Sentences with phrase «something most humans»

Not exact matches

As with most companies and entrepreneurs operating in the AI space, he sees increasing automation not as a threat to human jobs, but as something that can't happen soon enough.
We need bosses who equip businesses with promising talent; who excel at creativity and lateral thinking; and who have the emotional intelligence to herd the complicated urges and behaviours of their employees — most of whom, all hype aside, remain stubbornly human — toward building something great.
Most won't admit it, but we humans are quick to form opinions based on something as shallow as a hat or the distance from the camera.
Most of it made fun of it and / or questioned why a data driven firm like ours would include something so squishy as «being human».
«Time» is something humans created to quantifying the passing of events, because we need it to understand the world around us (or at least most of us do; there are people with strange mental conditions that are fully functioning but have no concept of time).
Most of Leff's lecture consisted of a review of all the unsuccessful attempts to establish an objective moral order on a foundation of human construction, i.e., to put something else in God's place as the unevaluated evaluator.
We are reminded, time and again, that what human beings do with their freedom matters, even when, like James, they choose paths that are no longer easily understandable to most readers, renouncing worldly values for the sake of something «harder to define.»
However much we may try to blame somebody or something else our human associates, our human situation, our past experience, and the like — the human response when most perceptive is to say that «I am accountable».
Every human existence which is not conscious of itself as spirit, or conscious of itself before God as spirit, every human existence which is not thus grounded transparently in God but obscurely reposes or terminates in some abstract universality (state, nation, etc.), or in obscurity about itself takes its faculties merely as active powers, without in a deeper sense being conscious whence it has them, which regards itself as an inexplicable something which is to be understood from without — every such existence, whatever it accomplishes, though it be the most amazing exploit, whatever it explains, though it were the whole of existence, however intensely it enjoys life aesthetically — every such existence is after all despair.
You say that most evangelicals believe «something miraculous» happens to make unborn babies human from the moment of conception, but you argue that «there is no way to prove that they are right.»
At their most successful, restorers retrieve from the incommunicable past something of two elements the world too often otherwise does without: the experience of the truly human and the surprising holy.
If Philip Larkin's fine words about An Arundel Tomb (that what remains after death is our loving) are the truth — and something deep in human existence affirms that they are — then what matters most of all about any one of us is the way in which and the degree to which we are enabled to contribute, however imperfectly this must seem to us, to the delight of God and the implementation of God's will and way in the world.
To dismiss this is to fail to grasp something that is deepest and most real in human existence.
Most human beings, when confronted directly with the question, will typically acknowledge that there is in fact a fundamental distinction between what one imagines and what is real, and admit that something that one imagines does not actually exist.
Whatever else the word God may mean, it is a term used to designate that Something upon which human life is most dependent for its security, welfare and increasing abundance.
As humans, we tend to pray most when we really need something from God.
Such alienation or estrangement brings about a sense of human frustration, sometimes felt very keenly but more often and with most of us in something like Thoreau's «quiet desperation,» known at moments when we can not sleep or when we are not happy about what we have been doing or thinking.
In fact, all my anxieties run in the opposite direction: that, in order to affirm the uniqueness of humanity within organic nature, as well as the unique moral obligations it entails, we will reject all evidence of intentionality, reason, or affection in animals as something only apparently purposive, doing so by reference to the most egregiously vapid of philosophical naturalism's mystifications — «instinct» — and thereby opening the way to a mechanistic narrative that, as we have learned from an incessant torrent of biological and bioethical theory in recent decades, can be extended to human behavior as well.
Sometimes feelings like alienation are indeed an indication infringement on a basic human need for mutual trust, companionship love, something that most if not all humans would aspire too.
I know there are those who will accuse me of exaggeration when I say this, but, until baseball appeared, humans were a sad and benighted lot, lost in the labyrinth of matter, dimly and achingly aware of something incandescently beautiful and unattainable, something infinitely desirable shining up above in the empyrean of the ideas; but, throughout most of the history of the race, no culture was able to produce more than a shadowy sketch of whatever glorious mystery prompted those nameless longings.
when thunder would boom we couldn't say another human did it and seeing we hunted most animals, it wasn't them so it had to be something larger than us... thus the spirits were born, over time we called them gods, then came the bright idea to put all into one god.
Before the «disenchantment of the world,» something for which Protestants generally and Calvinists most especially can be credited or blamed, the presence of the divine in human affairs was everywhere acknowledged, however much some might deplore the more «superstitious» responses to it.
You can't force people NOT to believe in something, because factors in our human nature make most people feel the NEED of a «higher power.»
Most if not all religions have a story to make sense out of the human instinct that we are somehow deficient, that something has to be done about it, and that since this something has been done everything's okay.
If they got something better than Christianity, it's understandable, but no, all they want is to be proud of their most perverse sensuality and their mass destruction of unborn humans.
If God did in fact make a unique and supreme revelation of himself in that event; if God was actually in Christ reconciling the world unto himself; if something of decisive importance for humanity really happened in connection with the life and death of Jesus, however different may be the theological terms in which we attempt to express that meaning — if this is our faith, the church becomes immeasurably the most significant of human communities, for it was within its experience that the revealing event first occurred and it is in its experience that the meaning of that event has been conveyed from one generation to another.
Fasting forces one of the most basic human needs to be suppressed for something deeply Holy, which similarly causes one to do the same with sexual passion.
I most - certainly took full advantage of having something else (growing a human) occupy the space in my life which had previously been occupied by prop collecting, recipe development, food photography, and blog posts.
(i know there are a lot of hardcore fans in the world, and let me tell you i love football and love arsenal even more but lets be honest, its just a game) than the rights of human called human rights if you havent heard of it and the freedom of people, then there is something fundamentally wrong with you and your belief, like with the most people on this world who go on babbling about conservative sh $ %
While there are so many human rights crises going on in the world right now — the Myanmar cyclone and China earthquake just to name a couple of the most recent — I decided on something slightly less in the spotlight, though no less significant, in hopes of educating myself as well as others.
Find something that is easy to clean and disinfect because most of what you would be doing with the diaper changing pad involves human waste.
2) Most European countries do not see all out war with Russia (or anybody) as a viable strategy eg even if you spend enough to guarantee that you would win any hypothetical conflict it is still something to be avoided at all costs ie the economic and human cost would be unacceptable regardless of who «wins».
That filing, which has been called the most important environmental lawsuit ever to go to the Supreme Court, demanded that the Environmental Protection Agency regulate carbon dioxide (CO2) as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act — something the plaintiffs saw as a very reasonable request since the Clean Air Act defines a pollutant as a substance that is damaging to humans.
The method involves transforming the most common type of cells found in wounds into fat cells — something that was previously thought to be impossible in humans.
Because the center is made up of four diverse divisions (Public Health Sciences, Basic Sciences, Clinical Research, and Human Biology), the talks cover something outside a member's direct area of expertise most of the time, which makes for an eager and enthusiastic audience.
«Most experts are going to look at the risk of acrylamide in coffee and conclude that this is not something that's going to have a meaningful impact on human health,» Lichtenfeld says.
Steve: It raises an interesting point about something that most people probably won't think about, but [that is that] veterinarians have a really important role in human health.
As one of the world's leading authorities on ancient seafaring, he has devoted much of his career to hunting down hard evidence of ancient human migrations, searching for something most archaeologists long thought a figment: Ice Age mariners.
Human nature being what it is, that's most likely to happen to something really exceptional.
Both of these apes may have something to tell us about the evolution of human behavior, yet most research has focused on chimps, in large part because bonobos are endangered — perhaps as few as 10,000 remain.
So just to start the microbiome itself is not something separate from us but it's the most newly recognized organ that we have in the human body.
This is something most people are completely unaware of: how drug testing on animals harms humans.
A new paper, forthcoming in the Journal of Evolution and Human Behavior, does just that and finds that for most people political beliefs is not something they choose to advertise to potential mates.
The vision of Southern California terrain Barfod molds in Salton Sea seems strangely undead and haunting even at its most jubilant moments, creating a chilling sense of something epic and part - human.
Like most»80s games, Rampage came with an extremely minimal backstory — the three playable monsters all used to be human, but were each mutated by something different.
Reflecting on the human experience with realism isn't something that most commercial comedies do.
While there is something to be said about the film's truly madcap and increasingly absurd multilingual clusterfucks - and they are perhaps the most potent and precise of any Palme d'Or nominee in years - those that know Ade's previous films (The Forest for the Trees, Everyone Else) should also expect a work that is achingly human and nuanced, working marvelously as both an intimate and awkward study of a father - daughter relationship and as an immersive look into the corporate landscapes of post-wall Europe.
As most of you know, the sequel finds Caesar (Serkis) on something of a revenge mission against The Colonel (Harrelson), who has amassed a human army at a compound deep in the snow.
Anton Chekhov's Arkadina is one of literature's most narcissistic mothers — which is saying something — and yet Bening makes her damnably human.
Faces Places reminds us that every single human being has a story to tell: French, American, Swedish, Alien... And that in the most personal stories often lies something deeply universal — a powerful reminder in times like ours.
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