Sentences with phrase «possible than a random»

Not exact matches

Most biologists agree that convergence is a common occurrence; but Conway Morris goes further, believing that evolution converges on the best possible solution, rather than on the best random solution.
If you want to truly, finally transform your physique completely to overcome your potentially poor muscle gain genetics and leave your hardgainer status behind for good (which is 100 % possible no matter what others may have wrongly told you), asking advice on bodybuilding from any random personal trainer or some big guy at the gym who likely has better muscle gain genetics than you (or unnatural help in some cases if we're being honest) isn't the smartest course of action because chances are they don't understand how you can fully transform your physique as they weren't a hardgainer themselves in the first place.
This is totally random, but this weekend I went back to one of your wintertime hair tutorials and noticed you mentioned that putting a little texturizing powder on your hands and rubbing it into your curls helps them to hold better — WOW, 2 days later and my curls look better than they ever have at this stage — I have only ever used my powder to help tease my hair in the past and didn't know this was possible!
Rather than being normal guys, just doing something random on a weekday evening, the majority have struck me as being rather odd and socially inept, and clinging onto speed dating events as if they are their only possible opportunity to meet members of the opposite sex.
Before we ellipse ourselves off the page, a few random remarks: Bronson mostly just walks through the film, which is a wise thing to do, and as swiftly as possible; he smiles more often than usual, which gives rise to more authentic mystery than anything in the scenario.
Our evidence suggests both that printing fluency confers the ability to name random letters more rapidly than 40 per minute6, and that the ability to phonetically write words fluently, possible only after the attainment of fluency in printing letters, confers phonemic awareness.
Given that premise, our job is to work out the details and they have hardly been all worked out, but when considering what premises are available upon which to base an «ethics» it seems one that starts with an axiom that an objective ethics is possible offers a helluva lot more potential for what we want, for what serves the life of a rational, sentient being, than one that says it's a matter of your bowels, or random electrical impulses in your brain or that your mind that tells you to murder my children is the moral equivalent of my mind telling me to protect yours.
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