Sentences with phrase «draws conclusions by»

«Massive infrastructure» Ausubel draws his conclusions by analysing the amount of energy renewables, natural gas, and nuclear can produce in terms of power per square metre of land used.
Medical research draws conclusions by producing studies over and over again.
This self attends first to the major premise, then the minor premise, and finally, draws the conclusion by holding the two premises together and seeing their connection.
The team were able to draw these conclusions by analysing new data from the chemical composition of the fossilised shells of sea surface and seafloor organisms from that period, taken from drilling cores from the ocean floor in the South Atlantic.
NIAID scientists and researchers at Yale University and University of Maryland drew these conclusions by studying blood samples from 25 donors with chronic HIV infection.
They get to work on the case studies on incidents happened previously and then drawing conclusions by writing academic case file and try to look out for the primary suspect in the whole criminal scenario.
Anfam draws his conclusion by providing the strongest link between the 19th - century Dutch artist and the 20th century American artist via the French philosopher Antonin Artaud.
Science is a process for drawing conclusions by making a hypothesis and testing it.
One can only draw conclusions by implication.

Not exact matches

That's one conclusion you can draw from a new research study, titled «Firming up Inequality,» published this week by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
These happy vibes are heard by a founder's «happy ears» — often leading the founder to draw false conclusions about the true level of potential VC interest.
The conclusion that can be drawn is that those who expected financial deregulation to smooth the cycle by itself have been disappointed.
A vast increase in oil transport by rail surely has at least something to do with the accident — if the train hadn't been carrying oil, its destruction might have been less catastrophic — but there will inevitably be debate over the conclusion to draw from that observation.
We can draw two conclusions from the information conveyed in the two graphs above: 1) the Fed is terrified of letting the stock market move lower and, for now at least, has a solid iron floor beneath the stock market; 2) the credit condition of corporate America has been deteriorating since early 2013, punctuated by 3 quarters in a row of declining earnings for the S&P 500.
We're also seeing overreactions by investors who have been quick to draw conclusions about what it all means before the dust has settled.
Given the debt load in the US and given statements made by government officials, this seems like a reasonable conclusion to draw.
The time period covered is relatively short by historical standards so it is difficult to draw significant conclusions.
And I also encourage you to view some assenting and dissenting views by those who are professionals and draw the conclusion for yourself.
There are way too many assumptions and conclusions drawn by interpreting data.
By your logic, we can not draw a definitive conclusion that the Roman Empire ever existed.
8) «This conclusion serves to corroborate the inference made by Soviet archaeologists from their discovery of camel - headed wagons that as early as the first half of the third millennium B.C. two - humped camels were used in Turkmenistan for drawing wagons...» The Camel and the Wheel, Richard W. Bulliet p155
There has been much spurious research and false conclusions drawn by those known as «anti-Mormons» to lead people to a bad impression of a man who was about as good a man who ever lived - save Jesus, of course.
One thing that mankind has is the ability to use logic, to be able to reason, to draw a proper conclusion based on evidence, a capacity that animals who are governed by instinct do not have.
If we recognize that in order to draw conclusions about matters of this sort, we must ask questions not answered by faith in any direct way, the tone of our debates can be improved.
It is difficult to draw any conclusion other than that nuclear war, either by accident or because of uncontrollable escalation, is not likely to be prevented.
(So draw your own conclusions, regardless of what you are ever told by another human being — because that human being could be saying things that aren't true or real or even SANE.
According to Nagel and Newman, this event led number - theorists to conclude (perhaps wrongly) that mathematics is not the classical «science of quantity,» but «simply the discipline par excellence that draws the conclusions logically implied by any given set of axioms or postulates,» regardless of whether or not they are true.
The conclusions drawn by Bruce A. Kimball in Orators and Philosophers: A History of the Idea of Liberal Education (Teachers College Press, 292 pp., $ 19.95) are of a different kind.
Whitehead states the wrong: «Mr. Russell, a scholar known in every major university of the world, impelled by motives which religion dare not disown, has been driven out of academic life and deprived of academic encouragement...» Whitehead «leave [s] the question here,» without drawing the conclusion explicitly: restore the lectureship to rectify the wrong.
But this can be explained partly by the extremity of the conclusions drawn by some advocates of form criticism, for example by Professor R. H. Lightfoot in his Bampton Lectures; (History and Interpretation in the Gospels [1934]-RRB- and partly by the ultraconservatism of men who are incapable of altering their views in later life.
Primary facts are only the experienced psychic phenomena, and all scientific «facts» are the result of conclusions, drawn by logical processes of induction and deduction.
The radical conclusion that they drew, is that the salvation proclaimed by the gospel is first and foremost the salvation of society as a whole.
More recent statistics by anti-abortion groups, however, bear out the conclusions to be drawn from the Guttmacher Institute study.
They may perhaps be submerged again for the time being by a contrary wave of caution, fear of one's own courage, terror of false conclusions which people may like to draw.
To help point the way out of the problem I will turn to the writings of Whitehead (particularly his later works), drawing from his work certain conclusions which, while not explicitly stated by him may nevertheless be said to follow from his overall philosophical scheme.
But if this is «what actually happens», it's hard to resist drawing the conclusion that in the outcry against Dawkins this summer we saw an extraordinary moment when society expressed moral outrage about itself; when we were provoked by one of our own common practices.
2) You can maintain your position from a faith perspective, and say this, but then I'd have to seriously question [a] your historical integrity (for example, the historical position of Revelations as canon, although more of a debate than the other texts, was still NOWHERE NEAR contestable enough for you to draw this sort of conclusion) and [b] your philosophical integrity (for example, if you dismiss Revelations because it doesn't support your position, i'm going to ask: by what authority do you think you have the right to discern this?
The process worked incrementally and backward, not toward faith but away from nihilism, fueled by the rising conviction that the conclusion I had drawn long ago was wrong.
This appears to be the only conclusion to be drawn from the real and underlying message of the piece, conveyed by its final one - sentence paragraph: «In short, Summorum Pontificum weakens the unity of the Church by failing to support the foundational insights of the Second Vatican Council»: the most «foundational» of all those insights, it goes without saying, being the absolute discontinuity between the preconciliar and post-conciliar Churches.
For in that case the assertion of God's sovereignty would be seen as a universal truth which can by logical reasoning be made intelligible to everyone; the miracle would then be regarded as a universally accredited, extraordinary event, from which the conclusion may be drawn that it depends upon a divine cause.
That Jesus was aware with every breath he drew of the eternal kingship of God everyone will agree; that he believed men could come even now in some real sense and measure under the righteous and loving rule of God is almost equally clear; and only by the most tortuous methods of interpreting the Gospels can one escape the conclusion that Jesus expected the kingdom of God as a future supernatural order.
In this story these characters and their situation are not depicted by analogy but directly, and, in consequence, the hearers are not left to draw their own conclusions, but rather are challenged by the direct statement: «I tell you...» The challenge is the one we have seen throughout this group of parables, the fundamental challenge of Jesus to his hostile contemporaries.
We have names for those who announce upon drawing up a chair exactly where the conversation is going and with what conclusions, just as we do for those who insult us by explaining the joke and telling it again.
Biblically conservative Christians today rightly reject recreational sex as a psychologizing of Scripture if undisciplined sexual behavior is justified by conclusions drawn from modern theories about sexual repression.
Much valuable data could be collected by studying them in the wild but they already have drawn their conclusions.
Fred, we have had a great detailed discussion this last week but as we drew towards making a conclusion you lost focus and by appearances forgot everything we have discussed so far.
«Doc Loren Marks found much of the studies by the APA were convenience samples and can not draw a conclusion in regards to gay parenting and the Mark Regenerus study while some said was flawed is not so flawed after all.
They drew the conclusion, for example, by observing how the angle of the North Star changed as they travelled north.
Thank you Regina... being Wiccan myself, many people I guess I would say fear and discredit what they don't understand by making false accusations and drawing wrong conclusions...
The Faith of a Physicist by Cambridge physicist and Anglican priest John Polkinghorne is a compendium of conclusions drawn from decades of dialogue between natural science and Christian theology.
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