Sentences with phrase «really studied his book»

So, who's ever sat down & really studied his book, and actually figured out how to bloody implement his 15 Points?

Not exact matches

Before Dan Price caused a media firestorm by establishing a $ 70,000 minimum wage at his Seattle company, Gravity Payments... before Hollywood agents, reality - show producers, and book publishers began throwing elbows for a piece of the hip, 31 - year - old entrepreneur with the shoulder - length hair and Brad Pitt looks... before Rush Limbaugh called him a socialist and Harvard Business School professors asked to study his radical experiment in paying workers... an entry - level Gravity employee named Jason Haley got really pissed off at him.
Since I completed my Rich Habits study in 2008, my focus has really been to help as many people as possible by getting my research out there through my writing (books / blog), media interviews and speaking engagements.
Holiness for me was found in the mess and labour of giving birth, in birthday parties and community pools, in the battling sweetness of breastfeeding, in the repetition of cleaning, in the step of faith it took to go back to church again, in the hours of chatting that have to precede the real heart - to - heart talks, in the yelling at my kids sometimes, in the crying in restaurants with broken hearted friends, in the uncomfortable silences at our bible study when we're all weighing whether or not to say what we really think, in the arguments inherent to staying in love with each other, in the unwelcome number on the scale, in the sounding out of vowels during bedtime book reading, in the dust and stink and heat of a tent city in Port au Prince, in the beauty of a soccer game in the Haitian dust, in the listening to someone else's story, in the telling of my own brokenness, in the repentance, in the secret telling and the secret keeping, in the suffering and the mourning, in the late nights tending sick babies, in confronting fears, in the all of a life.
I'm concerned about Tony's theology, whose philosophical foundations I criticized pretty consistently while I was involved in EC in 2004 - 7 before bowing out because Tony seemed more into pushing with some arrogance a pomo philosophy he never really studied in school than he was into fostering dialogue (I went back to just reading the wonderful books of Brian McLaren which is how I got involved in the first place).
It seems so simple and so obvious, but it took me three years of serious doubt, two years of study, an ongoing sense of skepticism, a trip to India, a blog, and a book to really figure this out for myself.
The present volume is really a collection of studies, and it might easily have grown to twice its size if other topics had been included: for example the miracle stories — I should have liked to examine Alan Richardson's new book on The Miracle - Stories of the Gospels (1942)-- or a fuller study of the so - called messianic consciousness of Jesus, the theory of interim ethics, the relation of eschatology and ethics in Jesus» teachings — see Professor Amos N. Wilder's book on the subject, Eschatology and Ethics in the Teaching of Jesus (1939)-- the influence of the Old Testament upon the earliest interpretation of the life of Jesus — see Professor David E. Adams» new book, Man of God (1941), and Professor E. W. K. Mould's The World - View of Jesus (1941)-- or sonic of the topics treated in the new volume of essays presented to Professor William Jackson Lowstuter, New Testament Studies (1942), edited by Professor Edwin Princestudies, and it might easily have grown to twice its size if other topics had been included: for example the miracle stories — I should have liked to examine Alan Richardson's new book on The Miracle - Stories of the Gospels (1942)-- or a fuller study of the so - called messianic consciousness of Jesus, the theory of interim ethics, the relation of eschatology and ethics in Jesus» teachings — see Professor Amos N. Wilder's book on the subject, Eschatology and Ethics in the Teaching of Jesus (1939)-- the influence of the Old Testament upon the earliest interpretation of the life of Jesus — see Professor David E. Adams» new book, Man of God (1941), and Professor E. W. K. Mould's The World - View of Jesus (1941)-- or sonic of the topics treated in the new volume of essays presented to Professor William Jackson Lowstuter, New Testament Studies (1942), edited by Professor Edwin PrinceStudies (1942), edited by Professor Edwin Prince Booth.
The critics have never taken the trouble to study what the Faith really stands for, and in most cases have certainly never studied the relevant documents, namely, the books of the New Testament, with their adult intelligence.
I would really like all of you to read and study First four books of the New Testament... even if you are a non-believer or a believer... if there are any few hundred pages of literature that was ever worth reading it is those 4 books.
(For those who want to study the subject I would recommend a book Did Jesus Really Live?
I have been using Logos Bible software for many years to prepare my sermons, write my books, and research Scripture, and it really is the best Bible study software package available today.
These are quoted constantly by Talmage in his discussion of the Articles of Faith, which is really a study of Mormon theology, alongside the Bible and the Book of Mormon.
These books provide new insight into how to read and study the Bible, and what sort of book the Bible really is.
One of the things I really picked up from the book is how I need to start studying more psychology so that my writing and speaking will be more persuasive.
But on the other hand, a book that could be called «Psalms for Dummies» is not really a serious resource for studying the Psalms.
There are many historians that study these times who seem pretty convinced that this really happened I read a couple of books along time ago that made a convincing case, I realize that doesn't make it so, I think it is true because the red letters of the bible have power.
This is new territory for me, doing a book - length study of Jesus and the origins of Christianity, but I have read everything I could get my hands on, weighed all the scholarly debates, and hope my book will be useful to the book - reading public in explaining what we can really know, historically, about Jesus.
Those who are really mature were encouraged to take copious sermon notes, study the Bible on their own for an hour or two every day, listen to sermons on the radio while driving to work, download sermon MP3s from the internet for listening while jogging or weeding the garden, read Bible study books and theology books in their spare time, and attend one or two Bible conferences or retreats every single year.
I can understand why many pastors don't teach any of this in their Bible study, but in this day and age there really is no excuse for Christians not to pick up a book from some biblical scholar laying this out.
It was like that when I learned my first numbers and letters through books presented by my father and board games I used to play with my sister, when I perfected my motor coordination and posture through dance classes encouraged by my mother, when I really understood about equilibrium and confidence in the moment that I learned to ride a bike, and when I received encouragement from my parents while I was studying my homework.
«So, conducting studies using picture books and storybooks has important implications for understanding how children really learn in their daily lives.»
Fischetti: The early [assertion] in the book about, I think it's being proved [out], [that] the earth really can't substantiate the resources that we're extracting from it or the waste that we're producing; and there's more studies that are coming out very recently even that are proving starting to put numbers on all of that, so the assertion is I think is that continued growth is not possible without greater resource consumption and [waste creation].
I looked each video (very well made) and also realize they use broader simpler but still concise enough terminology, that»S really great to increase reach and be more «approachable» because sometimes regular everyday people on the street don't know all or have heard the mumbo jumbo jargon in biogerontology (they will think you are a pompous alien nerd - stuck up who thinks he knows more because he was like a lab rat in his lab books studying aging; on top of that they will more Resentful towards you for Daring to Question their Life beliefs on Life and Death by your» 2 - cents worth knowledge (couldn't give a f...)»
While researching their new book, The Informed Parent: A Science - Based Resource for Your Child's First Four Years, science journalists Tara Haelle and Emily Willingham, Ph.D., sifted through thousands of studies on parenting practices — from birthing and breastfeeding to sleep training and screen time — to find out what moms and dads really need to know.
Dave Asprey: It's interesting, when I was writing the Bulletproof Diet book, I really dug in on the butyric acid angle and found two different studies that talked about what many in the Paleo community all know, if you eat some kind of fiber, vegetables, or starch, then the bacteria in your lower intestine can make butyric acid.
So it's really just a carb tolerance test and actually Rob Wolf talks about this in his book as well, where based on some research out of Israel, there was a study done following 800 different people and they found that you could give two people the exact same carbohydrate source whether it's sweet potato or bread or lentils and they would have very different postprandial glucose responses.
In my China Study critique last year, I pulled a bunch of data directly from «Diet, Life - style, and Mortality in China» — the same book Campbell and Chen are huddled around in that last picture — showing just how inconsistent the «plant - based diet is healthier» message really is.
People have a complicated — and varied — biology and it is impossible to micromanage individual nutrients — if you do finish PHD you should move on to an author who really knows his stuff and has actually done nutrition / cancer research like T. Colin Campbell, in his new book Whole: Rethinking the Science of Nutrition, and also his first book the China Study.
Blamed for everything from headaches, to abnormal weight loss / gain, to constipation / diarrhea, to menstrual irregularity, to leaky gut / bowel inflammation, to anemia... and basically everything including cancer and the deaths of kittens (ok, maybe not), gluten has really gotten a bad rap in the past several years, probably very much in part due to the publishing of the book Wheat Belly by Dr. William Davis, the landmark study on Non-Celiac Gluten Sensitivity (NCGS) by Dr. Peter Gibson, and the explosion of social media in the past decade that has given an unprecedented voice to people who otherwise would have no credibility with which to garner attention towards themselves.
A really great book to read is The China Study.
If you really want a good book to read, throw the China Study in the trash and read «The great cholesterol myth» By Stephen Sinatra and Johnny Bowden.
If you're a longtime reader of my books and articles, or a clinician who's been seeing these kinds of changes in patients, the study is not really news at all.
My wife and I are avid researchers and we have been reading your book and Wheat Belly and several others and one curious thing we've noticed is nobody really has done any studies (or at least no one really talks about it) on how long one needs to be gluten free before 100 % turn around.
I'm not a researcher — I love to read informational books, but I'm not good at analyzing studies, etc., so your efforts are really appreciated.
This e-book product is a companion book study that may be utilized in several different ways including: (1) individual professional development to renew your own professional growth and learning; (2) a faculty and staff book study as a summer or really anytime of the year book study for professional growth; (3) a guide or workbook for an assigned reading in a graduate course; and (4) maybe an entire faculty and staff summer read to help better understand the world of dyslexia as part of a school improvement process!
The book is full of examples, research, case studies, and, what I really liked, a nice framework for faculty discussion.
This ASCD Study Guide is designed to enhance your understanding and application of the information contained in What Teachers Really Need to Know About Formative Assessment, an ASCD book by Laura Greenstein published in June 2010 and designed to help teachers use formative assessment in their classrooms and schools.
That was really the biggest element for me and so, once I realized I had a product that I knew was going to stand out among 20,000 other going on Amazon every day, then I started focusing on the promotion and feature companies that I knew were being successful like BookBub and studying what it is they require to accept the book and then making sure that my book fit those qualifications.»
I really enjoyed the book and I promote it to the White and Indian schools to use it in their Social Studies classes as it has a Teachers Guide and lesson plans at the back of the book (Teacher Friendly).
My students and I are really excited to participate in the #GRAAmy book study.
Numerous studies have been conducted on how books fare at different price points, even within the genre - based breakdown: a book of a certain word count will sell really well at one price if it's a crime thriller by a bestselling author, for example, but at the same price may fail abysmally if it's a beach - read romance by an unknown author.
SESNONow on the business model, Jeremy, it's really interesting because — and this has been sort of alluded to, but a PEW study recently found that of people who are e-reading, 41 percent who borrow books from libraries purchased their most recent e-book.
It's not a book about teaching, really, so much as a study in human endurance, and yet I think it's the best thing ever written about teaching: the joys, sorrows and downright horrors of giving up the best years of one's life so that other (potentially less deserving) souls may thrive.
And then get some really good books on the craft, maybe take some classes, and just keep studying and practicing and learning and growing and writing that quota.
I thought I'd studied up ahead of time, but now I think it's hard to really know how to promote a book until you've done it.
Despite what the «studies» show, how many young people (age 30 and under) really go to a bookstore and buy a print book for themselves?
It is really meaty, content rich and is intended to be used as a book study.
(Really the whole point behind the «Authority Case Study» is to show how to build a brand outside of Amazon to help you connect with an audience that will support your Kindle books.)
Over the weekend, while watching the Orioles win yet another series on their way to an American League title, I spent some time with a new e-book called Quantitative Value Investing in Europe: What Works for Achieving Alpha... Where the study really gets interesting is when the authors combine low price to book value with six - month relative strength.
I have more finance / investing books than I know what to do with and my time studying may be spread too thin and that I would be better off focusing on the few materials that are really worth it.
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