This observation seems especially important in science, where
failure is ubiquitous and often productive.
Fear of
failure is ubiquitous and often connected to a nearly existential angst: If forced to abandon their hopes for an academic career, many postdocs worry they would not be able to find any job at all due to their age, overspecialization, and a «too academic» demeanor.
Not exact matches
The risk of
failure is too great to take lightly, because the consequences can
be irreversible or
ubiquitous.
The fairly
ubiquitous failure of contemporary Catholic thought to respect the findings of modern science as anything more than interesting and handy measurement and mathematics
is charted in this issue by Stephen Barr, John Haldane and David Brown.
We warn that a
failure to clarify the Tessling decision in the snoop dog cases and in the broader context of
ubiquitous information emanation, especially alongside the maintenance of reductionist, non-normative approaches to informational privacy across Canadian courts, could seriously diminish the privacy rights of Canadians in a manner that the Supreme Court of Canada has until now
been very careful to guard against.
Our phones
are such a
ubiquitous part of our lives that we
're much more aware of its
failures and downfalls than we
are, say, when our fridge isn't working as well as the newest model on the market.