Sentences with phrase «humans feel like»

Where each type of robot requires unique strategies and a strong sense of your surroundings to succeed, fights against humans feel like far less interesting resource and skill checks.
i am a simple lady who like to meet honest people that has fear of God and respect human feeling i like understanding people and i hate lies i love to travel and visiting friends also i am interested in watching movies
A loyal dog can make his human feel like the most important individual on the planet, and numerous pet owners would agree that dogs tend to hold an irreplaceable spot in our hearts.
Of all the gorgeous screens I've seen for Uncharted 2: Among Thieves, none has so beautifully, brilliantly encompassed the wealth of human feeling like this series of shots of some dude getting yanked off a building.
They're certainly not wrong in their assessment because The Aquatic Adventure of the Last Human feels like some sort of deliriously brilliant marriage between the frantic shoot em» up gameplay of Metroid and the tranquil, almost melancholic exportation of Ecco the Dolphin.

Not exact matches

I this all sounds like psycho - babble but I promise you that if you'll commit just one day of your life to go to prison with the team at Defy Ventures you will feel profoundly moved, you will feel deeply human and you will feel the calling to do more.
For example, a posting for «super drivers» called for candidates who feel comfortable chatting with moms and who operate «like a cross between Captain Planet, a human GPS and Santa.»
If your business model revolves more around river tours and large bodies of water, the mighty kraken, complete with lots of morbid jokes about your service to the creature, ferrying tourists to feed its unending hunger for human flesh, may do a better job of making your employees feel like they are part of something greater.
«Our idea was: Could we have a computing platform that's more internal, that melds human and machine in some ways and that feels like an internal extension of our own cognition,» says Arnav Kapur, who led the system's development.
Much of human psychology is built around the concept of associations; when we eat something sweet, we experience a release of feel - good chemicalsm like dopamine; that way, we learn to associate sweet foods with a pleasant experience.
«Try to lend a warm, human tone to your project descriptions and videos, almost in a way that makes people feel like they are talking with you,» he says.
There are so many moments lately when it feels like the world is torn: there are natural disasters, political crises, major human rights violations, and more.
According to Jeremy Bailenson, founding director of Stanford's Virtual Human Interaction Lab, «VR takes all the gadgets away, it takes all the multitasking away and you actually feel like you're with someone.
During my tests, I felt a pang of regret for even agreeing to being carted around like that in the first place, even with a human driver as a backup.
I rarely stand in the human cashier line, since buying tickets at the automated kiosks is usually much faster (and makes one feel less like cattle).
And we feel like that's a very universal human story that we're trying to tap in to.
A lot of human nature will drive us to do the small things that make us look busy and feel like we've somehow contributing to the company.
You'll have to wait two to four months from the initial fitting to put actual tires to pavement, but in the end, you'll have a bike that feels like an extension of you, rather than a bike for some human oddity Tour rider.
Stereotypical motivational posters aren't going to instantly motivate your team every day, but including pictures, quotes, and artwork on the walls of the office can inspire creativity and make the office feel like a much more human, organic place to work.
What will the next generation of human — machine interaction look and feel like?
Regardless of such sage advice being repeated over and over again, generation after generation, there is something in human nature that makes people want to feel like they have somehow found a silver bullet.
I know that harassment makes a person feel degraded, used, like they are not human but an object.
For example, the wide - angle lens is designed to mimic the way the human eye sees the world so that viewing a Memory later makes a person feel like they are reliving the experience.
It's human nature to feel like we belong and are connected.
I am not religious or spiritual, but I, like Nyad, can feel amazed by the human experience.
I've never really liked Palin, but this disclosed letter makes her feel more human, and showcases her dealing with one of the most emotional episodes of her life.
And how do you even defend yourself against such a barrage when someone thinks it's their human right to foul the air with any kind of language they «damn well» please, anytime they feel like it?
We generally like to be good to those we feel close to, as it protects our livelihoods — Some without reason will attribute this to God, I for one will consider it a wondrous byproduct of human development.
These films celebrate the human spirit and explore themes like God's character amidst the holiday season, what it means to be human or how it feels to fall in love.
Your brain which (like every other human brain) are a master of deception and delusion react to the stress by presenting you with the feeling that someone bigger and more powerfull is there to help you.
Amazing, such rationality presented by you... oh wait, not really rational to poke fun at your human being unless your own self esteem is so low that the only means to feel superior to your fellow human being is to belittle them for their beliefs... kinda like what the religious do to you.
If that which is in the womb is a human being then there can be no justification for the murder of that child and the people who lamely say it is the mother's prerogative to murder him or her if she feels like it is just barbaric.
And then that moment of birth being one of complete relief and release and joy, yes absolutely, but instead of popping champagne corks or bursting into laughter, I cried from the core of myself — like some ancient writer said, I lifted up my voice and I wept, because she was finally here and we were alive and we were safe and I felt held by the God - with - us; it was the most human and most sacred thing I'd ever done in my life, it felt like a glimpse of Incarnation.
Telling someone that releasing their pain in public like this and feeling as if NakedPastor / The Lasting Supper is not the proper place to discuss anything human?
but if anyone truley had God in thier heart and had faith in the Lord... simply by folding your hands and asking God to enter your heart... (try it he will be there for you, and you will feel the joy of His love), then they would never do things like this... he obviously was not a person who loved God because No one with God in thier heart would want to do thing s like that... you HATE sin when you truely love God, No ones perfect though, even those who belive in God we all stray from our beliefs, its human nature and the devil takes advantage of this.
«I'm able to feel and like my own strength as a human being... I'm doing a lot less of this god - making of authority people.»
I hope that in his next book, Turner does a little more of this, for it transforms his funny, sometimes bizarre anecdotes into more relatable, human stories and makes the reader feel more like a participant and less like an observer.
When I feel like discarding faith, I feel the overpowering nihilism and barely feel human.
Regarding the first: I do not care to defend here Hartshorne's psychicalism against the criticism that it commits the pathetic fallacy (or «fallacy of mislocation,» as Shalom contends) by attributing to nature human - like feelings, actions, etc. 3 But I do wish to argue that he is innocent of trying to move from (a human - like) nature («event - cells,» etc.) to human beings and characteristically human activities.
When I reflect on the infinite pains to which the human mind and heart will go in order to protect itself from the full impact of reality, when I recall the mordant analyses of religious belief which stem from the works of Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud and, furthermore, recognize the truth of so much of what these critics of religion have had to say, when I engage in a philosophical critique of the language of theology and am constrained to admit that it is a continual attempt to say what can not properly be said and am thereby led to wonder whether its claim to cognition can possibly be valid — when I ask these questions of myself and others like them (as I can not help asking and, what is more, feel obliged to ask), is not the conclusion forced upon me that my faith is a delusion?
In a world ruled by education and intellect, we feel like we lose credibility without our human knowledge or wisdom.
Humans like praise, it makes us feel good, and gives us a boost to our ego.
Statements like the one Speckhardt offered -(«We feel those (unaffiliated) folks don't yet know they can admit that they don't believe in God,») make humans sound like they are nothing but chimpanzees looking for any «ist» vine to grab on to.
The purely twaddling inhuman and too - human men are to such a degree without feeling for the need of solitude that like a certain species of social birds (the so - called love birds) they promptly die if for an instant they have to be alone.
At least when you have no knowledge you should speak in respectful manner in respect of the feelings of others... you said you liked me as human I say ok fine and I will do the same but to insult my belief and whom I as Muslim hold in high respect... well then you are not a worthy human being to treat as one... Hope you feel for me as I would have felt for you.
I understand the context, but why do his comments have to sound like the anodyne, feel - good verbiage we hear from the mouths of human resource professionals and corporate diversity officers?
On the other hand, if this man was human as I am, if he was a limited, feeling, fallible creature like myself, and he was able to live in this way and love in this way and give of himself in this way — then so can I. And his teachings are then relevant, for they come from someone who shared my predicament.
Feeling - qualities, the sense of empathetic identification, and the valuational aspect in all human experience have been given serious attention by most process - thinkers; this was why words like «good» and «love» and «harmony», and their opposites, could be used with some freedom in the preceding discussion.
The former — religious experience — need not be highly articulated nor even highly conscious of God as God; it may be vague, diffused, and unformed, yet also a deliverance of what it feels like to be dependent upon a reality greater than anything human or natural.
Believing in God is much more pleasant, and we humans are predisposed to experience emotions that feel like proof when we think of things like a higher cause, morality, justice, etc..
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z