Sentences with phrase «other deep things»

Not exact matches

That includes «trying too much too soon,» «spreading yourself a mile wide and an inch deep,» «trying to be all things to all people,» among others.
And all these engineers at Facebook and Google and others are taking this deep learning concept with all these frameworks, which is basically another word for tools, and turning these ideas into things of practical use.
Dig deeper, and you'll often find motives that are far messier — selfishness, revenge, fear of failure, a need to prove oneself to a seemingly unloving parent and many other things that most people would be reluctant to admit, if they were even aware of those motives in the first place.
In addition, Mr. Johnson offers deep insight into governmental affairs and the regulatory process, gained from, among other things, his tenure at Fannie Mae and his work with Vice President Walter F. Mondale, including as the Vice President's Executive Assistant.
The problem, it claims, is that the application depended on «the Steele dossier,» a document put together by former British spy Christopher Steele alleging deep ties between Trump and Russia (it's the source of, among other things, the «pee tape» rumors about Trump and Moscow prostitutes).
So when you start going one step deeper on what are the applications coming out, we talked about some of the social media ones, and they go by names like Steemit and LBRY credits and SingularDTV — I mean there's all these upstart ones that are replicating YouTube and Facebook and other things.
«Canada and the EU moved into a deeper agreement, which includes procurement and professional recognition of degrees, and all these other things that are strictly speaking, no longer trade,» says Amy Verdun, professor of political science at the University of Victoria in British Columbia.
The other thing about the Bible is that it is an honest assessment of mans deepest needs and does not skirt the issues that destroy mankind.
So we said, «Let's dig a little deeper into ourselves, and into the political, spiritual climate to find topics to write about other than things at the top of your head.»
The deeper we go the more we realize that everything is of one thing, like a collective, one can not exist without the other.
The better a man is, all other things being equal, the better an artist or writer he will be, because the better he is, the wiser he will be, the more accurately will he understand the world, the deeper will he see.
On the other hand Muslims who obviously hate the west and all things western so passionately should be actively encouraged to go back to Muslim - dominated countries where they can practice their faith in deep purity free from corrosive Western cultures and freedoms.
Sex between unmarried adults might be inside that gray area between the ideal and the immoral if, first, no one's marriage is being violated by either party; second, if it is a union of love and caring, not just a union of convenience and desire; third, if sex is shared only after other things have been shared, other things such as time, values, friendship, communication and a sense of deep trust and emotional responsibility; fourth, if it is both loving and discreet, private, shielded from those who would not or could not understand; if it is valued as a bond between the two people involved and between them alone, never violating the sacredness of the exclusive quality of that moment.
I think one thing missing today by people on all political sides is the ability and willingness to sit down with each other and have long conversations about deep issues.
For example, it could be argued that the «things of the Spirit» that Paul is referring to are about the deeper truths and mysteries of the gospel that Paul has been referring to previously in 1 Corinthians 2:9 - 15 (See Vance, The Other Side of Calvinism, 231).
I would strike up a conversation, then say «you don't know me but I'm a Christian and God is going to share with me about your life» I don't mean simple things like «you have the flu» or «Headaches», but deep, personal things that others couldn't know or even guess.
I think Muslim community is in deep trouble for it's backwardness and poverty while we see nothing is being done to resolve that... do we no have any other more important things to discuss than Birthdays or which foot first or this or that?
Gregory as well as Luther and Calvin knew that man lacked many other things besides the one thing needful and that the cure of all his other diseases would not ensue automatically on the healing of his deepest wound.
The other scrolls discuss deeper things of God and consciousness awakening.
For the subject - object relation is an assertion of ego, one's ordering the world about his subjective, personal consciousness, and as such it offers a handhold to all of the invidious evaluations that separate men from things, from each other, and from their own deepest life itself.
But on the other hand, when in talking about sin one talks only of such sins, it is so easily forgotten that in a way it may be all right, humanly speaking, with respect to all such things up to a certain point, and yet the whole life may be sin, the well - known kind of sin: glittering vices, willfulness, which either spiritlessly or impudently continues to be or wills to be unaware in what an infinitely deeper sense a human self is morally under obligation to God with respect to every most secret wish and thought, with respect to quickness in comprehending and readiness to follow every hint of God as to what His will is for this self.
The deeper reality of all things was to be found in God's perception of the world, and in that perception, each person was only one among others.
Whitehead believed that there is a deep religious intuition that God like all other actualities is also affected by all things.
It is a small book, and the supporting sociological evidence is mainly referenced in the footnotes, but Greeley does propose evidence that, among other things, Catholics have, compared to non-Catholics, a significantly higher appreciation of the arts and high culture; they have more satisfaction and fun in sex; they better understand the uses of leisure; they have a deeper and more stable relationship to family and community; they have a greater respect for the life of the mind, with educational achievements reflecting that respect; and they understand the nuanced connections between freedom and authority.
After some reflection on whether this opposition is really about singing or about some other deep - seated issue, we may still all arrive at the same place: that we belong to the Church and that this same Church, with the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, leads us towards God through (among other things) the full and undiluted celebration of the liturgy.
when asked why no other atheists condemned stone's p r n ographic, vi lent suggestions, the remaining moral atheists were so distressed, they simply couldn't find any thing suitable to convey their deepest anguish and displeasure.
I am a musician and a writer, plus a dabbler in drawing and other artistic «crafty» endeavors so I always interpret things from a deep emotional point of view which hasn't always worked in my favour (at least it didn't in the church I attended) and alienated me from non-artistic people who called me too sensitive and too picky and too obsessive and too emotionally involved with just about everything I did, or tried to do.
But Whitehead also said that the world and God are not identical; and I should interpret this utterance, along with others by him, to mean that there is in the divine life an exhaustibility which makes possible the wonderful novelty which the created order manifests, disclosing what Gerard Manley Hopkins named «the dearest freshness deep down things».
Yes Ducatihero... «christian»... although I don't use that label... others do for me... I also get atheist (i might get that more so after today's post)... we wouldn't be on the same page I'm sure... but that doesn't bother me... i still believe in the unity of all things... that at the deepest and most fundamental level we are connected, one, and that ideas only seem to divide or separate us.
In describing and accounting for the lives of the Religious Right, which we define simply as religious conservatives with a considerable involvement in political activity, the book and the series tell the story primarily by focusing on leading episodes in the movement's history, including, but not limited to, the groundwork laid by Billy Graham in his relationships with presidents and other prominent political leaders; the resistance of evangelical and other Protestants to the candidacy of the Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy; the rise of what has been called the New Right out of the ashes of Barry Goldwater's defeat in 1964; a battle over sex education in Anaheim, California, in the mid-1960's; a prolonged cultural war over textbooks in West Virginia in the early 1970's — and that is a battle that has been fought less violently in community after community all over the country; the thrill conservative Christians felt over the election of a «born - again» Christian to the Presidency in 1976 and the subsequent disappointment they experienced when they found out that Jimmy Carter was, of all things, a Democrat; the rise of the Moral Majority and its infatuation with Ronald Reagan; the difficulty the Religious Right has had in dealing with abortion, homosexuality and AIDS; Pat Robertson's bid for the presidency and his subsequent launching of the Christian Coalition; efforts by Dr. James Dobson and Gary Bauer to win a «civil war of values» by changing the culture at a deeper level than is represented by winning elections; and, finally, by addressing crucial questions about the appropriate relationship between religion and politics or, as we usually put it, between church and state.
But we who are aware of the deep interconnectedness of all things, notice how the true wellbeing of one part of creation supports that of others, and we are led to see how policies that reduce pressure on resources and defend the commons also give opportunities to the poor to survive and even prosper.
Augustine never quite brings his view of sexual love within the range of his deepest insight as to what loving another in God means: turning the whole current of love for self and neighbour into the channel of the love of God «which suffers no stream to be drawn off from itself by whose diversion its own volume would be diminished».19 To turn the human loves into the stream of devotion to God is one thing, to set devotion to God apart as one kind of love which makes others inferior is another.
But also other religions that have helped me find myself, taken me deeper, enabled me to feel at one with all things, and empowered me to become the person I am.
That points up the other thing that churches and their pastors get from involvement in the Nehemiah Project: a sense of deep respect for the hard - pressed people, earners of extremely modest wages, whom they seek to serve.
It is also sad for the person writing it, as they must have some of their own deep - seated emotional issues to warrant sitting down and thinking up hurtful things to say to other people they have never met.
I'm giving one lucky reader this 12 - inch Lodge Cast Iron Skillet so they can make their very own deep dish pizza (and pancakes and pot pie and so many other wonderful things) with it.
Things I changed: - cut the sugar by about half, using mostly dark brown sugar for the molasses kick - scratched the nutmeg and allspice but added about 1/3 extra of all of the other spices and also added nearly a tsp of ground cardamon - replaced the veggie oil with melted leaf lard - scratched the raisins - baked it on a deep sheet for only ~ 20 minutes - just barely until firm to the touch - then cut that sheet into three layers - replaced the icing with my own 16 ounce cream cheese, 8 ounce butter, ~ 6 ounce heavy cream, ~ 5 ounce honey, 1 tsp vanilla combo - toasted the coconut before dressing the cake.
«Ella and Louis», or any compilation that has them both really, for how to treat standards Count Basie, «The Complete Atomic Basie» to hear one of the best big bands at their best Duke Ellington, «At Newport» to go slightly deeper in big band Miles Davis, «Kind Of Blue» is super accessible greatness Wayne Shorter, «Speak No Evil» to go a lil deeper in that John Coltrane, «My Favorite Things» I love but some people are annoyed John Coltrane «Love Supreme» or many others to dig that mine more Herbie Hancock, «Chameleon» to start to see influence on other genre
In the fourth game of Buffalo's playoff series with the Celtics that year, he scored 44, bringing the Braves from 10 points behind to victory with, among other things, three straight baskets from the deep corners, even though Dave Cowens, the best defensive player in the sport, was draped all over him.
I'm hoping for a 1st and I think most other years it would be as close to a sure thing as you'll see on deadline day but this deep draft has me questioning it.
If you dug deeper you would understand how things are developing in other teams, what money has done to the game in the last ten years.
we tend to always make the players not playing into heroes thinking if they played things would of been different the truth is most of our players are simmilar to each other the issue is deeper than individual players its to do with the system were playing in and the balance
Maybe a good thing for the club itself — a gargantuan existential CRISIS for all the other teams in the Premier League that know, deep down, that they're bigger than Burnley.
I like the video idea and would love to hear and see it more, even though I think a text version is needed for things like deep analysing of matches and other stuff.
One other thing to throw in the mix, if we care to challenge ourselves to grow, can be to take a deeper look at the very things that provoke us (be it our wish to be more green colliding with our own human limitations to be perfect, or the injustices that seem clearly «wrong» to us).
I believe in the deepest parts of my aching heart that things will change because moms will no longer let other moms and children suffer.
An older child, on the other hand, may understand things in a more sophisticated way, but may have deep feelings of envy and jealousy.
The EasyLunchbox allows me to spread things out a bit more and the food is easier to see, while the ECOlunchbox is deeper so I have to stack things a bit more (the apples are tucked in under the other fruit in the small container that fits perfectly inside it), but it all fits in just fine.
Sometimes parents stay up much of the time to pick our brains, and other times they use doula time for deep sleep, as they trust that we have it covered and that our magical elves will help them get things done at night to make their days more peaceful as well.
I've personally tried various other models and this is the only one that really has thought of everything (except one major thing which I'll explain further down in my review) It has a really nice deep seat, over the shoulder padded straps (super important when the littles figure out how to push themselves up in a seat.
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