Each describes
a seemingly simple answer to the question of the meaning of life and then negates this answer with statements that typify confusion, mystery, openness, searching: «he does not know real answers,» «you don't know where you're going,» «we find ourselves never getting anywhere,» «what are the real answers,» «knowledge does not contain answers,» «there are no answers in power,» and so forth.
Not exact matches
However, the
answer to one
seemingly simple question has eluded me: How should I decide whether or not
to refrigerate a particular hot sauce?
Throughout this series, five moms will tell their story and
answer the
seemingly simple question, «How do you get your baby
to sleep?»
To Be or Not to Be The seemingly simple question of whether or not viruses are alive, which my students often ask, has probably defi ed a simple answer all these years because it raises a fundamental issue: What exactly defi nes «life?&raqu
To Be or Not
to Be The seemingly simple question of whether or not viruses are alive, which my students often ask, has probably defi ed a simple answer all these years because it raises a fundamental issue: What exactly defi nes «life?&raqu
to Be The
seemingly simple question of whether or not viruses are alive, which my students often ask, has probably defi ed a
simple answer all these years because it raises a fundamental issue: What exactly defi nes «life?»
In a study in the Journal of Ecology, a team of researchers experienced this firsthand when they tried
to answer a
seemingly simple question: what percentage of plants in the world are woody?
Seems like a
seemingly simple question but
to get an accurate
answer can be very frustrating!