Sentences with phrase «of educated guesswork»

You mean like history regarding, oh, the early years of powered flight, which involved a lot of educated guesswork compared to today's highly - modeled, well - understood aircraft designs?
(4) There is a lot of educated guesswork and subjective analytic assumptions that are employed in SCC calculations.
Even so, they provide a much more effective tool for making informed breeding decisions than the process of educated guesswork that has prevailed up to now.

Not exact matches

If you want to believe that joke as scientific fact go ahead.Scietific «facts» are nothing more than guesswork on the part bunch of educated morons looking for more free grant money so they don't have to get a real job.
The absence of a national religious census in the U.S. means that we are always confined to filling in numerical gaps with educated guesswork.
We do not really know what goes on behind the scenes or in the thoughts of the manager at our own club Arsenal, no matter how much we may read about the goings on in north London, so we are bound to be even more in the dark about other teams, making my thoughts on Joachim Low and the Germany national team just educated guesswork.
The richness of our individual experience is largely illusory; we actually «see» very little and rely on educated guesswork to do the rest.
However, atmospheric distortion creates so many errors that beyond the first handful of nearest stars, figuring distances to other objects in the galaxy amounts to educated guesswork.
But taking a pile of bones and conjuring up what snarling dinosaurs about to battle each other really looked like involves at best equal parts educated guesswork and complete artistic fancy.
To find that story took a lot of digging around and some educated guesswork.
It is so important that we learn, inform and educate on the basis of the best known science — illiminating guesswork (and certainly no bets)!
Of course this is educated guesswork, but we note that volatility since 2014 was incurred by a ~ 2 % imbalance in supply / demand and was steadied by co-ordinated OPEC action, perhaps less likely with the envisaged rivalry on cost.
Now, without going to the trouble of a Baysian probability analysis (which would just be putting numbers to educated guesswork), I think there is good reason to consider the Russian Heatwave sufficiently improbable on the assumption of no warming (relative to its probability on the assumption of GW) that it is worth independant recognition as evidence of the warming globe instead of just being burried under a mob of other statistics.
The most widely quoted estimates, like those in the Dynamic Integrated Model of Climate and the Economy, known as DICE, used by Yale's William Nordhaus and colleagues, depend upon educated guesswork to place a value on the negative effects of global warming in a number of crucial areas, especially agriculture and coastal protection, then try to make some allowance for other possible repercussions.
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