Sentences with phrase «more about the sort»

If you want to learn more about this sort of prayer, I highly recommend The Practice of the Presence of God by Brother Lawrence.
«I just think that, for us, it will be more about sorting out the tactical problems.
From technology specialists to patent attorneys to policy advisers, you can learn more about the sorts of careers that scientists can pursue and the skills you will need to develop in order to succeed in nonresearch careers.
And if you're curious to learn more about this sort of stuff, and how you can become a Jedi master in healing your body, you may consider joining me next Wednesday April 6th @ 7 pm EST for a free virtual workshop where I'll be teaching a process called «Body Mapping».
YOU NEED TO TALK TO THEM because they know a lot more about this sort of thing than you do.
Before you apply you can speak to your contact to find out more about the sort of person are hoping to recruit.

Not exact matches

More and more, according to Salesforce, consumers care about whether or not businesses are taking these sorts of socially responsible actiMore and more, according to Salesforce, consumers care about whether or not businesses are taking these sorts of socially responsible actimore, according to Salesforce, consumers care about whether or not businesses are taking these sorts of socially responsible actions.
If you're seeing some sort of discoloration, whether in large or small amounts, you might want to switch up or be more conscientious about some of your usual habits.
We've figured out some drugs that usually work, but as we learn more about the human body and our genetic code — the things we have in common but also the things that make us unique — we may come up with a new sort of medicine, tailored for each person.
Those sorts of questions are much more interesting and useful than questions about whether a particular politician should accept paid speaking engagements, and certainly more important than the borderline silly question of whether money that was accepted in good faith ought to be paid back.
Can you imagine the impact when a small - business owner is able to sort through volumes of internal and external data about his or her business and then lets any employee, in any role, to make insightful decisions and engage customers more effectively?
Although Hyman didn't offer any more specific timeline, she did talk about another fun feature the company has been beta - testing since the summer, that she describes as a sort of Netflix for dresses.
Traditional answers often focus on various sectors and involve more or less hand - wringing about their rise and fall, but according to the author of a forthcoming book on entrepreneurship and economy, there is another, better way to view our economy — as one single ecosystem, a sort of one - sector economy that interacts as a unit much like a forest and which should be nurtured as it grows and recycles itself.
It's the sort of rapid gearshift that few companies ever experience, much less master: over the course of about five years, FouFou Dog (FFD), a Markham, Ont. - based dog apparel firm, has seen its revenue grow by more than 800 % — a steep growth trajectory matched by the company's shift from providing very specialized boutique goods, like jewelry and booties for small dogs, and to a far wider range of products suitable for mass merchandisers and large offshore customers.
But after reading many of these articles, you may have noticed that the sort of things they suggest — practicing gratitude, say, or getting out into the natural world more regularly — are easier to read about then they are to effectively implement.
Still, while business owners are facing plenty of more immediately pressing struggles and will need to find their own unique approaches to parental leave, Siegel is convinced that the competition for talent will drive more and more companies to think hard about these sort of employee lifestyle issues.
We'll plan to make those sorts of debates central to our September event, which you can learn more about here.
Matt, maybe you can give us perspective as it relates to change, the economics of the change and how it compares to maybe some of your broader independent restaurants, specifically focusing on CBK and Panda since they are larger and one more, you talked about adding more throughout the year, sort of give us perspective on the cadence of that.
There may be some sort of inspiration involved, but what about those who get inspired to rob you for having more?
It's sort of like going to Vegas and marrying a good looking person without knowing more about what makes them tick.
«This book helped me realize that being authentic would help me find my customers... I began to get more customers I really loved to work with, I began to feel better about my personal brand and my positioning, and I felt confident that I could make any sort of adjustment that I needed to in the future.»
About last month they got a bill from... it was more like a cleanup - cost sort of thing, not a civil litigation suit.
From there, you can learn all sorts of invaluable information about your market — including their age, location, gender, lifestyle, relationship status, job title, pages liked, household income, home ownership, household size, spending methods, purchase behavior, and much more.
Of course he is talking about the period right before the crisis in 2008, and we all know how that mess got sorted out; the creation of more debt than the world has ever seen.
As usual, I don't place too much emphasis on this sort of forecast, but to the extent that I make any comments at all about the outlook for 2006, the bottom line is this: 1) we can't rule out modest potential for stock appreciation, which would require the maintenance or expansion of already high price / peak earnings multiples; 2) we also should recognize an uncomfortably large potential for market losses, particularly given that the current bull market has now outlived the median and average bull, yet at higher valuations than most bulls have achieved, a flat yield curve with rising interest rate pressures, an extended period of internal divergence as measured by breadth and other market action, and complacency at best and excessive bullishness at worst, as measured by various sentiment indicators; 3) there is a moderate but still not compelling risk of an oncoming recession, which would become more of a factor if we observe a substantial widening of credit spreads and weakness in the ISM Purchasing Managers Index in the months ahead, and; 4) there remains substantial potential for U.S. dollar weakness coupled with «unexpectedly» persistent inflation pressures, particularly if we do observe economic weakness.
These days, fewer and fewer jobs offer any sort of retirement plan — leaving more people feeling insecure and worrying about their futures.
Couple that with some share purchases in Apple (talk about a bargain) and more investment in my 401k (S&P 500 ETF), and you get passive income that has sort of held steady.
With this sort of regulation in place, HighLow can now care less about the branding in the short run and rather focus more on the long term success which encompasses around providing the best binary options trading services they can to their trading customers.
And, when she describes that change, what she ends up describing is what already more - or-less exists, namely: mainline christianity, embracing the reformed and the catholic, the scientific and the traditional, which has been doing (never perfectly, to be sure) the sort of deep thinking, social justice, and disciplined prayer that she talks about continually while the evangelicals were breaking off to do their own thing (the thing she seems to want them to stop doing) throughout the twentieth century.
And yet over the course of writing my blog, I have found that vast numbers of people struggle with fear, guilt, shame, and all sorts of terrible thoughts about God and others, and as I have learned more, I find that many of these feelings come from a faulty view of God.
(I wonder why we don't talk more about some of the successful programs in this country which have been 100 % effective in stopping this sort of evil.)
At the time, I sort of new it wasn't from my heart but since my mind kept thinking about it, it made me feel like I did mean it and that caused me more fear.
At first sight, beings and their destinies might seem to us to be scattered haphazard or at least in an arbitrary fashion over the face of the earth; we could very easily suppose that each of us might equally well have been born earlier or later, at this place or that, happier or more ill - starred, as though the universe from the beginning to end of its history formed in space - time a sort of vast flower - bed in which the flowers could be changed about at the whim of the gardener.
If God sent Irene as some sort of message, I'd say He might have been a little more clear about it.
If you scroll down your Facebook feed for more than two minutes, you're sure to spot some sort of rant about a political figure.
As to all your claims about believing until you believe and then pretending to sort of believe until you kind of believe a little more, I've heard it all before... from various members of various cults, religions, and pop philosophies.
Sister Sledge wonders why he's the greatest dancer, and given what the great Albert Murray says in Stompin'the Blues about the likes of Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis, they are right to so wonder — dancing ability often is a sign of musical intelligence, and is often linked with good fashion sense, even if the latter is a more surface sort of excellence, in that it obviously requires the money and leisure to purchase the clothes, or as Aristotle might say, the «equipment.»
«If people are sort of subliminally saying «those Christians are all barking mad», now we're challenging them saying «here we are, this is what I do, this is what I believe in, let's talk about it, let's see where you differ» and more often than not they'll see the message applies to so many of us and people resonate with that.»
This causes all sorts of worry for parents, who already have far more than their share of things to worry about when it comes to their children's futures, that their children won't become saved and will be excluded from heaven.
We continue to learn more and more about these principles and it is difficult not to develop a sort of faith, even reverence in these scientific workings of the universe.
Christian theologians might learn to theologize creatively about thc Holy Spirit by consulting a tradition like pure - land Buddhism, in which this sort of thinking seems to have been going on for more than two millennia.
Much of the value of this dialogue for process philosophers lies in following along precisely the sorts of things that Hausman and I said, for these are the sorts of things nearly all process philosophers say about Bergson, even those such as Hausman and I, who are very sympathetic to Bergson and try to study him closely (although admittedly, Hausman is really more a Peircean and I am more a Whiteheadian, and Gunter is really Bergson's true apologist).
Lately I've been interested in what sort of difference could be made if «dialogue» became less focused on understanding why someone believes what they do (in light of the way I belief) and more about understanding the way those beliefs are held in the context of the experiences that helped birth them.
However, since the gospel is about way more than just words and ideas, and also contains instructions on how to live life as a member of God's family, it might be best to include some sort of element of «proper living» in the translation of euangelistēs, such as «one who lives the gospel.»
Having thus posed all sorts of questions, legitimate enough if we grant the usual position about resurrection, it is now our task to set forth what may be a more coherent and credible way of thinking about «Jesus risen from the dead».
Although Whitehead never credits Bergson explicitly with these insights, it is clear that thinkers within a process framework are the ones who are obliged to come up with a solution to this sort of problem, while more traditional thinkers do not often or ever worry about the ways in which the intellect distorts reality by subsuming it in a spatialized conceptual scheme, or how the concrete process of thinking is distinct from thought.
Then along came John F Kennedy and the Vatican Council; the visibility and vitality of black Protestantism; new religions and now New Age religions; the more patent secularity of the «no religious preference» sort; curiosity about Jews in respect to Israel, and, most of all, the revitalization of conservatisms.
I have a difficult time accepting that islam is peaceful, or that islam is anything more than a bunch of lunatics running around preaching when I hear about this sort of thing.
But he doesn't let the disciples go without adding one more thing: an odd little parable of sorts, with some curious comments about gifts.
Not only that, I've sort of figured out that Alexis de Tocqueville, author of the best book on America, thought that the French Catholic Pascal taught the truth about who we are, and that the psychology of Pascal more than the History of Rousseau (or the ambiguously natural / Historical Locke) explains to us best of all who we are.
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