Sentences with phrase «certain kind of shape»

Rather, however difficult it may be to articulate, we tend to think that a «full» life has a certain kind of shape and direction, involves certain stages of development.

Not exact matches

«There's a certain lack of authenticity that comes along with the hiring of a large PR firm, that you kind of need help in shaping your message or spinning what you have to say,» Argenti says.
American diplomats feared that socialist systems had certain inherent strengths in shaping their particular kind of markets to avoid a rentier overhead.
There's a second kind of French envy that's much less common: It is found among certain very admirable American traditionalist Catholics, many of whom are shaped in some measure by the «after virtue» philosophy of Alasdair MacIntyre.
So: Beliefs regarding fairies concern a certain kind of object that may or may not exist within the world, and such beliefs have much the same sort of intentional and rational shape as beliefs regarding the neighbors over the hill or whether there are such things as black swans.
Whereas we commonly understand religion and theology as beginning with an inner and personal experience that only later seeks a community or tradition, the postliberal asserts that the community's ways of speaking and acting, its rites and rituals, its patterns of life and behavior shape and indeed make possible certain kinds of experience.
The effort to characterize construals of the Christian thing in the particular cultural and social locations that make them concrete will involve several disciplines: (a) those of the intellectual historian and textual critic (to grasp what the congregation says it is responding to in its worship and why); and (b) those of the cultural anthropologist and the ethnographer [3] and certain kinds of philosophical work [4](to grasp how the congregation shapes its social space by its uses of scripture, by its uses of traditions of worship and patterns of education and mutual nurture, and by the «logic «of its discourse); and (c) those of the sociologist and social historian (to grasp how the congregation's location in its host society and culture helps shape concretely its distinctive construal of the Christian thing).
, Rischling Predicting 1 - Predicting for a Graph, JRM, c. 1972 Measuring - Estimation and Comparisions Using the Metric System, Dennis Stages in Life Cycles Plant Exercise - Describing Growth from Parts of Plants, Rischling Measuring Volumes and the Solid, Liquid and Gaseous States of Matter, Smith Observing Animal Motion and Responses to Stimuli, Smith Classifying 6 - Kinds of Living Things in an Aquarium, Margate Many Kinds of Trees, JRM, c. 1972 Using Space / Time Relationships - Symmetry and Shapes of Animals, Gillis, c. 1972 Measuring - Temperature and Thermometers, Livermore Predicting 2 - Surveying Opinion, Dennis, c. 1972 SAPA Part C 2nd Draft, 1972 Classifying - Kinds of Living Things in a Terrarium, Troyer Predicting 2 - Syrveying Opinion, Dennis Predicting 1 - Predicting for a Graph, Mayor Measuring Forces with Springs, Smith Observing Animal Motion and Responses to Stimuli, Mayor Measuring Volumes and the Solid, Liquid and Gaseous States of Matter, Smith Measuring - Temperature and Thermometes, Livermore Classifying 9 - Components of Mixtures, Livermore Inferring 2 - How Certain Can You Be?
BOX 15, A-15-6; 30219214 / 734997 SAPA Part B - 1st Draft, c. 1972 Using Numbers - Numbers and the Number Line, JRM Observing - Observing the Weather Measuring - Making Comparisions Using a Balance, JE Alternate Auto - Instructional, Measuring 1 - 4 / Measuring Area, Gillis Classifying - Trees in our Environment, JRM, c. 1972 AAAS - Xerox Film Loops Guide, A11 Exercises - Shapes and Symmetry, Hansen, 1972 SAPA Part B - 1st Draft, 1972 Observing - Observing Color and Color Changes in Plants, HM Communicating - Identifying Objects and their Variations, RN Communicating - Different Kinds of Forces, AHL Communicating - Graphs, JRM Classifying - Observing Living and Nonliving Things, Smith Using Space / Time Classifying - Animals in Our Environment: Part B (alternate) Using Space / Time - Shadows, Smtih Alternate (Autoinstructional)- Using Numbers - Numbers and the Number Line Observing - Observing Soils, JRM SAPA Part B 2nd Draft, 1972 Measuring Area 1 - 4, CCP Measuring 1 - 4, Volume of Solids, Alternate 2, CCP Measuring 1 - 4, Volume of Solids, Alternate 1, CCP Measuring Length 4 - 6, Linear Measurement Using Metric Units, CCP Communicating - Intro to Graphing, JRM Communicating - Pushes and Pulls, AHL Communicating - Identifying Objects and Their Variations, RN Classifying - Trees in Our Environment, JRM Classufying - Observing Living and Nonliving Things, Smith Observing - Observing Color and Color Changes in Plants and Observing Changes in Mold Gardens, HGM Observing (alternate)- Observation, Using Several of the Senses, HGM, c. 1972 Using Numbers - Numbers and the Number Line, JRM Measuring - Making Comparisions Using a Balance, JWE Using Space / Time - Shadows, Smith Using Space / Time Relationships - Time Intervals, HGM Observing 10 - Observing the Weather, JWE Observing - Observing Soils Using Several of the Senses, JRM SAPA Part B Tryout Draft, 1972 Communicating - The Same but Different Observing 10 - Observing the Weather Observing 9A - Observing Soils Observing (alternate)- Using Several of the Senses Observing - Observing Change Classifying - Trees in Our Environment Classifying - Observing Living and Nonliving Things SAPA Part B, Observing - Changes in Molds and Other Plants, c. 1972 SAPA Part B Tryout Draft, 1972 Observing - Observing Changes in Plants Observing - Changes in Mold and Green Plants Measuring - Making Comparisions Using a Balance Measuring Length - Linear Measurement Using Metric Units Measuring Volumes of Solids, 1 - 4 Communicating - Pushes and Pulls Comparing Area, c. 1972 Using Space / Time Relationships - Shadows, 1972 Addition of Postive Numbers, Sums 1 - 99 (not being tried) SAPA Part B 3rd Draft (alternate), Using Numbers - Numbers and the Number Line, 1972 SAPA Part C 1st Draft, 1972 Classifying - Classifying Components of Mixtures, Livermore Inferring 2 - How Certain Can You Be?
Steve: And the amazing thing is these researchers saw these filaments grow spontaneously from the spheres, and they had no reason to expect that, but it's also just a natural kind of structural formation that happens with these particular chemical compounds when they're in [a] certain shape.
For all kinds of reasons we try to force our bodies to attain a certain shape and to look a certain way.
Only certain kind of clothes can highlight the body shape and for that reason, you ought to know themselves shape and choose a dress that meets them.
I'm put in mind of the kind of fashion rules individuals impose on themselves for specific reasons; tall people (that is, people who think themselves too tall) who won't wear shoes that add height, short people (ditto) who won't be without shoes that add height, people who decide a certain color or shape is off the table, etc..
While every dog is shaped differently, you can probably infer which kinds of dogs fit best in certain clothing items, especially if you have the measurements and are familiar with many breeds.
But to think of dérive as a kind of random stroll dominated by chance encounters would be to miss Debord's essential point: spaces, by virtue of being inhabited or shaped by humankind, possess their own «psychogeographical contours, with constant currents, fixed points and vortexes that strongly discourage entry into or exit from certain zones.»
We're essentially in a race between our potency, our awareness of the expressed and potential ramifications of our actions and our growing awareness of the deeply embedded perceptual and behavioral traits that shape how we do, or don't, address certain kinds of risks.
Sharon D. Nelson: Well, interesting, you kind of answered my next question, so I think I'm going to reshape it a little bit because I do think a lot of lawyers are worried about Artificial Intelligence replacing their jobs, and from my own perspective, I think a certain amount of that fear is justified, but I do understand what you're saying and I've watched with considerable admiration as you've kind of turned your ship a little bit into a different harbor because originally it was called ROSS: The Super-Intelligent Attorney, and now, you have more shaped ROSS from the point of view of the lawyer as somebody that allows the lawyer to be more efficient, serve the client better, and to focus on something other than what you might call «the goat work» of the legal world, which we really don't want to do, and so how did you come to the realization that that was something that needed to be done?
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z