The allusion to peer - review means you're probably aware most of the papers that have been published included
far more examples than actually ended up in the final product.
Of course there are more varieties and
far more examples, but the point is that it takes many forms.
Not exact matches
For
example, several research teams have criticised medical dramas showing heart resuscitation techniques for conveying misinformation about their effectiveness, such as
far higher survival rates from a heart attack, or
more younger people experiencing attacks than in real life.
Let's look at Joe Boxer as a
further example, here's
more about how their «fun» value is infused through and through.
An hour of an American worker's labour, for
example, produces
far more output than an hour of a Chinese worker's labour.
Examples include cleaning up floating plastic debris, slowing down the pace of ocean acidification, and gathering
far more data about the habitat impact of illegal overfishing.
She's a great
example of someone who used a skill to build a following on YouTube, and was able to make the shift to live video which, she has said, generates
far more comments.
For
example, if your research shows that an article entitled «Why You Should Join A Running Group» is doing well, take it one step
further and write something that provides even
more value — like «The Ultimate Guide to Running Groups.»
It is
far more often through the networks of our «weak ties» for
example, that we get referrals for business and find opportunities for new jobs.
And what I'm also trying to say is that your short comment just there, for
example, tells us
far more about the HST than any such «Jobs!»
At the end of the day this hits the EU, Japan and Canada (41 percent of U.S. aluminium imports for
example)
far more than China.
For
example, if company ABC and XYZ are both selling for $ 50 a share, one might be
far more expensive than the other depending upon the underlying profits and growth rates of each stock.
«Repeatedly, and in different ways, throughout this book, you actually demonstrate with a generous mix of insight and proven
examples, how» dog - eat - dog» marketing simply isn't necessary; how ethical marketing is not only easier to implement but
far more effective!
For
example, a utility company with a single power generation facility in an area prone to natural disasters is probably
far riskier despite having a higher interest coverage ratio than a
more geographically diversified firm with a slightly lower metric.
Unfortunately there are
far more bad
examples of cold emails than there are good ones.
During the middle of the 18th Century and well into the beginning of the 19th Century India produced
far more textiles — and usually much cheaper and of better quality — than did England, but a number of measures aimed at undermining Indian textile producers and protecting British textile producers (tariffs that almost always exceeded 50 %, for
example, and by 1813 were as high as 85 %) meant that at some point in the first half of the 19th Century the British textile industry had become the most efficient in the world and was able largely to eliminate the Indian textile industry from global competition.
And among
more recent
examples, bitcoin
far surpasses the IT bubble of the 1990s and the Japan bubble of the 1980s.
I remember meetings as
far back as 2008, for
example involving senior United States or European government officials looking to be debriefed on the Chinese economy, in which the foreign (and some Chinese) analysts present spoke jauntily about the great success of China's growth policies and the brilliant future ahead, while many of the Chinese economists present were much
more cautious and even gloomy as they discussed the sheer intractability of China's economic distortions.
This episode is a perfect
example: an unintended casualty of this weekend's firestorm is the idea of data portability: I have argued that social networks like Facebook should make it trivial to export your network; it seems
far more likely that most social networks will respond to this Cambridge Analytica scandal by locking down data even
further.
Even a relatively mundane corporate tax return for a Canadian corporation with a few dozen employees and domestic operations can easy run into 100 pages, and frankly our tax legislation and compliance obligations are
far less onerous than those of our US cousins (by way of
example, our Tax Act is one phone book, the IRC is three, of
more or less inpenetrable gibberish).
The euro crisis, for
example, encouraged
more buyers resident in the eurozone to look
further afield to diversify their investments and move at least a portion of their wealth out of euros.
«For
example, we plan to
further improve timeliness and efficiency for consumers and firms through a
more streamlined process for low complexity cases, while also looking for ways to reduce firm and consumer delays.»
It's
far more sticky — for
example, we charge a nominal dormancy fee to those that don't use the card in three months, just to encourage people to either use the card or shut it down.
These
examples are
far more simple than religious beliefs, but I have never chosen whether I believed or didn't, I just examined what was available to me.
To this list could be added many
more examples of how the data have grown and grown to support the proposition that the sexual revolution has been resulting in disaster for large swaths of the country — a proposition
further honed by whole decades of examination of the relation between public welfare and family dysfunction (particularly in the pages of the decidedly not - Catholic Public Interest magazine).
I think a person who lives by the
examples that Christ did, is
far more important than organized religions demand that you «accept» him.
Loving one another (family specifically) unconditionally and teaching love by
example is
far more of a noble focus than spending much of our time obsessing over and trying to please a god whom there is zero proof of existence.
Further down the scale toward materiality, other groupings of occasions can be assumed, which are still
more tied to biorhythms, as for
example the reticular system, balance and appetite centers, and so on.
Huntington, for
example, contends that «
far more significant than the global issues of economics and demography are problems of moral decline», an «increase in antisocial behavior», decay of family structures, weakening of the «work ethic», and decreasing commitment to intellectual activity.12 Similarly Brzezinski refers to a current global crisis of spirit which has to be overcome if the human race is to regain some control over its destiny.
Secondly, the style of the writing is somewhat inconsistent: some chapters are overflowing with
examples, others are
far more abstract.
Most ardent Catholics I know devote
far more time trying to convert the masses via Facebook debates, for
example, than they devote plugging into the day - to - day lives of their parishes.
He would argue that Leclerc's notion of «physical existence» applies not only to our
more typical notion of a molecule of water, or of sugar, or of hemoglobin (all of similar type), but also to
examples of crystals, which are markedly different, and to systems of chemical reaction which persist
far from equilibrium.
Further, the illustration of the contemporary region of «grey» may be due to quite other efficacious historic routes — for
example, to lighting effects arranged by theatrical producers — and in such a case, the term «stone» may suggest an even
more violent error than In the former
example.
The fact is that the religious life involves
far more than killing time,
far more, for
example, than sticking out one's hand in a gesture of otherworldly defiance and running down the clock, though heaven knows we need gestures of religious defiance in today's world.
For
example, «the fresh and vivid style of Mark» has been explained as the result of Peter's vivid personal recollections — forgetting that people did not usually write that way in ancient times, but
far more prosaically,
far less romantically; the exploitation of literary personality is a very modern innovation.
For
example, the Dutch painter Joseph Isräels (Frugal Meal, 1876) attempted to show that the most mundane acts of human experience conveyed the presence of the divine with
far more poignancy than the traditional subjects of cross and cathedral.
The fact that such large and powerful churches are led by people who are are
more concerned with being seen to be strong and right than with reading the Bible humbly and seriously is scary, and so
far from the
example of Jesus and the witness of the Bible itself.
«Disinterestedness,» for
example, turns out on
further analysis to be
more a feature of the scientist's occupational role than of his personal character.
For
example, transportation costs
far more in an urban industrial economy than in a rural village economy.
And so he fastens on my
examples of «moderate» positions and glides past the point: namely, that even measures
far more modest than his can plant principles, or teachings,
far more critical than anything his own,
more ambitious plan, would impart.
If all this added up to certain kinds of discomfort that would have seemed somewhat peculiar to our Eastern big - city cousins — childhood friendships, for
example, that unspokenly and mysteriously evaporated in adolescence — in some respects we were also
far more at ease than they.
The assembled documents, as they now stand, suggest that the empty tomb and the sight and handling of the risen body were the origin of confidence in the resurrection, and that the experience of the early Christians afterward went on to
further visions of him,
more spiritually conceived, as, for
example, Paul's on the Damascus road.
A
more far - reaching
example is when somebody recognizes you for what you are, knows you, to use Biblical language, and accepts that.
Those in the
far north benefit from having less light come in to their retina's, especially during times of snow... another
example is the inuit people who naturally create a type of antifreeze in their blood... developed over centuries of a populous that is
far more resistant to cold.
As Waterman, for
example, has observed, by
far the most influential theodicy in the Christian West is that of St. Augustine of Hippo, whose voluminous and powerful writings set the theological agenda for
more than a thousand years.
American socialists have never faced the mass arrests and the total prohibition on socialist publications that, for
example, Japanese socialists have, yet socialism in Japan remains a
far more vital movement than in America.
The above
examples of a few people who have found God real and contemporary, and who have thereby gained a sense of purpose which
far transcends this little life, are no
more than a brief record of those whom I have personally known.
Yet he was magnificently adapted to the larger environment of history; and so
far as any saint's
example is a leaven of righteousness in the world, and draws it in the direction of
more prevalent habits of saintliness, he is a success, no matter what his immediate bad fortune may be.
But, for
far too many (and there are prominent
examples), the critique is valued
more than charity or clarity.
They appear as
further and
more impressive
examples of our Lord's miraculous power and therefore take their place alongside his other mighty acts.