Sentences with phrase «leaves much uncertainty»

However, the recommendation to eat fruit and vegetables to prevent chronic diseases is mainly based on observational epidemiological studies, which leaves much uncertainty regarding the causal mechanism of this association.

Not exact matches

With so much uncertainty and instability in Britain, and with renewed and invigorated calls for a second Scottish referendum, he couldn't simply resign and leave without damaging Britain's financial situation further.
However, he notes, such software leaves much room for uncertainty about security and data integrity, as well as IP, legal, and regulatory compliance.
NASA's human spaceflight program has been in a state of uncertainty pretty much from the moment the Apollo 17 crew left the surface of the Moon 45 years ago this month.
In a statement, Emanuel said, «In the past, there has been too much uncertainty around changes to our schools: year after year, Chicago Public Schools did not do an adequate job of engaging communities in these critical decisions, and year after year students, families and communities were left wondering of what was to come.
The game never explains or connects too much, and thus it leaves a little edge of uncertainty, that dreamlike sense of forces powerful and incomprehensible churning just beyond the world.
The greatest economic uncertainty is not over climate, but over how much oil is left and how fast we can transition to alternatives.
Representing uncertainty is always a challenge but I think this does a good job of representing the scale of our emissions, compared with the «safe» amount of carbon we can burn and how much carbon should be left in the ground.
It is MUCH better to just skirt the issue, leave the uncertainty, and run around crying «The Sky is Falling» — all the while accepting grants to study little issues of climate that don't have the potential to blow their funding out of the water.
You would have to leave that as ambiguous as well because that much uncertainty wouldn't allow you to discriminate the signal from the noise.
Sifting out the facts from the factoids usually leaves an unsatisfactory result — unsettled questions, way too much uncertainty, vague understandings.
Furthermore, repeating things like «the IPCC reports don't leave much room for uncertainty» only shows you haven't actually read the IPCC report.
On issues such as CRISPR and genetic engineering the EU is regulating itself out of the competition and many businesspeople are unaware that this will get much worse once the ECJ starts using the Charter of Fundamental Rights to seize control of such regulation for itself, which will mean not just more anti-science regulation but also damaging uncertainty as scientists and companies face the ECJ suddenly pulling a human rights «top trump» out of the deck whenever they fancy (one of the many arguments Vote Leave made during the referendum that we could not get the media to report, partly because of persistent confusion between the COFR and the ECHR).
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