Sentences with phrase «by slow evolution»

And you can't change by slow evolution.

Not exact matches

Driven by strong oil revenues, the rapid evolution engulfing Saudi Arabia today shows no signs of slowing down.
The second low - cost shift coming to the open - source and hacking world is a slower evolution in computing, but will be no less powerful — the democratization of programmable chips like those made by Xilinx and Altera.
Science is about what we can establish by observation, while evolution, if still in progress, is too slow to be observable, and past events are beyond the reach of observations.
If martian canyons were gouged out only by rare floods rather than many millennia of slow seepage, Mars may have lacked the continually warm and wet climate needed for the origin and evolution of life.
Scally's group comes up with a date of about 6 million years ago, adjusting what would have been a more recent estimate by assuming that the mutation rate slowed over time in ape evolution.
In contrast, rapid environmental change may slow the overall rate of evolution driven by direct interactions within large networks, making each species more vulnerable to extinction.
If the researchers incorrectly estimated a 200,000 - year - old salamander species to be 2 million years old, then their result was off by a factor of 10, making the salamander's rate of evolution 20,000 times slower than climate change instead of 200,000 times slower.
«We can expect that within the next 20 to 30 generations, evolution will slow human aging considerably, by about 25 percent,» Austad says.
It is important to remember that geological history contains numerous periods of slow evolution punctuated by periods of rapid evolution, which Steven J. Gould called Punctuated Equilibrium.
Technological improvements are slowing down these days and the PS4 Neo is an evolution that benefits publishers by keeping game development costs low, gamers by allowing users to have the same or better experience on new hardware and the industry as a whole by keeping consoles relevant in a market where many thought they'd fail by now.
So many lost lives left me cursing my own slow fingers for missing jumps or being struck by fire, putting me closer than ever to the days when the stage design was the challenge, not the technical limitations inherent in the awkward evolution of the code.
Traveled to Fondation Deutsch, Lausanne, Switzerland (September 17 — November 8); Musée Bab Rouah, Rabat, Morocco (December 11, 1992 — January 31, 1993; Casablanca, Morocco (February — March 1993); Fondation FISA, Séville, Spain (April — May 1993); Italy (summer 1993); Museum Sankt, Saint - Ingbert, Germany (September 19 — November 21, 1993); and Paris (December 1993 — January 1994) Painting, Self Evident: Evolutions in Abstraction, concurrently at Halsey Gallery, College of Charleston; The Meddin Building; and the Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, South Carolina (May 21 — June 28) Summer group exhibition, Ginny Williams Gallery, Denver (May 14 — June 30) From America's Studio: Twelve Contemporary Masters — Works by Alumni of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago / One Hundred Twenty - fifth Anniversary Celebration, Art Institute of Chicago (May 10 — June 14) 15th Anniversary Exhibition, Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago (May 8 — June 13) Slow Art: Painting in New York Now, P.S. 1 Museum, Institute for Contemporary Art, Long Island City, New York (April 26 — June 21) Play Between Fear and Desire, Germans van Eck Gallery, New York (April 24 — May 23) Alumni Exhibition, School of the Art Institute of Chicago (April 20 — June 15) An Exhibition for Satyajit Ray, Philippe Briet Gallery, New York (April 11 — May 16) Paint, Edward Thorp Gallery, New York (April 4 — May 9) Paths to Discovery: The New York School — Works on Paper from the 1950s and 1960s, curated by Ellen Russotto, Sidney Mishkin Gallery, Baruch College, City University of New York (March 20 — April 17) American Art 1930 — 1970 (organized by FIAT with the assistance of Independent Curators, New York), Lingotto Fiere, Turin, Italy (January 8 — March 21) A Permanent Collection: Art From the 19th Century to the Present, Castellani Art Museum, Niagara University, New York
1992 Picturing Paradise: The Rain Forest at Risk, Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Atlanta, USA Summer Group Show, Texas Gallery, Houston, USA Documenta IX, Kassel, Germany Quotations, Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, USA; Museum of Contemporary Art, Dayton Art Institute, USA Painting, Self Evident: Evolutions in Abstraction, The William Halsey Gallery, Simons Center for the Arts, College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, USA (Exhibition on view here and simultaneously at two other venues, The Meddin Building and the Gibbes Museum of Art, during the Spoleto Festival) Summer Group Exhibition, Ginny Williams Gallery, Denver, USA Slow Art, P.S. 1 Museum, Long Island City, New York, USA Selective Vision, TransAmerica Corporation, San Francisco, USA Psycho, Kunsthalle, New York, USA (Inaugural exhibition curated by Christian Leigh) Allegories of Modernism: Contemporary Drawings, Museum of Modern Art, New York (2/16 — 5/5/92) Twentieth Century Prints of the East End, Renee Fotouhi, East Hampton, NY
As described in the paper, climate warming specifically refers to the slow time evolution of the local July temperature as described by a smooth non-linear trend line, which reveals a significant climatic warming over the last three decades.
The late and great Stephen Hawking warned that «the development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race... Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn't compete, and would be superseded».
It may look like a slow evolution now, but disruption will arrive in time, because the value delivered by new legal models is just too compelling.
As posted in a separate interview with BBC, it was simply stated: «humans, limited by slow biological evolution, couldn't compete and would be superseded by A.I.»
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