Sentences with phrase «so radical thought»

«So here's my not so radical thought: What if the Bible is just fine the way it is?

Not exact matches

What makes this book so radical — and thought - provoking — is its ingenious composition: fifty dart - like essays that shoot to the heart of an equal number of components of public health in the current age.
Other companies with world - class R&D groups built radical innovations only to see their company fumble the future and others reap the rewards (think of Xerox and the personal computer, Fairchild and integrated circuits, Kodak and digital photography, etc.) Common themes in these failures were, 1) without a direct connection to the customer advanced R&D groups built products without understanding user needs, and 2) the core of the company was so focused on execution of current products that it couldn't see that the future didn't look like the past.
It probably won't bring jetpacks and hoverboards, but it will usher in other radical technologies, business models, customer experiences and even a new breed of entrepreneurs — a wave of so - called digital natives who think and act differently from every generation before them.
So what Singapore is doing, which I think is so interesting and is a reminder that there are much more radical fusions of left wing and right wing ideas than people give credit for, is the government is overwhelmingly regulating both supply and prices to keep costs dowSo what Singapore is doing, which I think is so interesting and is a reminder that there are much more radical fusions of left wing and right wing ideas than people give credit for, is the government is overwhelmingly regulating both supply and prices to keep costs dowso interesting and is a reminder that there are much more radical fusions of left wing and right wing ideas than people give credit for, is the government is overwhelmingly regulating both supply and prices to keep costs down.
So until we do, you cant blame people for thinking that either the moderate Muslim does nt care about the radicals that much... or they kinda agree wtih them.
Amazing how so many radical Flag waving Christian Americans think they can read my thoughts!
I also think it's telling that he is criticizing how «fashionable» critiquing Empire is... Interesting how more and more people are realizing that Empire has some serious problems (in my eyes a positive) and the vested progressive doesn't want to be seen as fashionable... So he critiques the critique... as a new way to be radical?!? Not sure...
The polarization is so deep that when, in 1996, the late Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin founded the Catholic Common Ground Initiative as a means of addressing division in the church, he was criticized by some liberal Catholics who thought that the project was not radical enough and by some of his brother cardinals who believed that it jeopardized the essential truths of the faith.
People in the US often think they are radical but tend to be so entrenched in a belief in the system that they don't understand it is the system that is the problem.
But the charge puts me in mind of the colloquium discussion in the January issue of First Things which treated the debate between so - called «liberal» and «radical» Catholics, perhaps because my contribution to that discussion has elicited similar accusations of political irresponsibility or moral cowardice from people sympathetic to the liberal line of thought.
For example, what has come about in the shift of imagery exemplified in the new physics and in emergent thinking generally represents not so much a reaction as a radical reconception of fundamental notions, altering the modern consciousness itself.
Despite its great relevance to our situation, the faith of the radical Christian continues to remain largely unknown, and this is so both because that faith has never been able to speak in the established categories of Western thought and theology and because it has so seldom been given a visionary expression (or, at least, the theologian has not been able to understand the radical vision, or even perhaps to identify its presence).
Even Arab Rulers — the ones that think they are direct descendant of prophet Mohammed are so wary to radicals group.
Actually Brehvik does not consider himself a christian in his words, «in the strictest sense», so the first part of your point is moot... Secondly I think a fairer statement would be that not «all» muslims are violent extremists, as many who don't live in western countries are, as their book does instruct them to kill any and all who do not procalim allah as the one god and mohammed as his prophet... As far as having extreme passion for one's beliefs, if someone was truly to be an «extreme» christian that person would be completely loving as this was Jesus» command to love both God and everyone... to take that to the extreme would mean «extreme» loving, like the radical kind of love that caused Jesus to endure the cross for the sins of us all... includinig the man who committed this atrocity and yes any and all of the muslim's who have committed similar things.
It's way more radical to say that an alleged but never proven god is «lord,» as if it's absolutely true and dare I say, not to be questioned, than to clearly say «I don't think so
So Muslims want days off from school for their religious holidays???, when the moderate Muslims start to profess their outrage at the radical Muslims then we'll think about it.
It is disappointing to note that many critiques of Bonhoeffer see him only through the eyes of the so - called «radical theologians» who have misrepresented his thoughts.
So if you are a radical Christian, following Jesus in the way of voluntary poverty, what are you to think of the biblical boob - tube fan?
Yet a truly modern subject or «I» is a doubled or self - alienated center of consciousness, and is so in a uniquely Cartesian internal and radical doubt, one never decisively present in previous cognitive or philosophical thinking, although its ground had been established by Augustine's philosophical discovery of the subject of consciousness.
It may be, however, that one reason that «radical and egalitarian individualism» often appears to be «winning out» is that it so thoroughly permeates that part of American law, constitutional law, where we tell the story about what kind of people we think we are.
Only when the minister gets very «radical» about either doctrine or social issues does serious protest arise, and even then there is a tendency to let the minister think his own peculiar ideas so long as not many people are influenced by him.
This sort of understanding of God's love is so radical, it revolutionizes everything we think about God, Scripture, ourselves, and the church.
It is amazing that Feisal Abdul Rauf knows so much about what the radical Islams think — act — and can predict what can happen - YET KNOW SO LITTLE ABOUT THE AMERICANso much about what the radical Islams think — act — and can predict what can happen - YET KNOW SO LITTLE ABOUT THE AMERICANSO LITTLE ABOUT THE AMERICANS!
If, as Hall and others suggest, the flaw in technological society runs so deep in Western thought and culture, the solutions to our present difficulties (if any there be) must indeed be radical.
Griffin's essays poses serious challenges to contemporary physicalism, not only because it forces physicalists to return to the beginnings and re-examine their fundamental assumptions but, more importantly, because it does so by proposing a radical, thought - provoking alternative.
If it does (and I think it will) it will do so because it is not radical enough — it does not sufficiently take into account the moral and spiritual forces in social life.
So thinking that maybe this could be a radical sea change in the field of child sleep I set off to test my theory.
Even so I think Corbyn will remain leader, just not a radical leader, because there is no other way back for the right wing.
So again, I think this is a bit radical, to the left, extreme.»
He also noted that «the area of adjudication requires some radical thinking and changes, commercial litigation is the area that feels the pinch the most,» noting that the system is so slow that, it has attracted a lot of negative comments outside the country.
These are serious times that require radical thinking, so it is staggering that the government have chosen to turn a blind eye to the huge amounts of wasteful and unnecessary public sector spending.
But what is so absurd about these flights of wishful thinking is that there is not a single word about the real lessons which Labour needs to learn — the need for radical banking reform, the need for a massive revival of British manufacturing (when this year the UK deficit on traded goods is likely to exceed the entire UK budget deficit), the need to take back public control of the NHS and education system, the need for a jobs and growth strategy rather than a programme of endless cuts, the need for an effective anti-poverty strategy and a huge reduction in inequality.
«We need a radical change in thinking, so that bio-derived chemicals are considered as primary options in manufacturing.»
So it is a radical new way of thinking about all of that, and it's something that is being tested in Israel, I believe, and maybe a couple of other places.
General relativity is the most radical and challenging of Einstein's discoveries — so much so that I believe the majority of physicists, even theoretical physicists, have yet to fully incorporate it into their thinking.
The team thinks one reason their technique is so efficient is that a chemical reaction between the hydrogen plasma and air molecules in the chamber's atmosphere generates cyano radicals — carbon - nitrogen molecules that have been stripped of their electrons.
«I have been using essential oils for several years and thought I was «radical» for doing so.
So in other words, you have less inflammation which means lower levels of free radicals... but you also have fat burning off as heat which is essentially lowering body fat levels (which I would think means over time you are switching your energy source from the depleted fat, but to what?)
So, the thinking is that lower methionine intake leads to less free radical production — the so - called «reactive oxygen species,» which slows the rate of DNA damage, which then would slow the rate of DNA mutation, slowing the rate of aging and disease — thereby potentially increasing our lifespaSo, the thinking is that lower methionine intake leads to less free radical production — the so - called «reactive oxygen species,» which slows the rate of DNA damage, which then would slow the rate of DNA mutation, slowing the rate of aging and disease — thereby potentially increasing our lifespaso - called «reactive oxygen species,» which slows the rate of DNA damage, which then would slow the rate of DNA mutation, slowing the rate of aging and disease — thereby potentially increasing our lifespan.
Here's a radical thought (sorry to be so simplistic but...) this could be the cure for ISIS?
But for many moms, this constitues a radical shift in thinking: we've all been so busy trying to look like rulers for the last 10 years, that hourglass now equates to fat.
At the time, he kept it vague, only saying that the series would «re-examine a figure who maybe we forget how radical they were in their thinking because they were so incorporated into our culture and outlook as a modern society.»
In fact, so good was the device that nobody ever thought there was still scope for improvement without going for radical changes with the device.
Also, because I don't think about budgets in the «cash» accounting terms that so many do, I am not impressed with what so - called radicals are proposing.
Having said that, I'm always open to new ways of thinking — after all, if you believed in a spherical earth a few hundread years ago, you would have been considered radical and wrong — but so far little evidence that Austrian Economics can be used successfully.
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It's a world away from what Resident Evil has become since the heady days of Resident Evil 4 (a game that worked so well because series creator Shinji Mikami was willing to think outside the box and do something radical), and that's exactly what the once potent franchise has been in need of.
Bloom remembers seeing Levine's appropriated Walker Evans photos and thinking, «Oh my God, that is so radical and so insane.
So I don't think personally that we are seeing anything radical or different at all.
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