Sentences with phrase «of conversation you would find»

However, after having this type of conversation you would find that both operate under subscription - based models and match two entities together.

Not exact matches

«The skill set of starting my presidential campaigns — and building the kinds of teams that we did and marketing ideas — I think would be the same kinds of skills that I would enjoy exercising in the private sector... The conversations I have with Silicon Valley and with venture capital pull together my interests in science and organization in a way I find really satisfying.»
There are handy online calculators that help you estimate the cost in staff time of that meeting you're contemplating, so we suggest doing the math and inviting only the most crucial people, or finding another way to have that conversation.
«Mehl and his team found that the happiest person in the study had twice as many substantive conversations, and only one - third the amount of small talk, as the unhappiest person,» reports author Jenn Granneman on Psychology Today.
What the president told Republicans, in other words, largely echoed the report's findings — and it makes perfect sense he would do so: killing the hype on both sides of the Keystone debate is the first step toward turning the conversation into a civilized exchange that can lead to compromise.
Along the way, they've helped thousands of female technologists find a voice in a male - dominated industry and opened the conversation about inequities, large and small, woven into the fabric of the tech industry.
While reading the article, I was immediately reminded of a conversation I had with Raphael Van Lierop, who recently founded his own company, Hinterland Studios, in Victoria.
She had got it right: while I still consider myself to be active on Twitter and other platforms, I find that unless I think I can contribute something that's positive or of value to an ongoing conversation around a particular topic, then I simply don't post.
«As an independent consultant, I found myself missing «water cooler» conversations, professional development opportunities, a sounding board and someone to have a glass of wine with at the end of the day,» says Stephanie Goodell, founder of Samaya Consulting and Business Engagement Lead at IBIS Consulting Group.
Once you've sparked up a conversation, you've got one clear goal of finding something in common (not work) and bonding.
We engaged in conversations with several women founders and VCs across the US to learn more about their experiences, both good and bad, and to hear what ideas they had for increasing the amount of capital going to women - founded companies.
And, Richard you know the many conversations that we've had in fact, I know Peter and I totally found commonalities when Mark Fields came out of the White House and talked about currency manipulation being the mother of all trade barriers.
I founded Octane AI in May 2016 with Ben Parr, author of Captivology and marketing guru, and Leif K - Brooks, the creator of Omegle, a chat product that has powered over 200 billion conversations.
I find this conversation one of the most fascinating I've had in a long time.
The Institute was founded in 1989 by Richard John Neuhaus and his colleagues to confront the ideology of secularism, which insists that the public square must be «naked,» and that faith has no place in shaping the public conversation or in shaping public policy.
I have always found it interesting and frustrating in the conversation about spiritual abuse and / or other type of abuse within the Emergent circles of how women and men in the «inner circle» use «they have always been nice.....»
I think one of the most important aspects of this entire thread is that, while some argue that a blog is an unsuitable forum for such a conversation to take place, the silenced are thrilled that they have finally found a venue that gets their voices out there.
I find this conversation has helped me grow in my own acceptance of thoughts I have kept suppressed or thoughts that had not been so succinctly organized as some posted.
When we start to have those kinds of conversations, I think it can bridge the differences and the disagreements because we begin to find the commonalities in the things that we can agree on.
Let's face it: We are unlikely to find a single party that truly represents a «culture of life,» and abortion will probably never be made illegal, so we'll have to go about it the old fashioned way, working through the diverse channels of the Kingdom to adopt and support responsible adoption, welcome single moms into our homes and churches, reach out to the lonely and disenfranchised, address the socioeconomic issues involved, and engage in some difficult conversations about the many factors that contribute to the abortion rate in this country, (especially birth control).
John 3:3 is found near the beginning of a conversation Jesus has with Jewish religious leader named Nicodemus about how to be born again.
As I have had hundreds of personal and online conversations about the unforgivable sin over the years, I find that lots of people have some sort of idea about what constitutes blasphemous thoughts or actions, but which are not really blasphemous at all.
Another Christian divorcee, Erik Castenskiold spoke frankly of his experience when the topic of his divorce comes into a conversation: «You certainly get a different reaction in their face when they find out you've been married before,» he said.
I would find further conversation difficult since my only source can be the word of God, and since you seem to have placed a question mark on its reliability.
Since I issued that call, Rorty has continued to develop his notion of an edifying conversation in ways that I find stimulating, yet troublesome.
Historians need contexts, and Outler has found his in conversations, colleagues and, most of all, the family.
Here is the curious thing: As I interact with people of other religions, and through the course of conversation find out why they hold their beliefs, I find that nearly all people of all religions have these same four basic arguments for why their beliefs are true.
to J.W. and fred — i think its rather silly to argue anything as fact if its cleary thought based (i.e. lacking proof / evidence) when asked about the where did we come from or how the universe (whatever) i always answer with i don't know, but then i pose an idea — i state openly thats its only an idea... if any one of you religions folks would simple agree to the FACT that what you BELIEVE is real is REALLY only an idea until proven (much like evolution) then i would find much more pleasing conversations beyond the realm of atheists... but alas, i am still waiting — i found some but most are imovible in there beliefs that god is real, provable, and most def.
Below are some responses that we have found helpful when engaging in conversations with our bothers and sisters in Christ, who — often because of what they have heard on radio or in political arenas — initially may be skeptical about the call to care for the environment:
The following facts support this belief: the participation of the churches in the theological conversations of the ecumenical movement, which perforce have had to find their common starting point and common vocabulary in biblical literature and theology; the growing body of specifically biblical theology, produced by the very vitality of fragmentary and monographic studies.
If we find atheists who believe the world has a kind of moral order, we do indeed have a great starting point for conversation with them.
Perhaps, then, some of our fellow citizens have come to a decision that we find abhorrent, through the exercise of their reason, individually and in conversation with others.
And if you find yourself going on months of online conversation after you've both swiped, move one.
The NSPCC and O2 polled mothers and fathers with youngsters aged eight to 13 and found that less than a fifth of parents are having frequent conversations with their children about staying safe online.
Yes, that resembles many of the conversations I have overheard myself... and sometimes find myself participating in.
In conversations with liberal friends and family, when they have spoken of pre-sixties morality in terms of patriarchal suppression, cheering its eclipse by new, more flexible mores, I find the best response is not to defend the past but to question the present.
As a result, he reports, he has freed up more family resources for his daughter, prevented the conversation at home from being dominated by kids, and generally found it easier to be a parent, all out of a spirit of generosity for the planet (and not the selfishness of the contraceptive mentality).
And of the highest importance have been my conversations, oral and written, with my American colleagues in the parables seminar of the Society of Biblical Literature and those with whom I have been associated in the founding of Semeia, a new journal established specifically to do biblical studies experimentally, drawing on tools from other disciplines.
And so, for those of you who find yourself in heated conversations online, I offer a few tips I've learned along the way:
It fell flat on me since the beginning of my journey with God started about 22 years ago when I had conversations with two friends about a «new life» they had found, and these conversations took place over cups of coffee.
Better still: if any of them were, by some sad quirk of eyesight, attracted to me, I'd not only find out, but open a conversation with them on those terms.
Here in Dayton, I've developed a bit of a reputation for being both a political and theological «liberal,» and have thus found myself in some spirited conversations about everything from Barack Obama's foreign policy to the eternal destiny of Buddhists and Hindus and, well... Barack Obama himself.
When Henry Sidgwick (1838 - 1900) was reforming English universities under the impetus of Enlightenment rationality, he found that universities depended upon constrained agreements; that is, before you could even enter the conversation, you had to locate yourself within the Christian tradition, even if in dissent.
Still more, he found a number of conversation companions, themselves also widely recognized scholars who have played a continuing role in his thought.
What seems to get lost in most of the conversations that turn into personal protection and what weapons are necessary to defend oneself from perhaps a burglar, is that the burglar the Founding Fathers had in mind was the Federal Government.
A little later my dad came in and sat down on the edge of the bed and said quietly that we should have a conversation about Sunday Mass, and probably I was now old enough to make my own decisions about attending Mass, that he and my mother did not think it right or fair to force that decision on us children, that we needed to find our own ways spiritually, and that while he and our mother very much hoped that we would walk in the many rewarding paths of the Church, the final decision there would be ours alone, each obeying his own conscience; that was only right and fair, and to decree attendance now would perhaps actually force us away from the very thing that he and my mother found to be the most nutritious spiritual food; so perhaps you and I and your mother can sit and discuss this later this afternoon, he said, and come to some amicable agreement.
Or, maybe you had trouble finding common ground between you and so some of the conversations were forced or repetitive.
Lately I've found myself engaged in several conversations about the place of forgiveness and grace in the context of bullying and abuse.
Join me and thousands of others as we find healthy, delicious, and easy ways to eat and live our best... and tackle the tough conversations about food that we all need to be having.
This is the second time in recent months I've found myself talking about coconut oil, the first being with an off - duty male midwife who my wife and I ran into at Wal - Mart one night, and that conversation somehow steered it's way into the realm of natural birth.
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