-- People
often draw conclusions of the data they were given.
I do not think that people are inherently dishonest, I simply know the mind plays many tricks, and people will
often draw conclusions that are false, and then build on those false conclusions to create all new false conclusions.
When people say, «I have a theory about why that happened,» they are
often drawing a conclusion based on fragmentary or inconclusive evidence.
Defenders of the traditional view too
often draw the conclusion that if the Gospel narratives of the resurrection are not historically true, then it makes the apostles and early Christians to be liars.
Many of us who never came across such relationships or spoke to people involved in such an arrangement,
often draw a conclusion that these girls have «daddy issues».
Not exact matches
These happy vibes are heard by a founder's «happy ears» —
often leading the founder to
draw false
conclusions about the true level of potential VC interest.
From the above case studies, one can
draw conclusion that the Federal Reserve's pursuit of maximum employment have
often contributed to the rise in risk asset valuation (an intended effect of easing financial conditions), and such policy would only be reversed during times of acute (or perceived) inflation risk.
Finally, the book lacks «form» itself: too
often, the author merely acts as a conduit for the opinions of other scholars without
drawing his observations together into a coherent
conclusion.
Archaeologists
draw conclusions about earlier civilizations,
often from items that have lain buried for thousands of years.
Let the preacher, then, first of all know where he and they are going, whether this be in the proper sense a
conclusion or whether this be a point at which he stops, leaving each person to
draw his own
conclusion, as Jesus
often did in the parables.
Describing the
conclusions he'd
drawn after years of thinking about the fashion industry as a Christian, he said: «For me, I've
often asked the question «if God was boss of this industry, what would his priorities be?»
American and British theologians oft en find themselves in significant agreement —
drawing on similar sources and reaching shared
conclusions — but geographical distance as well as the very different church - state relations in the two nations have meant that Christians in one region are
often unaware of theological developments in the other.
Reasonable
conclusions that can be
drawn from xG are how
often a player is in a good spot to score, and makes themselves available for good chances.
The problem with the discussion is that it so
often gets opinion dropped in as fact, and then
conclusions are
drawn from the dropped in opinion as if it were a fact.
Leveson makes clear he's not taking sides, but says documents such as these can not
often be taken «at face value» and says he wants to hear «every side of the story before
drawing conclusions».
The report that landed on Sunday
drew a few broad
conclusions: pricing is opaque; quality and cost aren't always correlated; increased market - share
often increases costs; cost - shifting — which is when hospitals with large Medicaid populations try to make up for that by charging more money to commercial insurers — doesn't happen that
often.
Davis» results have
often been taken as a clear indication that likes and dislikes are fundamentally built - in and natural, though, as we'll see, Davis herself
drew a rather different
conclusion.
People
often draw inaccurate
conclusions quickly.
Critics of school choice
often claim that parents ignore quality when evaluating schools and
draw their
conclusions on the basis of the school's racial or ethnic composition.
Here at the Chalkboard we
often take on the dangers of analyses that
draw causal
conclusions from correlational data, particularly when the analyst is free to keep mining the data until the desired pattern is revealed.
«It
draws sweeping and
often irresponsible
conclusions based on limited information and obsolete data,» the CCSA said.
People tend to
draw conclusions about quality, expect to always get the low price on any future releases you might get (regardless of how much popularity or fan base you might develop — because you've set that expectation FOR them), and you can
often do your peers a disservice because you're right... there is a sweet spot, and the more people that low ball pricing, the lower that sweet spot becomes.
It is doubtless true that the three processes of choosing facts,
drawing a hypothesis or
conclusion, and testing the
conclusion, are
often confused, in his own thinking, by the man of science.
However, in practice, we should not examine them and
draw conclusions too
often.
All too
often, people
draw invalid
conclusions based on data.
There are a few reasons why the
conclusions we
draw from animal advocacy research are
often highly uncertain:
The possibility that individuals evaluate the characteristics of cultural variants is also acknowledged (called «direct bias» or «content bias»), but it has been studied less because, unless one knows how variants are evaluated, the only
conclusion that can be
drawn is, trivially, that preferred variants will be chosen more
often than non-prefereed ones [21].
This is not because these media are historically important or intrinsically valuable, but because they are basic: simple technologies that record,
often in exceptionally nuanced ways, the gestures and maneuvers of a consciousness in action (making decisions, adapting to circumstances, working through rough spots, and coming to
conclusions — only to start all over again in the next painting or
drawing).
The media (and some pundits and politicians)
often mis - summarize,
draw the wrong
conclusions from, twist, or mislead the public using such letters.
Gavin's work is
often about empowering people to
draw their own
conclusions.
The authors
often say that «these model limitations must be kept in mind» — and there are many other model limitations not discussed — but then they do not keep them in mind when
drawing conclusions.
Lynn, as someone who
often has to work with sparse datasets where things vary Poisson-wise about some mean, that also may be changing, I can attest that
drawing rigorous and meaningful
conclusions is not easy.
«Cause I
often hear «skeptics» saying that Argo data are insufficient for
drawing scientific
conclusions, and I know that you greatly value input from «skeptics.»
Head over to the Junk Charts blog (among others) to see some hilarious, and
often worrying, examples of how easy it is to misinterpret data and
draw wrong
conclusions.
This is an accurate
conclusion to
draw since historically defendants
often purposely drag out fulfilling court ordered obligations while secretly planning their next evasive step.
Any GC who has reviewed data from TyMetrix would quickly
draw the same
conclusion, as a large firm lawyer with 20 - years experience in, say, Minneapolis
often has a lower billing rate than a second - year at a mega-firm in NYC.
This is because the law requires proof of causation only on a balance of probabilities, whereas scientific or medical experts
often require a higher degree of certainty before
drawing conclusions on causation (p. 330).
This leads to the courts
often deferring to the fact finding and
conclusions drawn by tribunals.
This does not apply to graduate positions, where employers
often want to know a person's interests and hobbies because there is usually little work experience from which to
draw conclusions.
Modern astrophysics is complex, and the
conclusions we can
draw from our findings is
often subtle.
After the honeymoon period in a relationship is over, and our partner raises complaints about us, or does things we don't agree with or is somehow absent, we
often start to make or
draw slightly negative
conclusions about them or the relationship.
«More
often than not, the
conclusions people
draw about our children's birth parents are far from funny.»