Sentences with phrase «full grasp of»

It is important that the reader go through the full CV to have a full grasp of your abilities.
It's assumed that they don't have a full grasp of the potential consequences of their actions, so liability covers them even for most intentional acts.
This doesn't strike me as a reasonable list of questions, except to those who don't have a full grasp of the scientific evidence on climate change.
I feel that my multiple hours though is certainly not enough to get a full grasp of what's on offer and I'll definitely be diving in for months to come, so feel free to join me.
In the survey, the person interviewed might not have a full grasp of the cards being used by everyone in the family, the researchers said.
It's assumed that they don't have a full grasp of the potential consequences of their actions, so liability covers them even for most intentional acts.
I recommend most writers attend a writers conference that has literary agent speakers to get a full grasp of the query letter writing and pitch process.
One is not reassured of Kirp's full grasp of this matter when he places «Allan Bloom and E.B. Hirsch» [sic] together on one side of the issue, Jonathan Kozol and Jean Piaget on the other.
According to him, the government demonstrated that it did not have a full grasp of the challenges facing the economy.
Most parents of special needs children will tell you that you already need to know special needs law, understand the ins and outs of agency options and policies, and have a full grasp of all available therapies before stepping foot in a planning meeting for their child.
By using an anatomical baby boy doll, the child could slowly get the full grasp of the process.
The spirit in the ministry today appears to be to achieve as full a grasp of gospel and world as possible and to achieve the most effective available application of the one to the other.
The priest, however, must exercise other functions besides administering the sacraments and institutional means can not empower him to fulfill these duties; hence he needs to practice spiritual discipline, cultivating all the Christian virtues; he also needs to study, for «how can he teach unless he himself possess knowledge» and have gained a «full grasp of the Catholic teaching on faith and morals?»
«Back in 2010, while I was VP of Sales at uberVu (acquired by HootSuite in 2011), Mike joined our Advisory Board and within a month he had a full grasp of our business and had opened no less than 50 doors for potential clients directly with the CEO of each company.
That way, you get a full grasp of your daily tasks and can better understand who to reach out to for advice.
Still, many of the individuals making these decisions don't have a full grasp of Social Security benefits.
Get a full grasp of how a business turns profits on paper into money in the bank.»
The pure prophets are distinguished from the apocalyptic ones, as from the seers and diviners of other religions, by the fact that they did not wish to peep into an already certain and immutable future but were concerned only with the full grasping of the present, actual and potential.

Not exact matches

Even knowledge of the «hard» sciences advances over time; a unified theory of the investment world is similarly beyond our grasp — as is a full understanding of any one strategy, no matter the current pile of historical evidence.the research puzzle For more thoughts on the topic, see this posting on «decaying beliefs.»
We can hardly grasp the full meaning of the word «death» (death is somewhat beyond reason), thus we should regard, what we can understand regarding the topic of death.
Despite the sinfulness of its people, the Church is always the privileged place of encounter with the living God, who continually forms his people into the community in which the full truth about humanity is grasped.
We see glimpses of it, we're reminded, we have a hunch or a memory we can't quite grasp if we try to look at it full on.
Two sentences in the discussion of reason in the earlier version of the report could be taken to support the use of such analysis: «By reason we relate our witness to the full range of human knowledge and experience,» and «By our quest for reasoned understandings of Christian faith we seek to grasp and express the gospel in a way that will commend itself to thoughtful persons who are seeking to know and follow God's ways.»
And beyond issues related to justice, psychologists are only just beginning to grasp the full impact of pornography upon our brains and how those effects are creating sexual and relational dysfunction.
In this sense a process hermeneutic will be more fully «secular» than the new hermeneutic, since it will recognize that all beings, in all times and places, who can in the full sense be named human persons, are — simply by virtue of their humanity — capable of grasping (and being grasped by) the message of the text.
It is the same Revelation that the OT narrative of Abraham, who was not yet evolved enough to grasp the FULL Revelation, «I desire mercy not sacrifice,» got when God stayed his hand from human sacrifice: the cycle of pain and cruelty stops here!
So we do not have a full understanding or grasp of what good and bad is.
This failure to grasp the universal nature of ideality also results in animals, however virtuous, not qualifying as full - fledged moral agents (AAMB 52) 4
Nevertheless, the full complexity of this double stream of tradition is still available, and one way ahead in the ecumenical dialogue may be to grasp again the full complexity of the common tradition available to us.
He solved it, or got round it, in the way philosophers and scientists have always been obliged to do — by the use of neologisms and, at times, of elaborate, allusive formulations of words which make considerable demands on the reader if their full meaning and implications are to be grasped.
You will also discover that you will never completely grasp the full complex of meanings or spirit of the texts you read.
Yet to grasp the full significance of the eternal recurrence, we must first recall Nietzsche's basic intentions: namely, to accord an ultimate value to the realm of becoming and temporal life; to redeem and to unleash the creative potentials of earthly will to power; and to help create a humanly significant future.
What we need to do in order to grasp its meaning is to give full recognition to both elements, and the divine message will shine through with greater richness and power if we understand something of the channels of human fallibility mixed with high insights through which the message comes.
To concern oneself with the resurrection hope simply for the purpose of grasping hold of what seems to be a viable approach to personal immortality does not, however, do full justice to this first - century doctrine.
Perhaps the first to grasp the full significance of globalization, and to experience global consciousness intensively, was the Jesuit priest - scientist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881 - 1955), whose seminal book The Phenomenon of Man was written before 1940 but not published until after his death.
Persons who are grasped by the power of such visions, who are inspired by a «sublime madness in the soul» (Reinhold Niebuhr), are the probable agents of redemptive social change, even though they know in their critical moments that no future achievement is likely to embody the full measure of their treasured ideal.
I wish I could explain his reasoning on this, but you really must read the chapters for yourself to grasp the full weight of his argument.
God's natural order can still be grasped at by the common sense of men of good will, but the full truth and meaning of creation, the separation of the sexes and of human nature, will only ever be in part and obscurely viewed when the determined and determining purpose of the mind of God is recognised in creation, holding all things relative to Himself — and to His plan to enter creation as its Lord and King.
To the contrary, my hypothesis was so complex, so difficult to grasp, and so full of details, I myself had trouble keeping it all straight in my own head!
@ Rainer Braendlein — from the convo on the other page — look, in truth... no one can truly grasp at the full meaning of those books unless they themselves are those who wrote it.
In short, the Church should simultaneously promote Catholicism as the religion of mystery and as the religion that promotes reason's full capacity for grasping universal truths.
It is precisely by raising these controversies in the context of the comparative study of congregations that the full meaning and importance of contested theological views are best grasped.
In consequence, reason and the sciences benefitimmensely from the attitude of faith, since it opens them up continually to the full complexity of reality, preventing research from becoming satisfied that it has grasped the fullness of it all.
Because the chances are my perpetrators, even if they do apologize, may never grasp the full dimensions of their violations against me.
I do not presume to have grasped the details and full import of Griffin's approach.
It went in the stat sheet as a half sack for Gunter and a half sack and a caused fumble (although I normally would give a full sack to whomever caused the fumble), but I do wonder if Goff is either able to wiggle out of Gunter's grasp or just able to throw the ball away.
The Young Lions fell behind on 35 minutes when full - back Jeremy Toljan found Davie Selke in the box, who planted his header beyond the outstretched grasp of Jordan Pickford.
Stephanie is an engaged parent, working to grasp some of the more philosophical aspects of parenting that have been proven to help children learn, grow and develop to reach their full potential.
In other parts of the world... places that are less industrialized, slower paced, and full of a sweet simplicity that beckons one to join in and take notice, have grasped the amazing bond that nursing brings — and they aren't so quick to let it go.
Because the breast is so full and swollen, the nipple and areola may flatten out (sort of like a water balloon) making the tissue difficult for the baby to grasp.
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