Sentences with phrase «most human beings do»

Like, look, most humans are doing a lot in their lives, and we're all just doing our best to not f*ck any of it up too badly.

Not exact matches

Marsh calls it, «an eye - opening exploration into how children are raised around the world and how child - rearing can inform the understanding of human nature more broadly,» noting the author's most essential point is that «one of the things which makes humans special as a species is that we don't limit care to our own children.
Activist Alberdingk Thijm does groundbreaking work helping activists use smartphone cameras to defend human rights, but her most profound influence is incredibly down - to - earth: classic children's book character Pippi Longstocking
Are we supposed to believe that Dwayne Johnson, the most charismatic person on Earth, really doesn't have any human friends?
These aren't necessarily groundbreaking ideas, but they do show the ways technology is being integrated even into the most human elements of the hiring process.
The global study from Resources Global Professionals released today reveals that 82 per cent of global human resources leaders believe the «war for talent» is a key business issue for the next decade and beyond - yet most do not have a clear strategy to combat it.
Through space exploration, most of what we do is look back at ourselves, and going to Mars will reveal more about what it means to be an earthling and a human
What it does: The role of this bacteria, which is most well - known for causing syphilis and Lyme disease, is still not well - understood in humans.
What it does: This bacteria is most notorious for causing severe illnesses such as tuberculosis, leprosy, and Hansen's disease, though most species of mycobacteria in nature are benign in humans, unless in cases of those who have weakened immune systems.
What it does: This is one of the most common microbes found on the human skin and nose.
Of course, having more information on a client is a good thing, but it doesn't address the fact that human advisors are still more expensive than most online services.
Heidi Shey, a senior analyst at Forrester who studies the cyber insurance space, says insurers are in an excited «land - grab» state, gobbling up as many customers as they can because insurers believe most businesses will not file a claim, or there could be a cyber event that doesn't get covered due to an exemption, such as human error, credit card fraud, or email fraud.
The most effective leaders inspire people by clearly articulating how the work they do together is helping other human beings and how each person's individual role on the team makes a difference.
«We suspected that the young are most vulnerable because of their immature immune systems, but we didn't have a lot of hard evidence to show that before,» said study lead author Bo Hang, a Berkeley Lab staff scientist who previously found that thirdhand smoke could lead to genetic mutations in human cells.
Smart devices may be one of the most important inventions in human history, but they have certainly done little toward eliminating adult attention deficit disorder (AADD).
The most ambitious element of Brooks's scheme was designing Baxter to be trained the way humans learn things — by having someone show them how to do it — instead of having to be programmed by experts.
Just about every human being who has ever walked the planet in fact does have the right to expect great outcomes but most don't ever do so, simply because they don't believe they truly can.
But the most important lesson he brought with him from the academic world, he says, is that humans learn far more from failure that they do from success.
«Supporting the needs of our employees is one of the most important things we do, especially during significant moments in their lives like having or adopting a child,» said global human - resources executive Sheri Bronstein.
Perhaps most importantly, great company cultures are like great societies — they can expand human potential by empowering people to do exceptional things.
Most of us instinctively assume that technology relentlessly marches forward, but there have been times before now in human history — after the Egyptians built the Pyramids, for instance, or after the multiple advances of the Roman Empire — when the civilizations that followed could no longer do what had been done before, and perhaps there's a complacency and arrogance in assuming that this won't happen again.
That's a pretty huge steelman in that it undoes most of this post, since all reasoning we can do then comes from analogies like animals: humans:: humans: AI.
They eliminate the factors associated with human trading since they trade without any attached feelings and they, therefore, don't suffer from greed which is the main reason behind the losses that most binary options traders in the world make.
«Fear and greed, most notable among counterproductive emotions where money is the object of human desire, can and often do compromise the capacity for rational and orderly thought» Frank Martin
The establishment of justice and acts of compassion should be done at the lowest, most human levels of society, instead of by distant, centralized bureaus - a perspective fully consistent with the designs of America's founders.
Merely to over-ride a human will (as His felt presence in any but the faintest and most mitigated degree would certainly do) would be for Him useless.
Yes, we have a human nature with a desire for s * x. However, we also have the gift of self control, which most people today don't use anymore.
«Time» is something humans created to quantifying the passing of events, because we need it to understand the world around us (or at least most of us do; there are people with strange mental conditions that are fully functioning but have no concept of time).
I do know, however, that where I live most of the folks are decent human beings who are willing to help one another whenever necessary.
I reallly want to know what it was that most christians have done that they feel that they must be saved by a human sacrifice.
I don't think I'm better then theists, nor do I hate theists, I just think most humans can't face mortality or the fact that once we die, thats probably the absolute end.
Most importantly, note this: I am a Christian, I'm gay, I'm a recovering alcoholic, I believe in Evolution, I believe the universe is 13 billion years old and that the Earth is 4.5 or so billion years old, I believe man evolved from lower primates and that Adam was the first man who God gave a soul and sentience, I do not believe in hell but I do believe in Satan, I do not believe the Bible is a book of rules meant to imprison man or condemn him but that it is rather a «Human Existence for Dummies» guide, I believe Christ was the son of God but I do not believe Christianity is the only «valid» religion, I do not believe atheists will go to hell, while the English Bible says God should be feared, the Hebrew word used for fear, «yara», such as that used in the Book of Job, actually means respect / reverence, not fear as one would fear death or a spider.
However, while he did not accept Jesus» divinity, Lennon nevertheless considered Jesus the most important human being who ever lived, and considered Jesus» ministry the most important teachings ever taught.
@believer, I don't know if you'd call me an atheist, but I don't believe in a god or gods and, while open to the possibility that some may exist, am highly unlikely ever to believe in the Christian god, mostly because 1) most versions require an anti-scientific concept of «free will» and 2) I think there's abundant evidence of human creation of the Christian god concept.
I believe that throughout most of our early human history, when our species population was still relatively small, you simply didn't see rampant homosexuality.
A lot of people are looking to be told what to do... this is the state in which humans evolved and it is what most humans find comfortable.
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.
One of my deepest core beliefs is that we find God most often in the raw and human moments of our lives, that God doesn't differentiate between sacred - and - secular for us.
Most books that were recommended to me did NOT line up with the God that I knew and loved, let alone the type of parent that I wanted to become, nor the type of humans I wanted to raise.
... If someone works hard in school and develops good financial habits, they're more likely to do reasonably well financially than most people were for most of human history.»
And these books don't serve up blind patriotism nor are they revisionist in scope — the stories put a human face on some of our most tragic moments and failures as a nation like Japanese internment, the plight of home children, residential schools, flu epidemics, wars, child labour, the Halifax explosion, the Acadian expulsion, and so on.
It is unliveable at the level of society: hence, in Britain we have a government that lauds the freedom of the individual (and it should be noted in passing, but noted very well, that our present generation of politicians rarely talk of the «human person» or just of the «person», but usually of the «individual») but which has brought in some of the most draconian legislation in Europe designed to control what people say and do on certain issues so that society can proceed in its life as a unity and not just as a mere collection of individuals.
If the Bible is a myth, it would be the truest and most helpful myth ever written, and I would still read it, study it, teach it, and try to follow it... especially the parts about Jesus, for He (even if he didn't really exist) represents the truest way to be human.
I am trying to find out more of what we can do too, but since there is so much criminal activity involved in human trafficking, most of what can be done is reserved for law enforcement.
But sometimes such a rivalry does exist, and it is surely one of the most painful of all human dilemmas.
So then perhaps it is no poem, or at any rate not one for which any human being is responsible, nor yet mankind; ah, now I understand you, it was for this reason you called my procedure the most wretched act of plagiarism, because I did not steal from any individual, nor from the race, but from the God or, as it were, stole the God away, and though I am only an individual man, aye, even a wretched thief, blasphemously pretended to be the God.
Radiant Word, blazing Power, you who mould the manifold so as to breathe your life into it; I pray you, lay on us those your hands — powerful, considerate, omnipresent, those hands which do not (like our human hands) touch now here, now there, but which plunge into the depths and the totality, present and past, of things so as to reach us simultaneously through all that is most immense and most inward within us and around us.
My view is that when God called Abraham he knew he was going to work through flawed human beings to bring about redemption... and that the fault lines run forward then all the way to the cross, the most wicked thing humans ever did and the most loving thing God ever did.
For the more we examine the human situation — and the more we can do of this at first hand the better — the more we see that a deficiency of love is the root cause of nearly all our most refractory problems.
The most pervasive form of self - sufficiency is the general mood of trust in human powers, whether one's own or those of other men, to devise or do all that man needs in order to master his world.
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