Mr Blair this week apologised
for intelligence failures and inadequate post-conflict planning, but refused to say sorry for the decision to invade.
Not exact matches
But are
failures like these — small groups of people throwing wrenches into the works, just
for laughs — why exciting projects like artificial
intelligence or hitchhiking robots sometimes don't make it off the ground?
Particularly
for health care, data is widely seen as an elixir that will revolutionize an ossified industry, rooting out waste and
failure and bringing
intelligence to the marketplace.
But Flynn was also heavily scrutinized over his work at his outside
intelligence firm and
for dealings involving the Turkish government, including his initial
failure to register properly as a foreign agent.
I doubt
intelligence failures will ever be reduced to zero, but a first step toward limiting the repetition of a particular error is recognizing and taking responsibility
for the mistake.
In this play, Ibsen has correctly pinpointed problems in marriage that call
for change: domineering and patronising husbands,
failure to acknowledge with respect the
intelligence, responsibility and self - direction of wives, dishonesty and childish behaviour, duty without love that can leave a marriage relationship superficial.
Effusive praise
for skill or
intelligence may reinforce a fixed mindset and result in your child attributing
failure to being not smart.
Another limitation of prior investigations is the classification of infant feeding as ever vs never breastfed.4
Failure to account
for partial vs exclusive breastfeeding or breastfeeding duration could lead to underestimation of the true effect of breastfeeding on child
intelligence.
The fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq takes place this Thursday and Mr Katwala had used the impending milestone to call
for an «independent public inquiry» into its
intelligence failures, the war itself and the ensuing struggle
for security.
The
failure of individuals with lower
intelligence to appropriately follow a consistent strategy and estimate the future consequences of their actions accounted
for these different outcomes.
The
failure of individuals with lower
intelligence to find and follow an optimal strategy and appropriately estimate the future consequences of their actions accounted
for the difference in outcomes.
Or does the
intelligence of these students lead to too high expectations, given that children with AD / HD are often at a greater risk
for academic and social
failure?
If we accept the premise that student - centered learning can be a highly effective strategy
for many kinds of classrooms and school populations, how can we ensure it is implemented effectively, with
intelligence, and without the rigid dogma that so often leads to the
failure of so many sweeping educational reforms?
Isikoff's June 2002 Newsweek cover story on U.S.
intelligence failures that preceded the 9/11 terror attacks, along with a series of related articles, was honored with the Investigative Reporters and Editors top prize
for investigative reporting in magazine journalism.
In a recent survey [1] conducted by the Economist
Intelligence Unit
for The Bingham Centre, the majority of executives surveyed had in the past five years experienced several
failures of the rule of law in countries in which they had invested.
The majority of executives have in the past five years experienced several rule of law
failures in countries in which they are investing, according to a survey of 300 senior decision - makers at Forbes 2000 companies conducted by the Economist
Intelligence Unit
for The Bingham Centre.
A «fixed mindset» assumes that our character,
intelligence, and creative ability are static givens that we can't change in any meaningful way, and success is the affirmation of that inherent
intelligence, an assessment of how those givens measure up against an equally fixed standard; striving
for success and avoiding
failure at all costs become a way of maintaining the sense of being smart or skilled.