'» I believe that this needs to be clarified because there is so
much suspicion in our political space,»» he said.
Not exact matches
My
suspicion is we'll see RIM launch with a
much deeper set of applications and a renewed interest
in the platform.»
The Psychology Today review, written by John Wren - Lewis, says that Paulus «appears to be a hasty production, so
much so as to suggest the nasty
suspicion that it might have been rushed out
in the hope of counterbalancing the possible scandal of Hannah's revelations.»
Its effort to create community
in the face of
suspicion, its combination of idealism and despair, its testimony to the corruption of both oppressor and oppressed, and its tragic heroism
in trying to actualize human values against impossible odds is a kind of microcosm of
much of American history, but it would take a book to do it justice.
reaches back, perhaps unwittingly, to the deeper roots from which the Western literary imagination springs — an imaginative tradition that owes
much to Paul's hermeneutic of trust
in God and
suspicion of ourselves.
It is a world
in which the subconscious «
suspicion» of God's existence and presence, on which so
much of our Christian apologetics and proclamation have depended, may be disappearing.
Much of traditional and contemporary Christian proclamation, apologetics and worship assumes an innate «
suspicion» within people that for the world to be the way it is there must be a greater power behind it - note, for example, Paul's statement to the Romans: «There is no excuse at all for not honouring God, for God's invisible qualities are made visible
in the things God has made».
In The Christian Intellectual, Jaroslav Pelikan underscored this dilemma by saying that the most formidable obstacle to the renewal of Christian intellectual life is «a curious alliance between the secular
suspicion of an elite that has been characteristic of
much of American life and a distorted interpretation of the Reformation doctrine of the universal priesthood of all believers.»
But it's also the unreal, the unseen, the you - feel - it - but - can't - say - it of times of creative quiet: I'm empty and I'm tired, I have nothing from which to pull the water out of the well, there isn't a bucket or a scooper and even if I could find one, I
suspicion that there isn't
much in the bottom of this old well right now.
However, when his presentation of the helio - centric solar system was, not surprisingly, given a
much better treatment
in the text, certain officials
in the Sacra Congregatio Romanae et Universalis Inquisitionis seu Sancti Officii were upset and
in the ensuing trial Galileo was convicted of the
suspicion of heresy, probably more for his disobedience to their request for equal treatment of both positions than for the ideas themselves.
Instead, the present situation was
much more accurately predicted by Huxley
in Brave New World, which suggested that «
in the age of advanced technology, spiritual devastation is more likely to come from an enemy with a smiling face than from one whose countenance exudes
suspicion and hate.
Having, like Milton's Satan, elected evil as his good, he has a conservative's
suspicion of a theodicy that threatens to reverse his reversal and put him out of business: after all, he has a stake
in the reality of evil, however
much he may encourage an empowering nihilism among his victims.
But for most people living
in Australia today, the environment
in which we are living has changed its character, and with it is changing also the subconscious «
suspicion» that people have of God's presence and activity, a
suspicion on which so
much of our Christian apologetics and proclamation has depended.
The general community shock that followed these events found expression
in a strong
suspicion that the media, particularly the television and video industry, contributed significantly to these and other expressions of social violence through the heavily violent nature of
much of their news and entertainment programming.
Even my co-teacher who usually eyes my «healthy» breakfasts with
much suspicion happily accepted them for breakfast three days
in a row.
All of which has led to
suspicions that the WSL may have been acting
in cancelling Margaret River as
much out of recognition of Medina's displeasure as out of a genuine and well - founded concern for the welfare of its surfers.
This proved a problem for him
in the 2003 polls - he failed to secure
much support among Christians
in the south, where he was viewed with some
suspicion.
«That since the younger generation of Nigerians makes up for more than 60 per cent of the nation's population, it is our hope that they inherit this country
in better shape so that they can build a
much better future for themselves and their offsprings
in an atmosphere that is devoid of anarchy, hate,
suspicion and negativity that characterize the polarized, and clearly irreconcilable differences forced on us by the Biafran Igbos».
But there is persistent concern about the quality of some of the construction and this is because, local officials sometimes take bribes and allow construction companies to build things below standard and so we have a situation
in the Sichuan province where the earthquake occurred, where schools were collapsing and collapsed at a
much greater rate than other government buildings and the
suspicion is of course that local officials have taken bribes and allowed the schools to be built this way.
«It's very clear that
much of the opposition to evolution
in this country — and it really matters; it's a very serious educational problem — is fed by the very
suspicion, which I happen to think is justified, that evolution really is antireligious,» he said.
Too
much distracted energy is wasted
in worry, resentment,
suspicion and criticism.
This stuff is
much easier to see
in a video, don't ask why I bother with the above instructions... eaah ok, I suppose I do it because I have this sneaking
suspicion that not everyone likes watching videos.
A colleague informed him of a startling trend: liver cancer was plaguing affluent Filipinos at a
much higher rate than their less - wealthy counterparts — a phenomenon that, despite a slew of other lifestyle differences, Campbell believed was linked to their higher intake of animal protein.1 Bolstering his
suspicions, Campbell also learned of a recent study from India showing that a high protein intake spurred liver cancer
in rats, while a low protein intake seemed to prevent it.2 Intrigued by this gem of little - known research, Campbell decided to investigate the role of nutrition
in cancer growth himself — an endeavor that ended up lasting several decades and producing over one hundred publications (none of which pertained to Fight Club).3
The rest is exploring unfounded
suspicions and the usual range of motivations; dealing with antagonists of various stripes [from a sheik who has a tax - free ostrich racing concern
in the desert, to Hassansins — hired killers who use drugs to see into the future], and action set pieces that pretty
much rock — even before the effects crew embellish them.
It is true that the real life David (Zach Galifianakis) was a bit of a dummy that robbed all of the money under the impression that it was for his girlfriend (Kristen Wiig) when
in actuality he was handing the money over to even dumber people that immediately made a number of expensive and exotic purchases that surely raised
suspicion, but pretty
much all of what is going on here is blown up far too stupid.
It's tough to know how
much stock to put
in Frannie's
suspicions, but if this truly is a solvable murder mystery, then Malloy is one possible suspect, as are Frannie's student (Sharrieff Pugh) overly fascinated with John Wayne Gacy and a fling turned stalker (a thanked but uncredited Kevin Bacon).
Samuel L Jackson has long been a Tarantino favorite, and his delivery as the diabolical Uncle Tom house slave who has some secrets of his own, will bring the house down when he first sees Django and,
in a
much darker way, when his
suspicions are confirmed.
Although there isn't
much to Jagged Edge
in terms of flash and brilliance, as it is a fairly standard courtroom drama mixed with a romance as culled from Hitchcock's
Suspicion, it still is able to entertain.
Much of the suspense hinges here, as
in Hitchcock's The Lodger or
Suspicion, on whether the hero is a killer and on whether the heroine is
in danger because she is with him.
That 36 Quai des Orfèvres is loosely based on real - life events
in 1985
in France provides a sobering counterpoint to my
suspicions that
much of this film was false.
Meanwhile, defenders of the current system view all this talk about the achievement gap with
suspicion — asserting, as they do, that schooling is hopelessly intertwined with conditions
in the family and community, and thus that we can't expect results to improve
much until we alleviate poverty and racism.
We met with
much suspicion from the African - American community who feared the school would set admissions criteria that would result
in a public school that looked like the local private school.
However, Quirk is carrying far too
much baggage of his own to have any interest
in rushing into the role of avenging angel, so even though he very quickly realizes that the cause of death is not as stated he has no wish to get involved, and even goes to some lengths to divert
suspicion.
And Sebba's remarks (her Amazon author page is here for you) may have revealed at least as
much about the
suspicion and dislike many
in the publishing community still harbor for ebooks as about their concern for how today's books are sold.
My
suspicion would be No since there was a report earlier (
much closer to August than to April) with someone from Qualcomm talking about how they had the technology and just had to figure out a way to get it produced
in quantity.
I suspect that Bill had a hand
in the engine Mark built as well, but my
suspicions don't
much matter.
In doing so, they often incur the wrath of the Canada Revenue Agency, which wants to collect as
much tax as it can and views fancy tax avoidance schemes with deep
suspicion.
It's a barebones selection of stuff at the moment with two items locked off due to its Early Access nature, but I have the sneaking
suspicion that there's not going to be
much more on offer
in the full game either, reinforcing my belief that Freaking Humans is fun, but doesn't have a whole lot to offer.
The Player Choices feature is quite reminiscent of the My Choices feature found
in Telltale's previous games such as both seasons of The Walking Dead episodic games by providing an entire listing of your choices including the statistical analysis regarding the percentage of players who have made the same choice as you for each moral decision as well as a variety of decisions that are scattered throughout the chapters of each episode such as backing away from a fight when the opposing Fable has been stunned, who you have decided to place
suspicion upon, who you have arrested and
much more besides with the feature being directly available from the main menu and at the end of each episode.
My parents never disapproved of gaming (
in fact, I always had a sneaking
suspicion the NES my parents bought for us
in 1988 was for my dad as
much as it was for my sister and I), but they stopped thinking I played too
much after Tetris was added to our game collection.
You can easier blend
in because you do not arouse as
much suspicion as the assassin and because there are many parts of the story taking place
in the midst of slaves, but you can not use certain bigger weapons like the assassin's sword.
Enemy sightlines make more sense, and enemy
suspicion and alert indicators are
much more intuitive than they were
in V2, although the enemy's collective hearing seems to be annoyingly and weirdly acute at times.
While I went
in expecting the game to be more along the lines of Bioshock, Prey went
much farther
in the direction of true survival horrors like Resident Evil and Dead Space, will all the accouterments that accompany them, including brutal difficulty, not enough ammo, way too many enemies, and the creeping
suspicion that nothing can be trusted, even yourself.
JD: I think
in the contemporary art - world there's a
much - discussed
suspicion of what we call «skill» when it comes to contemporary painting, particularly realist painting.
You are subject to arrest (I am joking about the arrest warrant) on reasonable
suspicion that you are
in the latter group due to your statement «-- the
much higher efficiency of electric motors compared to internal combustion engines.»
Blooms of harmful algae
in the nation's waters appear to be occurring
much more frequently than
in the past, increasing
suspicions that the warming climate may be exacerbating the problem.
Well put, MT. I had a very positive gut response to her piece, combined with deep
suspicion that
much of it likely wasn't economically sound, and her «wholesale change
in all our systems is needed» does rather conflict with «it'll cost roughly 2 % of GDP» (Caldeira and others).
A paper that Joules Verne, of all people, sent to me that examines this extreme limit shows explicitly that if there is a thermal lapse across this gas it has a weak asymmetry
in its conductivity that makes gas relax thermal gradients from top to bottom slightly faster than it does gradients from bottom to top, but the split smoothly vanishes as the gradient does, strongly suggesting that even
in this limit if we (correctly) require that the length of a vertical parcel to be
much greater than the MFP (and hence
much much greater than) the bulk averages will still satisfy the usual kinetic theory and I have a sneaking
suspicion that overall they will still satisfy the MB distribution, even though the average itself will be extremely odd.
My doubts on the level of improvement are based on the
suspicion that the limiting factor is deeper
in the data that can be collected, not so
much in the methods used
in processing it.
I agreed with Nick from the beginning, but I realized only
much later that the paper does actually confirm directly
in the beginning of chapter (34) that our
suspicion was right.