Sentences with phrase «latest thinking on the subject»

The resource centre is a convenient way for us to keep them apprised of our best and latest thinking on the subject and we're excited to make it available to both current and prospective clients.»

Not exact matches

The series of studies led by New York University's Gabriele Oettingen tested the effects of positive thinking on subjects» moods, both in the moment and several months later.
First published in 1948 and running through many reprints, Christianity and Communism Today by the late John C. Bennett laid down the «moderate» liberal line on the subject, a line that dominated mainline Protestant thinking up until the fall of the Soviet Union.
When, years later, I found Calvin declaring that every Christian experiences the inward witness of the Holy Spirit to the divine authority of Scripture, (2) I rejoiced to think that, without ever having heard a word on this subject, I had long known exactly what Calvin was talking about — as by God's mercy I still do.
I genuinely was interested in this subject because of late it has somewhat been playing on my mind and so sought to discover the truth on the matter and so sought out discussions and literature by christian writers that I might examine their different stances on the issue and try to find a moral cross-section as I think is appropriate for all questions since the ranging views are like politics ranging from far left wing to far right wing views.
ok, ok, ok, i get it both sides think they are telling the truth there are no lyers here on this blogs only misinform people talking about two separate subjects yet thinking they are talking about the same thing the existence of god... one side believe the other doesn't what's wrong with that... sooner or later they'll changed their minds and one side will believe and the other won't so the arguement will forever be the same about two separate aguement on the same blog... but its definitely entertaining to read the comebacks... keep up the good work you all... its just as fun to read what the believer have to say as to what the nonebeliever have to say... after all it keeps all getting to know eachother better on what we believe right???
More seriously, sometimes a taste can whet the appetite for more complete consumption later on, and perhaps these samples will at least suggest ways to think about the subject.
The reasons for the latest failure by Arsenal have been and will continue to be the subject of heavy debate but one thing I think we can all agree on is that the lack of goals compared to the amount of possession and chances was a major factor.
Manchester United have agreed their first summer signing (subject to a medical) ahead of their assault on the Premier League title next season, so I thought I'd indulge you with a selection of the latest selection of Arsenal rumours.
I am of the thinking that on the very day Brexit comes into effect, and except where it has formally been agreed during the negotiations on certain issues and matters to benefit both the UK and the EU, the UK should no longer be subjected to comply or obey any standing Laws passed before and later by the EU court of justuce after Brexit has come into effect.
A little later today I'll share a guest blog post from Robyn McCord O'Brien on this subject, and I'll also be giving away to Lunch Tray readers three free copies of Robyn's thought - provoking book, The Unhealthy Truth.
I give them kudos for putting some thoughts out there on a subject that has drawn much debate in the public affairs community as of late; however, I found the seven listed «tips to make sure you're reaching bloggers most efficiently» was walking the line between obvious and odd — «odd,» as in, «disturbingly oblivious to what I think most of us would consider standard good public affairs practices».
The Government's reforms of the NHS have also been getting a lot of media attention, and this is an issue where Labour are traditionally more trusted than the Conservatives our latest poll on the subject showed that 40 % of Brits think Labour would handle the issue of the NHS best, compared to 24 % for the Conservatives.
After Kubrick had once talked to his close friend Spielberg about producing the film, he later attempted to pass the film on to Spielberg in 1995, thinking maybe the subject matter would better fit his style and tone.
I may have more to say on the subject later, but I think as a culture we've come to mistake self - seriousness (which The Revenant has in spades) for seriousness, and to imagine that any hint of humor (which The Martian deploys artfully) is an indicator of unseriousness.
Literacy is the foundation on which all academic success is built, opening access to challenging subject matter and critical thinking in later grades and life pursuits after high school graduation.
Today, novelist Cynthia Eden, whose Deadly series is published by Grand Central (we loved the latest installment, Deadly Lies) shares a few of her thoughts on the subject with us.
I think after the recent publicity PETA's gotten (collecting animals from veterininarians with the promise of finding them homes, only to kill them a few minutes later), their credibility on any subject is pretty much non-existent.
For example, to think of a giant like Clement Greenberg, his early championing of Jackson Pollock may have launched his career, but his legacy was made not on the basis of these often cursory reviews, but rather on his synthesis and contextualization of Pollock's significance in later essays such as ««American - Type» Painting» and «After Abstract Expressionism» that rely on a certain degree of historical distance from their subjects, however slight.
I am not alone in thinking of Stella as a consummate colorist (and I feel as though I'm too old to like the neon in the later works) but in this pivotal piece he is a supreme dialectician on the subject.
There is an interesting article I read on the subject on HBR titled «You Are Not a Failure» which had an intriguing classification of types of creativity — «conceptual» (in which a young person has a clear vision and executes it early, a la Picasso or Zuckerberg) and «experimental» (think Cezanne or Virginia Woolf, practicing and refining their craft over time and winning late - in - life success).
At the second reading of the Legal Aid and Advice Bill in 1948 (later the Legal Aid and Advice Act 1949), the Attorney General and former British Prosecutor at the Nuremburg Trials, Sir Hartley Shawcross, noted in relation to the need for reform that: «The existing arrangements were subject to the further criticism — and I think a serious one — that the scheme depended on the good will and charity of the legal profession.
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