Sentences with phrase «seen much literature»

I have not seen much literature lately on the pros and cons on vertical farming of algae for bio-fuel purposes.

Not exact matches

That there is no auxiliary literature of grievance for men — who, for the most part, just don't seem to feel they have as much to grieve about in this new world order — is something else that Humanae Vitae and a few other retrograde types saw coming in the wake of the revolution.
For a much more in - depth look at this passage and others in Wisdom literature, see Bruce Waltke's The Book of Proverbs: Chapters 15 - 31 and Ellen F. Davis» Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Songs.
they all say same thing pretty much... got to remember we can not fully trust 100 percent all translations... which is why one needs to study properly by using Koine Greek (for NT) dictionaries and concordances... and Hebrew dictionaries for OT... when one realizes how the versions are trnalated they will see this... also... thuis is true of ANY piece of literature... have you ever studied and spoken another r language?
Nevertheless, recent developments in the scientific culture, especially as we see them reported in books like James Gleick's Chaos: Making a New Science, suggest that Snow's greatest mistake was his failure to take into account the extent to which the literature of science is literature itself, which has all along anticipated much of what science ultimately spells out in its own terms — terms that have often enough seemed invidious to literature.
In the pre-Enlightenment period, a notion like «Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch» did not function so much to invite inquiry into the mind, circumstances and psychology of Moses as it did to unite the literature under a single coordinating point of view, urging the reader to see a synthetic purpose within even the most heterogeneous and diverse collection of traditions.
Although many of the British intelligentsia felt that in view of the advance of human knowledge they could no longer be Christians and, as we have seen, much of literature and thought was religiously sceptical, some widely influential figures in prose and poetry remained unashamedly Christian.
One wonders whether, in the future, when we shall know so much more about what literature says and how it hangs together than we now do, we shall come to see literary myth as a similarly constructive principle in the social or qualitative sciences, giving shape and coherence to psychology, anthropology, theology, history and political theory without losing in any one of them its own autonomy of hypothesis.»
I was DEAD SET against cosleeping before I had my son — I had seen all the literature on the risks and the supposed «evidence» about how it was SOOOO much more dangerous than a crib.
«They (investigators) were asking about why I believed I had been unfairly targeted, why Mr. Pigeon would spend so much money trying to unseat me and they asked to see some of the literature which I had,» Grant said.
As far as I could tell, all of the material in Parker's book could have been recycled from other creationist sources, and probably was; it is hard to see how someone familiar with the scientific literature could get so much wrong.
We will see what the peer - reviewed scientific literature has to say on the subject, and show that not only have the IPCC surface temperature projections been remarkably accurate, but they have also performed much better than predictions made by climate contrarians.»
Do we see much in the scientific literature showing that therapies for the ileocecal valve, ileocecal valve manipulations, and the like have a positive impact on health?
I have followed your blog and enjoyed it, its great to see scientific information and literature citations (I am a chemistry professor and I appreciate the scientific approach, which is missing in so much of nutritional studies).
Most of the stuff I find myself creeped out by no matter how many times I see it (e.g., Cure, the Winkie's scene in Mulholland Drive) is just on the border of the irrational, but slasher movies — in which the narrative is almost always a process of elimination — are really easy to rationalize, which is probably why there's so much academic literature about them.
Those of us who are familiar with Virginia SGP and the research literature writ large know that, unfortunately, there's much that Virginia SGP does not understand about the now loads of research surrounding VAMs as defined more broadly (see multiple research article links here).
National Library Week 2016 is April 10 - 16, and we want to help promote this great opportunity to sign up for a library card, see what's going on at your local library branch, and tell those hard - working library employees how much you appreciate their dedication to reading and access to great literature for all.
But as games become generally easier to make for individuals and smaller studios, we're seeing more experimentation like this, and Amy sees it as a stepping stone on the path to a more widespread experimentation with the medium to tell stories like this, much in the same way as literature or filmmaking.
One needs to look no further than literature, cuisine and music to see evidence of the South's profound influence on American culture, and consequently much of the world.
Of all the art and literature that we have on Andy Warhol, much of it is largely dominated by his persona and in the way we see him; he is his art.
Elizabeth Mankin Kornhauser (Hartford, CT, 2002), 43; see also n. 113, which quotes Hartley's letter to Stieglitz of Oct. 23, 1914, Yale Collection of American Literature, in which Hartley writes of «sit [ting] alone much the spectator of the great tragedy of the heart & soul of mankind — I can not set up and work.»
I expect much more work like this in the future, but I have not seen one published in the peer - reviewed literature since R. L. Smith, «Extreme value analysis of environmental time series: An application to trend detection in ground - level ozone (with discussion)», Statistical Science, 1989, vol 4, pp 367 - 393.
Others tried before me (see above) but much much more could be added to show how badly founded your theories and claims are, what cheap tricks you use (e.g. presentation of out of context and incompletely cited literature or manipulated datasets and graphs).
I do not see much mention of this in the literature or the press.
Re: «Having done lots of reading in the primary literature on many topics — I can't see that anything from Atomski that has much scientific depth.
Having done lots of reading in the primary literature on many topics — I can't see that anything from Atomski that has much scientific depth.
So far I haven't seen much in the literature about this possibility, but I'll certainly keep my eyes peeled, pointers gratefully accepted.
Economists often deal with this kind of thing by modelling a series of overlapping generations, but I haven't seen much discussion of this in relation to benefit - cost analysis, though no doubt it's in the literature somewhere.
Yet in any of the literature I rarely see a mention, much less a graph, showing solar output in the past, lets say 150 years, or to correlate to something like the Hockey stick let's say 1000 years, wouldn't it be nice if we had some data showing the trends since let's say the beginning of industrialization, I mean it has to have some relevance to the discussion.
There is much work that I can clearly see in the literature that is being casually swept under the carpet.
I can not see any «alternative» interpretations (what should that be, given that there is not much scientific literature suggesting otherwise?)
The accuracy of much of the PR firms to date has been very accurate to date as we have seen by the recent IPCC grey literature meltdown and the corruption revealed in climategate.
V 173: And herein lies the most insidious potential consequence of all the irresponsible fear mongering we see now continually, not only in the media, but so much of the so - called «scientific» literature.
And herein lies the most insidious potential consequence of all the irresponsible fear mongering we see now continually, not only in the media, but so much of the so - called «scientific» literature.
The literature on these placements suggests that although kinship families are much more vulnerable than unrelated foster families, children living with relatives are more likely to remain in the same placement and to have longer durations in foster care.78 Given the large numbers of kinship placements occurring across the United States, it would behoove the child welfare system to provide supportive services to these vulnerable kinship families to enable them to provide quality care to the children in their care (see the article by Geen in this journal issue).
The field of emotion and aging research is still determining how much cognitive effort older individuals exert when regulating their emotions (for examples of this literature, see Allard & Isaacowitz, 2008; Carstensen & Mikels, 2005; Isaacowitz, Allard, Murphy, & Schangel, 2009; Knight et al., 2007; Labouvie - Vief, Diehl, Jain, & Zhang, 2007).
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