instead asks what concrete institutional factors are responsible for the prevailing cultural illiteracy.
If you truly want answers, you should do a google search and find an unbiased source of information rather than asking on a religious blog.
If we ask what overt result Jesus may have hoped for, the answer is not easy, because he issued no program of religious or political reform, any more than he laid down precise regulations for individual behavior.
It's easier to regurgitate answers than to ask good questions.
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