Sentences with phrase «preconceptions too»

Former Chief Justice Brennan praises «a sense of humour that allows the mind to concentrate on the issues without taking oneself and one's preconceptions too seriously».
I built up really good relationships with all my care givers and challenged some of their preconceptions too which was great.

Not exact matches

When so many syntheses of thought have been shown to be too small a garment to fit a growing world of knowledge, when so many preconceptions have had to be revised in every field of knowledge, the modern man is in no sympathetic mood to listen to proofs for the existence of a personal God unless the very knowledge he has so recently acquired can be geared to the demonstration of such an Absolute.
If Dee surprised some of her audience, she too came away with a few preconceptions shattered.
As Bob Somerby never tires of pointing out, too much ink and airtime are spent repeating The Script — the punditocracy's preconceptions about the candidates.
«I want to come up with totally new things, so I don't want to be affected by too many preconceptions,» he says.
Up to 70 percent of NTDs can be prevented with adequate preconception intake of folate or folic acid and there is some evidence that other types of birth defects may be prevented too.
We are left with our own sound reasoning skills which too will be influenced by our own preconceptions.
Although it could be said that a film like this challenges audience preconceptions and encourages discussion and debate, this will be greatly diminished by the dramatic and rather - too - fantastic denouement that allows the characters an easy escape that is simply dishonest and unhelpful.
I don't want to say too much because I think it's best to approach this story without any preconceptions.
«Contemporary African art has been minimised by preconceptions and stereotypes for far too long.
Tell me, too, how someone who sees things as you do — all built into Bayesianism; no need to address whether the problem is different priors or different sources of information relevant to truth - seeking likelihood ratios vs. a form of biased perception that opportunisitcally bends whatever evidence is presented to fit a preconception; no need apparently either for empirical study on any of this — can straighten out someone who says the key to dispelling public conflict over climate change is just to disseminate study findings on scientific consensus.
It's possible, I suppose, that you're just imposing too many of your preconceptions on what you see him doing.
One can have prejudices or preconceptions — like the prejudice that most early scientists had that humans were just too small to be able to change something as big as the global climate.
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