Sentences with phrase «so than a sense»

Both dogs and cats «see» the world through their sense of smell as much, or more so than their sense of vision.

Not exact matches

So, in a sense, they might be even more motivated to be helpful than a traditional VC.
So again, this idea of consolidation was more about looking at history, trying to understand how markets trade, and the sense that there's probably more wage inflation than people perceive.
Hulu seems to be focused more on upselling its existing subscribers more than pulling in tons of new people, so keeping this sort of nonlinear interface would make sense.
However, rewards credit cards often carry higher interest rates and fees than traditional cards, so they don't make financial sense for everyone.
But doing business with that company still makes sense because Peachtree shows its inventory turning far faster than others, explains Garrett, so Triad gets a return on the same dollar invested more times a year than with other lines.
A lazy person knows there's lots of life and fun to be experienced, so finding the shortcuts through the slough just makes a lot more sense than dragging your feet down a long road.
Sure, he spends more time on chores than she does, so in one sense it isn't fair — but it's more satisfying to both than the old system.
And Face ID — which Apple touts as being less vulnerable to bad actors than its Touch ID fingerprint sensing — could be more secure than using a fingerprint sensor on a phone simply because such sensors tend to be so small that they require you to input several partial prints from the same finger.
So - called variable pay plans have been around for more than a century, and were first used by industrial magnates including George Eastman and William Procter out of sense of social conscience, writes Rutgers economist Joseph Blasi in this Huffington Post story.
On the average day, 39 percent of millennials interact more with their smartphone than anything or anyone else so it makes sense to use this tool to help them with their finances, a Bank of America study found.
Dorsey, Twitter's CEO, is known for having a more advanced fashion sense than some of his Silicon Valley peers, so his sneakers by the avant - garde designer Rick Owens certainly fit his style.
«It would be easier than «StarCraft» in the sense that you don't have so many different levels of control, but you'd still have the issue of teamwork, which is very complex,» Togelius says.
Why this should be so — why the success of the Jewish minority should be so particularly resented by other peoples — is a complicated question which is rendered more complicated by the fact that anthropologists are now generally agreed that the Jews are not a race in any scientific sense of the term — no more of a race, for example, than the Germans.
This is why the deal makes so much sense: AOL provides the technology to target individuals instead of content, and Verizon the ability to track those individuals — at least the over 100 million customers they already have — at arguably a deeper level than anyone else in digital advertising (for non-Verizon customers, AOL's ad platform is still useful, albeit not as targeted; rates would be commensurately lower).
It makes sense that these Facebook - optimized channels would take off so fast: Facebook's algorithm favors anything that keeps people on Facebook longer, rather than sending them away to another site.
The authors begin by noting that while choosing managers on the basis of historical performance might make intuitive sense, «it takes an impractically long time to differentiate talented from untalented managers — far longer than the five years or so that many investors believe is sufficient.»
Hope this doesn't put off new Tesla owners who see this charging at the superchargers, the guy must have more money than sense to spend that kind of cash on one car just so that he can say he has an electric estate car for his dog, nice gimmick but he is not going to be offsetting the cost of fuel anytime soon.
You had CD's that had better yields than the current 5 - year Treasury rate, so it makes sense, but I'm just curious.
Even more so than Millennials, Gen Z is unique in that technology may be their sixth sense.
Depending on your situation, it could make more sense to take the standard deduction rather than itemize, so be sure to run the numbers to see which scenario works out the most in your favor.
It used to be that subsidized federal loans almost always came with lower interest rates than private loans, so refinancing didn't make that much sense.
So, it actually makes complete sense that that number is too low when you're talking about a developed market economy versus an emerging economy because, in theory, a developed economy can borrow at lower rates than an emerging economy can.
#TradeElite A7 — I suppose if your projections have you yielding more return than the higher interest it would still make sense; however, projections wouldn't be enough to mitigate the risk of #toohigh interest so, actual revenues, i.e. a pilot approach in - market, is recommended https://t.co/IigZtOkpxC
If you can afford to contribute to both a 401 (k) and an IRA, it probably makes sense to do so: You will save more for retirement than either account would provide for alone.
There are some benefits to this harmonization; for example, it made little sense to charge products imported from Japan a higher rate than imports from Korea, so some harmful distortions were removed from the tariff schedule.
The inflation that Obamanomic is causing will be greater than the interest rate payed on the bonds so there's really little sense in buying them at this time.
This is meant to be more of a barometer than anything else and this data should not be used to make a business case, but more so just to give you a sense of opportunity.
Makes sense about diversification for you — I don't have as much capital to apply so I'm a bit more reserved and concerned that RECF in general may be more risky than some alternatives (am33 reflected those concerns well) but it is still an intriguing space to me due to the potential of investing in multiple properties at a relatively low amount / per property, with one K - 1...
Makes a hell of a lot more sense than an all powerful all knowing god needing to give birth to himself, so that he could sacrifice himself to himself in order to save humanity from the punishment that he condemned us to.
If the cost of transaction processing is a significant fraction of the transaction value, then that's bad, so bitcoin really only makes sense for transactions worth more than a few pennies (and most people define micropayments as sub-penny).
Yet, Heidegger is even less congenial to Christian theology than Kant, for in an important sense Christianity is anthropocentric: «God so loved the world that He gave His only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.»
You know or SHOULD know, (you sound pretty stupid so you might not) that politicians make decisions based on their faith, so when people find someone with a different faith than theirs running for the highest office, it makes sense that they are uneasy with it.
Atheists deal with what the physical world delivers, so they might not have any sense of something bigger than man and have no ultimate purpose.
Turtles have hard shells too, so a statue (which would of course be of a hard material) makes more sense than using a manatee with its soft flesh.
Some think that the bible tells them that the earth has to be less than 10,000 years old rather than the better explanation, that writing did not come into being until close to 6,000 years ago and our oral collective memory couldnt reach too much further back SO it makes sense that the old testament would appear to only reach back 10,000 years.
Maybe he doesn't care enough whether his mother gets humiliated; or maybe he's so cowardly that he'd rather condone the knuckleheads than arouse their wrath by condemning them; or maybe he doesn't have enough sense of his own dignity, and his mother's.
Jeremy it just hit me like a bolt of lightning i am so excited about this thought that salvation has nothing to do with eternal life but is speaking of losing the ability to be an overcomer in Christ.Having been there as a carnal christian i always believed in Jesus but i felt i did nt have the power to live a christian life so i felt like a hippocrite i was still subject to sin and sinful desires.So in that sense i had never received salvation because i had never been an overcomer in the first place.So i can see how a christian could lose there salvation having once walked by faith but that does nt effect there eternal life in Christ.Just so others know i am now walking by faith and am an overcomer i know what it is like to experience the power of the holy spirit and to not be overcome by my old nature that is what Jesus wants us all to experience rather than being a victim of the enemy.Whether we are an overcomer or not does nt effect our eternal life.brentnz
Imagine these sentences: Sabio, it seems your problem is more with Muslims, than with Allah... more with Greeks than with Zeus... more with Hindus than with Kali... more with Mormons than with Moroni... more with Shintoists than Amaterasu Since I don't believe in any of those imaginary entities, so none of these sentence make sense.
Wow, you don't even make any real sense, so I can't respond other than saying look outside of yourself instead of basing your whole experience on your own religious experience.
So at one point I told him there are actually different degrees of infinity, in the sense that some infinite sets are bigger than other infinite sets.
The psalmist recalls times when his sense of the divine presence was so immediate and full that he felt as if he were beholding nothing less than the face of God.
The class so defined extensionally is more basic than is a concept subsequently applied to it, which defines it in an intentional sense (Russell, PM 80f.).
There are people who do not accept the full Christian doctrine about Christ but who are so strongly attracted by Him that they are His in a much deeper sense than they themselves understand....
So I prefer to try to make sense of It, rather than throwing up my hands and saying I don't know, I'm done, you have to be done too.
The highest cause may be (1) in every sense or aspect «uncaused,» in no sense or aspect the effect of anything else; or it may be (2) in some aspects uncaused, and in others causally influenced, but its manner of both acting and receiving influences may be the highest conceivable, hence absolutely «perfect,» although even so its whole being may not in every sense be perfect, because the influences as coming from other causes, say human beings, may be less admirable than they might be; or the supreme cause may be (3) in no sense or aspect uncaused, independent of other powers, hence in no way wholly exempt from the imperfections of the latter...
Surely it is more than a mere accident that Whitehead so conceives the «actuality» of his actual entities in such a way as to fit the Aristotelian sense of energeia and entelecheia, both of which are rendered by the Latin actus and its derivative forms.
Even if, in some sense, I exist, I don't know what I am — and it turns out, so some modern materialists have begun to argue — that nothing I do or even say and think is more than the motion of material parts (and so subvert even the notion of rational argument itself).
She knows the heart of God more than anyone else I know, and so while she may not know all the logical arguments or Scripture passages for various theological views, she senses rightness and wrongness in various theological positions.
I can see how one can look at this idea and look at the following examples in Hebrews 11 as «Because they were sure they would get this reward, they did this thing» but as the author points out in verse 39 that they didn't get what they imagined they would, so if we understand faith as «being sure» it would turn out that it is «being sure» of something and being totally wrong — instead it makes more sense to understand Hebrews 11:1 as saying that «faith is a realization (or actualization)» of our hopes, a realization that the author points out is greater than we could expect and be sure in.
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