Sentences with phrase «lot about the human»

We've learned lots about the human mind.
We've learned a lot about the human condition in the past few hundred years — namely how pain can turn to hatred.
In fact, working with Barbie has taught me a lot about human nature.
I can not understand anybody wanting to leave Arsenal — but in 30 years of doing transfers you learn a lot about human beings.
Yep, you can tell a lot about a human from their BM (and that's true for adults too!)
By studying these disorders, scientists can learn a lot about human social cognition.
«We know a lot about the human genome, but we also know that there is a lot that remains to be discovered,» Sebastiani said.
Fossil bones and stone tools can tell us a lot about human evolution, but certain dynamic behaviours of our fossil ancestors — things like how they moved and how individuals interacted with one another — are incredibly difficult to deduce from these traditional forms of paleoanthropological data.
It can teach us a lot about human disease.»
Biologists are building banks of «organoids», and learning a lot about human development on the way
While the Human Genome Project revealed much about our common humanity, recently scientists have begun to learn a lot about human evolution from the small genetic differences that set us apart.
Biteen: We hear a lot about the human gut microbiome, but what is really interesting to me — and I only appreciated it recently — is that microbiomes are everywhere.
Before I got sick, I think I knew a lot about the human experience and some universal experiences, but health issues certainly brought up many new feelings for me.
Many of us have heard a lot about human growth hormone, haven't we?
The scientific name for flax — Linum usitatissimum — reveals a lot about our human relationship to this plant.
He says you can tell a lot about a human by observing how he treats his dog.
Michael Horn: When you founded Rocketship Education, a school network, you thought a lot about the human capital challenges and opportunities in education gleaned from your own time as a teacher and in technology.
A really moving, engaging, and original narrative that - through some extraordinary circumstances - reveals a lot about the human capacity to love and to mourn (Tom B).
The book urges one to think a lot about human nature and morality.
Well, at the recent BlogPaws conference, our Saturday keynote, Dr. Kate Hodgson, DVM, MHsSs, CCMEP, spoke on the topic of «one health initiative» and taught us a LOT about the human animal bond.
By the time you read this, you will have heard a lot about the Human Animal Bond Research Initiative (HABRI).
«I think and reflect a lot about humans and their relationships.
I've learned a lot about the human mind from Dan Siegel, a psychiatrist at the Center for Culture, Brain, and Development of the U.C.L.A. School of Medicine and the author of a string of related books.
I've been writing a lot about human vulnerability to inevitable disasters on a crowding planet.
One of the advantages of great literature is that it says a lot about human beings.
but climate scientists don't know a lot about human behavior.
These seemingly simple tests can reveal a lot about human health such as detecting any abnormality in liver and kidney functions, a rise or fall in blood sugar levels and whether or not the insured consumes alcohol and tobacco.
SH: You've talked a lot about the human touch.
Learned a lot about human relations and the importance of a positive mental attitude in everything I do.

Not exact matches

He also told The New Yorker he felt the ambitious undertaking would allow him to «confront a lot of our shared anxieties about the future of human expression (see: Twitter or text messages) by forcing a great work of literature through such a strange new filter.»
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.
When my client started thinking about what his various audiences needed from him, his communication got a lot more relevant and meaningful — and more human.
Many of us fall for these personality tests because they tap into a basic human craving to reveal a lot about our own desires and dreams.
With the recent discovery of anatomically modern humans evolving 100,000 years earlier than previously estimated, it's not out of the question that our ancestors did a lot of moving about.
Elon Musk is famously wary of artificial intelligence and has talked a lot about what its rise could mean for the general safety of the human race.
«For Treasuries, the share of transactions by primary dealers has dwindled by more than half to 4 percent since the end of 2008,» with electronic traders like Citadel expanding their role as dealers, and the complaints about the Treasury market sound a lot like the complaints in the equity markets about human market makers being replaced by algorithmic traders.
«I got really interested in trying to understand how we could model human behavior through social media because there's residue of who we are in everything we do and here we had lots of little behaviors that we could use to try to understand a little bit more about who you are.»
If you're interested in self - inquiry there are a lot of psychological texts written in recent years when the science was far, far in advance of anything understood about humans back in biblical times.
You are right about humans and their dead, but the main reason, and it took a lot of evolution to prove it, was due to hygene,
I have seen people that were «demon - possessed», have heard a lot of stories about ex-freemasons that interacts with lucifer, people that had near death experiences, people that have seen angels, people who can turn human beings into real zombies, (i can not prove / disprove these stories).
You Said: — «I have seen people that were «demon - possessed», have heard a lot of stories about ex-freemasons that interacts with lucifer, people that had near death experiences, people that have seen angels, people who can turn human beings into real zombies, (i can not prove / disprove these stories).
A lot has been made in the past several years about human trafficking during the NFL's Super Bowl.
I think we humans have a lot to learn about how time works and how God is related to time.
I have a lot to be mad with God about and sometimes I struggle, but my pain has taught me a lot about God and the human heart.
Just imagine — If the human race is still around in a thousand years and we were somehow able to listen in on a discussion regarding what we now think is true in all of these areas, I'm guessing there would be lots of chuckling about our «primitive» ideas.
Again, I think that it has had a lot to say, including some very important insights about the physical universe, human nature, history, and about our knowledge of all of these.
We never have seen anything pop into existence ever, everything we see or build starts with some type of creation from some creator whether it be from humans or whatever, not one single example of anything would prove otherwise, so going about everyday life feeling confident that everything just magically popped into existence without a magician really takes a lot more faith than what I have.
Mainly, because in all the verbiage about freedoms of beliefs there is something so important, so blatantly acute yet everyone do not even mention it, except - oh genial me: Why would anyone in the whole world support any type of creed / belief / religion where a whole lot of humans — as in millions of human women — are not allowed to go to school, to even just read and write - less become a teacher, doctor, lawyer, president of their own companies, their own countries, mutilated by the millions when they reach puberty, WHY is this allowed?
And, oh, when the hour - glass has run out, the hourglass of time, when the noise of worldliness is silenced, and the restless or the ineffectual busyness comes to an end, when everything is still about thee as it is in eternity — whether thou wast man or woman, rich or poor, dependent or independent, fortunate or unfortunate, whether thou didst bear the splendor of the crown in a lofty station, or didst bear only the labor and heat of the day in an inconspicuous lot; whether thy name shall be remembered as long as the world stands (and so was remembered as long as the world stood), or without a name thou didst cohere as nameless with the countless multitude; whether the glory which surrounded thee surpassed all human description, or the judgment passed upon thee was the most severe and dishonoring human judgement can pass — eternity asks of thee and of every individual among these million millions only one question, whether thou hast lived in despair or not, whether thou wast in despair in such a way that thou didst not know thou wast in despair, or in such a way that thou didst hiddenly carry this sickness in thine inward parts as thy gnawing secret, carry it under thy heart as the fruit of a sinful love, or in such a way that thou, a horror to others, didst rave in despair.
Why do you talk about only what he didn't menage to do, or what was wrong in his pontificate?Yes, I agree there were many things that could have been resolved in better way, but he was only a human and as everybody could make mistakes.To me what is important in his pontificate is that he was a first pope who «opened «the church to people, who travelled a lot, met with people, went to synagogue, did much to abolish communism.Sure, he wasn't ideal, but for me the best pope so far.
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