Sentences with phrase «of human decision»

With neuroscience methods and techniques, the results are more reliable and provide a better understanding of human decision making in various circumstances, researchers said.
The actual construction of experience is a matter of human decision.
This argument assumes, against all evidence, that human life - spans are independent of human decisions.
But underlying all this, the authors claim, is a process of human decision making that can be studied, and can be modeled.
I am interested in the psychology of human decision making, particularly as it relates to important issues of our times and the way in which they are debated.
Its use of calculated algorithms — the produce of human decision - making — led it to discover and disclose links in a determined order.
Taken together, they risk placing moral responsibility onto sophisticated tools rather than on the shoulders of human decision makers.
So much of what we observe in nature correlates with patterns of human decision making.
Hence in order to stress this wider environment of human decision and action, I wish to make a case for the development of a theology which, by design, is concerned with the theory and practice of Christian biopolitics.
Any light that can be thrown on the problems of human decision ought to be shed — and the light that shines from the Christian gospel is a source transcending all others.
It is not part of the natural order of things, but is continuously shaped by a broad range of human decisions that are not altogether rational or substantively just and that could be made to be more so.
After five years of investigating the basic mechanisms of human decision - making, the Caltech Conte Center will tackle a more complex topic: How do social settings affect the way we make decisions?
More importantly, research has indicated that — given fundamental characteristics of human decision - making and interaction — it simply may not be possible to avoid hit - driven market dynamics in a digital ecosystem.
Bill Jacobson, A Series of Human Decisions (# 1120), chromogenic print, 2004.
Cognitive psychologist Gary Klein on the complexities and mysteries of human decision - making.
It is a punishing, often thankless job, where the vagiaries of human decision - making never cease to amaze and where one's income is always dependent on the whim of others (no hourly billing here, thank you very much...).
As a lawyer, a mediator, a trainer, a law professor, a consultant, entrepreneur, a legal tech enthusiast and a student of human decision making, there are many points of potential collision.
News items such as this are a good reminder of the number of human decisions required to create an «automated» collection of information (or knowledge for that matter).
But the experienced quality, the «being of worth,» is not itself a matter of human decision, for the essence of value, as distinguished from desire, is precisely the power of evoking devotion and of transforming persons in conformity with its own pattern.
I also find it interesting that his discussions are so focused on the fallibility of human decision - making ability.
While there are challenges is showing how these AI tools made a decision, folks continue to make breakthroughs on opening up the black box of A.I. decisions, yet all the while the current offerings are not only clearly having black box issues, the factors being looked at are all the result of human decisions, rather than a man plus machine approach which AI tools bring to the table.
Even if you ignore Gavin's comments about emission scenarios and set a specific target which is independent of human decisions (such as a doubling of carbon dioxide) will you be able to determine the statistics of weather events, or the weather events themselves, etc?
Perhaps John hints at this when he says that those to whom Jesus gave the right to become children of God were born «not of natural descent, nor of human decision, nor of a husband's will, but were born of God» (John 1:14).
Yet to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God - children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband's will, but born of God.
12Yet to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of Godâ $» 13children born not of natural descent, [c] nor of human decision or a husband's will, but born of God.
Our technology makes pregnancy more and more a matter of human decision; more and more our choices are influencing the weal and woe of the animals on this earth.
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