Sentences with phrase «oblivious as»

Do enough research on the company you are applying to so you don't sit there oblivious as to what the company creates.
The above quotations make it clear that van Ypersele is as oblivious as was Pachauri to critics» concerns.
As Whitney Museum curator Lawrence Rinder points out in his catalogue essay, most citizens of the United States are oblivious as to how citizens in other countries view this country, much less how they are effected by it.
HD screens are far more common than they were when the Wii was announced, and as oblivious as Nintendo can be, they do know where the money is, and high - def is no longer just for the elite.
My pets and I can become pretty oblivious as we meander through grassy meadows and majestic forests as we try to take it all in.
Amazing they sales team was oblivious as to how to work with a customer to find an alternative vehicle and let a customer walk away.
It is oblivious as to how to fully utilise Emily Blunt.
He seems completely oblivious as to how this colonization effort would defeat the purpose of leaving New York in the first place.
Senior scientists working away in their labs, applying for new research grants, writing new papers, hiring new postdocs, remain as oblivious as ever, and as unlikely to note the problems faced by today's young scientists.
Besides, the faculty, as oblivious as some of the members may be, notices who?s there and who?s not.
But perhaps the most dated of the technology ads was one that appeared in November 1999: It depicts a man sitting at a computer in a narrow Spanish street, oblivious as the rampaging bulls of Pamplona charge down upon him.
Other than those of us who use an electric meter, many are still oblivious as to how much electricity we use, because the power stations offer us an infinite source.
While there have been several well - rendered and moving depictions of abuse in media, all of these recognize domestic violence as a cardinal sin; none are as bafflingly oblivious as Fifty Shades of Grey.
He noted that the love expressed in the Galilean origin of Christianity was»... a little oblivious as to morals.»
Love neither rules, nor is it unmoved, also it is a little oblivious as to morals.
Love neither rules nor is unmoved; also it is a little oblivious as to morals.
He says, «Love neither rules, nor is it unmoved; also it is a little oblivious as to morals.»
Whitehead does speak of that kind of love which «is a little oblivious as to morals, «23 and of perspectives of the universe to which morality, logic, art, and religion are irrelevant.

Not exact matches

We can question the precision of their targeting, and the efficacy of the sit - in as method of producing social change, but only the shallow and the oblivious could fail to see that there was something to the protesters» complaints.
Investors and even the Fed seem oblivious to the risks because they assume that recent earnings can be taken as a sufficient statistic for decades and decades and decades of future cash flows.
If Chinese economists were nearly as oblivious to China's problems as the China bulls claim they are, we would have reason to be truly worried about the country's prospects.
Following his presentation at a conference in early April, Gundlach held forth in the lobby as advisor after advisor — oblivious to or uninterested in the subsequent presenters on stage — asked for his insight for the better part of an hour.
Without doing so, they may become oblivious to a new expectation buyers are considering in their overall buying as well as social experience.
Just as I was oblivious for much of my life to the problems posed by bearing and rearing children, so humankind was blissfully undisturbed for most of....
Just as I was oblivious for much of my life to the problems posed by bearing and rearing children, so humankind was blissfully undisturbed for most of its history by the conundrums this book addresses.
But the Fundies, they will be watching «Honey Boo Boo» or Professional Wrestling and will die as they lived, oblivious to the reality all around them.
Oh, pilgrims walking by oblivious, your minds, it seems, on something not at hand, can you have come from such a distant land» the way you look suggests as much to us» that you're not weeping, even as you pass right through the suffering city, like that band of people who, it....
As they prayed, the worshipers could hear cars passing by outside, travelers in a secular age oblivious to the ancient hopes being spoken in the little chapel.
Funny people use hermaphrodite snails n pre-puberty lambs skipping about oblivious of their own gender as examples of natural gayness.
On a fine day it seems as if all 25,000 residents are out and about, strolling the boardwalks and paths, oblivious to car traffic because it's almost nonexistent.
But the argument that Professor Smolin attributes to Arkes is nowhere in the book; and what Arkes does argue for never appears in Prof. Smolin's review — in fact, Smolin writes as if he is oblivious to it.
Recall the High Priests of Jesus day that actually carried out the sacrifice of the perfect lamb of God on Passover and they were oblivious to what they were doing even as Jesus hung on the Cross saying Father forgive them for they know not what they do.
Cut off from the rest of the human race, we stand frozen in our tracks, left to mourn what was but is no more while the rest of the world goes on without us, oblivious, helpless and, as far as we can tell, uncaring.
Further, Hartshorne identifies Brightman as «the principal founder of American personalism» in an article written in 1960, which suggests that he was practically oblivious to Bowne or to the other Boston personalists older than Brightman, such as Knudson and McConnell.
In the years since Thomas Carlyle coined the phrase in 1849, there have been plenty of others who have seen economists as little more than quartermasters in the Army of Mammon, toting up their accounts, oblivious to the human carnage around them.
To support his slurs, Eichenwald first tries to undermine reliance on Scripture as a supreme authority for moral discernment and then to show how Christians, oblivious to the problems with biblical inspiration, ignore its clear teaching.
If, moreover, one thinks of the tree as the motherly feminine or as a symbol for the whole of nature, the shadows lengthen into a bleak morality tale about an oblivious male chauvinism or about an environmentally destructive anthropocentrism, both ominously foretold when, early on, the boy gathers leaves and weaves them into a crown and struts about playing king of the forest, his nose lifted high in the air.
The breadth of Moltmann's interests may be one reason that the term political does not appear as the encompassing horizon of his theology, even though he is never oblivious to the political dimension, in the narrower sense, of what he is doing.
Likewise he appears earnestly oblivious to the irony of presenting Robert McNamara as the «capitalist par excellence,» not least given the general disdain that most free market organs and institutes have for both the World Bank and Mr. McNamara's tenure there.
So we go on blindly as a culture in our search for goodness, oblivious of new moral imperatives.
This insight moved Williams to advance the possibility that in black women's identification with Jesus as surrogate Lord they risk being «passive to the oppressive operation of surrogacy in our lives» and «oblivious to forces at work influencing us to stand in somebody else's place, to be at the beckon of somebody else's call and to forever service the needs and goals and tasks and responsibilities of somebody else.
Oh, pilgrims walking by oblivious, your minds, it seems, on something not at hand, can you have come from such a distant land» the way you look suggests as much to us» that you're not weeping, even as you pass right through the suffering city, like that band of people who, it seems, don't understand a thing about the measure of its loss?
Surely he is right that God's preferential love of Israel can not decrease what is available to others, as if God becomes oblivious, as it were, of the rest of humanity.
Because creation ostensibly ended with the biblical era, we who follow are not considered a part of the ongoing creative process, but are to function as the custodians of religious dogma and ritual, oblivious of Christ's words, «You have a fine way of rejecting the commandments of God, in order to keep your tradition!»
At school, I remember proudly revealing their Christian credentials to a friend who had been hitherto oblivious to lyrics such as «The real battle just...
Still oblivious to the fate awaiting me, I gathered the ingredients that Nancy — the James Beard Award - winning founder of Los Angeles» La Brea Bakery — considers as essentials for the best biscuit recipe.
Serve the pasta immediately, and watch as your friends dig in — oblivious to the fact their dish is 100 % gluten free.
Living on the road + s» mores in Yellowstone = best birthday ever (although Scott would say feeling as if your life was constantly threatened by grizzly bears lurking around sucks the fun out of it — I wouldn't know what he was talking about because I am contently oblivious to all negative possibilities and danger).
Tom Colicchio has styled himself as the hashtag - Resistance of the food world, and the man who epitomizes the machismo - industrial - complex — Anthony Bourdain — seems oblivious to the irony of his tweets.
Without warning, a barefoot, homeless woman punched me in the mouth as she walked past in a stupor, oblivious to all forms of social decorum.
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