Sentences with phrase «nice sounding theories»

They never seem to realize the amount of faith they put in their science of the day to bridge the gaps between absolute facts and nice sounding theories is very similar to the faith religious people use to fill in their gaps in empirical evidence.

Not exact matches

The theory sounds nice, but when theory and observation are in conflict, observation is right.
Sounds nice in theory.
This sounds nice in theory, but what would the actual numbers look like if it were possible to have 100 percent of the world online?
«That sounds nice in theory, Mr. 5 Dollar Bill, but your ilk is the most likely out of us to be tucked into a stripper's... er... we'll form a committee and get back to you.»
I agree with you on the wage issue, we could afford to pay better wages for star players and I think the biggest part holding us back here is Wengers idea of a more balanced pay between the squad, sounds nice in theory but it hinders player development.
A radical manifesto — full of civil liberties and political reform and Trident cancellation — may sound nice in theory, but that's all it would ever be.
It sounds nice in theory, but unrealistic in application, something only the Dalai Lama and a handful of others have mastered.
It sounded nice in theory but it had been so long since I've had a normal relationship with food, I wasn't sure if I could change my mindset.
This sounds nice and simple in theory, but, it has one small flaw.
In theory, this sounds nice, simple, and traditional.
This sounds nice in theory, but our test car didn't change the way it shifted no matter how I drove the car.
The BlackBerry Hub is just a giant inbox for all of your messaging accounts (Instagram, Facebook, Gmail, Twitter), and although that sounds nice in theory, it can be overwhelming if you get a lot of notifications.
In theory, this sounds all very nice — we're getting more inventive with objects, so perhaps we should be so with words — but then you hit a word like «pwn», which is based upon a spelling error, and it all becomes a little too dirty and a little too real.
In theory it sounds nice, but its not yet practical.
Taking a vacation from paying your loans sounds nice in theory, but is just an invitation for a bigger student loan bill down the road
Goals like «I need to save more» and «We need to spend less on eating out» sound very nice in theory.
Winters could also have more mild days, which sounds nice in theory, but could unleash a host of negative impacts from hurting communities that rely on winter tourism to affecting maple syrup production.
While it might sound nice in theory for Hawaii to become a sovereign country again («To Form a Nation,» November), do the people of Hawaii really want to lose all of the rights they now enjoy as Americans?
The shift from four weeks to «officially unlimited» leave «has pros and cons — it sounds nice in theory but can have the effect of making people take less.»
In short, your distinction might sound nice in theory, but I think it becomes just a matter of sematics if / when we try to operationalize your claims (especially when one also considers that judges have to try to satisfy 3553 (a)(2), but only need to consider the concerns of 3553 (a)(6)-RRB-.
I'll be interested to see how this new interface pans out on both the new and old Pebble devices as it sounds nice in theory.
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