Sentences with phrase «suggest booking as»

Not exact matches

Step two couldn't be simpler, and as Business Insider pointed out in its write - up of Boothman's book, «research also suggests that smiling when you meet someone in a happy context is a useful way to get them to remember you.»
If people repeatedly come to you with requests in areas where you don't feel adequately qualified to help, having a few stock resources, such as books or articles, to point them to can ease the pain of saying no, Grant suggests.
As University of California Davis economist Ann Huff Stevens asserts in her contribution to the 2008 book Laid Off, Laid Low, «In recent years, a conventional wisdom has emerged, suggesting the extent to which U.S. workers and employers form long term relationships has deteriorated.»
Bennett also suggests «Collective Genius,» a book on leadership and innovation, as well as Paulo Coelho's «The Alchemist,» an inspirational novel that has a strong following in business circles.
In one study, «the number of books «liked» on Facebook profiles was negatively correlated with [psychopathy]-- a finding the authors suggested might indicate that an interest in books contradicts psychopathic tendencies such as thrill seeking, impulsivity, and affect deficiencies,» reports Psychology Today.
And his research — as laid out in his booksuggests that, contrary to conventional wisdom, nice guys actually finish first.
Treasury yields on Friday book a weekly drop as geopolitical instability keeps investors pouring into the perceived safety of government paper, but for the day, rates of government paper rise as a robust raft of economic data suggested U.S. growth would maintain its steady clip, ahead of a key monetary - policy update on Wednesday.
This pattern, practiced by modern superconnectors, unfolds exactly as Wharton professor Adam Grant's soon - to - be-released book, Give and Take, suggests: Helping others increases net productivity and success for both helper and helped.
However, my philosophy in reading books is to take out as much as I can, read it with a grain of salt as is suggested, and let the rest go.
As the book's title suggests, Rocha believes that successful speaking isn't about conveying power but rather forging a connection.
As a rule of thumb, we suggest that the product of the multiplier times the ratio of price to book value should not exceed 22.5 (this figure corresponds to 15 times earnings and 1 1/2 times book value.
As the setup looks negative, we suggest booking a loss on 50 percent of the open positions and holding the rest with the stops at $ 7,600.
In his book, Blank describes customer validation as a «method that allows you to develop a predictable sales process» and suggests that you should not scale the business until you have developed a solid understanding of a repeatable sales process.
When we suggested US Bancorp (NASDAQ: USB) to Squawk Box as our favorite large cap, that was because of the operational excellence as opposed to the stock price, which trades above 2x book value.
... this book suggests concrete investing strategies to make Congress's systemic dysfunction work for you, and to hedge the risk and damage that Congress so casually and relentlessly inflicts on your life savings as represented by your portfolio and your house.»
I humbly suggest that any time a believer quotes Einstein or Stephen Hawking (especially Stephen H given his most recent book) as support for their position, the bullishit is flying!
But to suggest that PE is evolution's attempt to address some wholesale absence of transitional fossils is nothing more than a disingenuous misrepresentation as was the clear attempt in Strobel's book.
Are you suggesting a «church» that lives and is modeled after the «shared community» as described in the Book of Acts?
The book does not really present «the voice of first millennium Christianity» or make much of an argument toward «restoring the great tradition» (as the subtitle suggests it might).
But its validity was suggested as early as 1969, when a Gallup Poll revealed that 58 percent of all Americans had never finished reading a book other than a textbook or the Bible, and only 26 percent had read a book in the previous month.24 One reason for this near - illiteracy is America's addiction to television.
Hymn and prayer book of the second temple it may have been, but obviously some of the psalms could never have been sung in connection with the sacrifices, and may well be grouped, as Professor Julius Bewer suggests, under the caption, «Private Worship outside of the Temple.»
As the title of her church and book suggest, Bolz - Webber is not your average church leader.
He suggested that one response might be for dioceses to produce authentically Catholic text books to act as a primary resource for teachers, as long as they did not «compromise the principles and syllabuses of public examining boards».
With electronic culture, he suggests, the resonance of sound has become the dominant mode of communication and conveyor of truth, rather than sight (as in reading books to discern ideas).
Suggest Evolving in Monkey Town as a selection for your book club or small group study (Bonus points if your book club has 5,000 members)
David L. Miller, recently reviewing my book The Chickadees in The Christian Century (May 22), has suggested that, as in ancient Greece, «there are two paths in our time, alternative mythologies for a period of crisis: up and out (the rational, heroic, masculine way), and down and in (the mad, mystical, feminine way).»
The increased interest in Bible study could well be interpreted as marking an intellectual swing back to the center, but the huge demand for simple books of personal religion suggests an emotional retrenchment somewhere to the right of center.
The entry, unconnected with the themes around it, bears the heading «Prologue,» suggesting it was meant to serve as a prologue to a book that was never written.
To include Lewis» words in worship, as part of the liturgy itself, is to suggest that those words deserve the same reverence that we grant to the Book of Common Prayer and perhaps — given the usual source of liturgical benedictions — Scripture itself.
In this first book he inquires into the significance of the terms (or, as Ross suggests, «linguistic facts» [AR 26]-RRB-, in which propositions are couched.
As was suggested earlier, most of the persons likely to read this book do not need to confess the grosser sins of the flesh.
In his book Third - Eye Theology (Orbis, 1979) he focuses on the image of the third eye in the teaching of the Japanese Zen master Daisetz Suzuki, who suggests that the aim of Zen Buddhism is to open up a vision of life that is usually clouded by our ignorance, a vision that will enable us to see ourselves as we truly are.
Some scholars suggest that the book of Matthew was developed to serve as a catechism in some early Syrian community, but that is to use the term «catechism» in a broader sense.
As part of this late exercise in autodidactism, they suggested that I read various books — some of which were subsequently acquired — by formidable chess grandmasters including Nimzowitsch and Alekhine and others who left permanent stamps on the game.
Like Yale's Stephen Carter in The Culture of Disbelief (a book Clinton has promoted on several occasions), Clinton sometimes seems to suggest that it is fine for religiously based views to be aired in the public square, so long as they don't seriously impinge upon the business of governing.
The myth of the divine consummation (found in books like Revelation in the New Testament and suggested by the picture of resurrection, as well as by the «last things») is an assertion that the divine purpose can not fail, that God will take into the divine self what is achieved in the world, and that in some fashion, obviously beyond our imagining, God will be disclosed as all in all.
Christena Cleveland offers some really helpful ideas for both action and healing in her post «Wellness in the Age of Trump and Terror,» as well as some excellent reading suggests in «15 Books for Fighting for Justice in the Trump Era.»
As the title of this book suggests, his quest is to find a way through the ever - changing times with their complexities, emphases and ups and downs to help prepare the way for greater stability, renewal and enthusiasm among the Lord's disciples, especially within religious communities.
David Dark is sympathetic to all these anti-religious emotions, and yet in his new book Life's Too Short to Pretend You're Not Religious, he suggests that try as we might, we can not completely sever ourselves from religion.
Putnam's historical sensibility leads him away from that shallow jeremiad, and as a result he both deepens our understanding of the current situation and evokes hope that, as the book's subtitle suggests, revival will follow collapse.
The Bible is unique because it suggests as no other book can that God has engaged in history with living human beings, who were inspired to convey their knowledge of God to others, actively expressing themselves in their given historical epochs and cultures.
I can only suggest that perhaps the book of Job is as much a fictional story as yours is.
«Nevertheless, just as I believe that the Book of Scripture illumines the pathway to God, so I believe that the Book of Nature, with its astonishing details — the blade of grass, the Conus cedonulli, or the resonance levels of the carbon atom — also suggest a God of purpose and a God of design.
Everybody wants to do what is right in their own eyes and frankly, I am growing weary of media statements that suggest «well, everybody knows that the Bible is just a book of myths and that it's irrelevant, etc.» as though everyone accepts this as understood.
In his recent book, Life, Liberty, and the Defense of Dignity, he offers «four benefits» of mortality: interest and engagement, suggesting that adding, say, twenty years to the human life span would not proportionately increase the pleasures of life; seriousness and aspiration, proposing that the knowledge that our life is limited is what leads us to take life seriously and passionately; beauty and love, presenting the idea that it is precisely their perishability that makes, for instance, flowers beautiful to us, just as the coming and going of spring makes that season all the more meaningful; and, finally, virtue and moral excellence, by which he means the virtuous and noble deeds that mortality makes possible, including the sacrifice of our own life for a worthy cause.
As N.T. Wright suggests in his book «Surprised by Hope,» the Apostle Paul certainly liked his metaphors, and might have benefited from such advice.
When Rachel Carson dared to suggest in Silent Spring that synthetic pesticides did more harm than good, her book was dismissed as so much hogwash.
In her book The Body of God, theologian Sallie McFague goes further, suggesting that the combined influence of post-modem science and Christian faith requires the construction of a new model in which we see the universe as the body of God.12
Problems such as the pope's claim to doctrinal authority are «in tension with the American temper and the very thing the U.S. Constitution was written to restrict,» but such problems, the book suggests, are passing remnants from the bad old days of Catholicism.
In short, the Church is not sovereign over the Bible as much Catholic thought suggests; nor does the Bible stand completely outside the Church as a heaven - sent answer - book as much Protestant thought implies.
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