It's literally an industry in which decisions are frequently made without any data at all; and at best they are made with what we call anecdata, which is basically taking a few data points and
then drawing conclusions from those few data points.
Let's take a look at the list of the best stocks in the S&P and
then draw some conclusions from their performance.
Not exact matches
From this perspective, the article
then drew the
conclusion that the «meager» results of crusades compared to the great cost in time, energy, and money represented a failed stewardship of God's resources.
The main
conclusion I
draw from the data is that, other things being equal, the person who is involved in religious life is also likely to be more involved
then his secular counterpart in the life of the community.
2) You can maintain your position
from a faith perspective, and say this, but
then I'd have to seriously question [a] your historical integrity (for example, the historical position of Revelations as canon, although more of a debate than the other texts, was still NOWHERE NEAR contestable enough for you to
draw this sort of
conclusion) and [b] your philosophical integrity (for example, if you dismiss Revelations because it doesn't support your position, i'm going to ask: by what authority do you think you have the right to discern this?
For in that case the assertion of God's sovereignty would be seen as a universal truth which can by logical reasoning be made intelligible to everyone; the miracle would
then be regarded as a universally accredited, extraordinary event,
from which the
conclusion may be
drawn that it depends upon a divine cause.
The only logical
conclusion to be
drawn from this is that, in one and the same institution, God assigned two complementary purposes to marriage; but wished, in separate narratives, to stress first one end and
then the other, so that we could better understand the synthesis, harmony and interdependence of these two ends.
What
conclusions about gender and the Holy Trinity shall we
then draw from them?
And lastly, if you're honestly trying to tell me that you have more faith in Lynch than Pace when it comes to drafting
then I have no idea where you're
drawing that
conclusion from.
I will not
draw much
conclusions from a game with Bournemouth, because in a week, we beat City, we get destroyed by Southampton and
then we win against a team that has it's first season in the top flight.
The problem with the discussion is that it so often gets opinion dropped in as fact, and
then conclusions are
drawn from the dropped in opinion as if it were a fact.
If any of you were willing to stop patting yourselves on the back long enough to work out the logic,
then you'd realize that the only
conclusion that can be
drawn from this research is that the best method for raising a child is the one that produces the fewest tears (and thus causes the least damage), EVEN if that method be Ferber.
Similarly heavy rain fell on Australia in 1973 - 74, but sea - level records
from then are not detailed enough to
draw conclusions, and the three climate systems might not align again for decades.
since combining the coconut flakes with the coconut milk, basically eating whole coconuts, is «harmless» could one
then draw the
conclusion that while coconut milk on its own per the arterial impact
from it is bad for you
then what about how people actually use coconut milk?
Then the
conclusion drawn from a study of only a handful of people is applied to a very diverse and large population.
«This is slightly more in common with projects I've worked on like Ex Machina or Never Let Me Go,» he continued, «which are taking something about our world now — not our world in the future, but our world as it is right now — and
then drawing sort of inferences and
conclusions from it.»
These youth researchers can
then create their own research questions and use observations and feedback
from peers to
draw conclusions about what's going right, what could be improved, and how to help.
I am leery
from drawing too many
conclusions from this, but,
then again, there is no such thing as a free lunch.
For example, if you write an argumentative term paper under the above - stated statement that «vipers should be excluded
from the animal kingdom», you are to write first of all about danger of vipers,
then to pass to data what danger they run, after all to
draw a
conclusion.
So data
from Amazon is «like looking at data on politics
from Alaska and
then drawing conclusions about the USA; or data on politics in China because it has the biggest population and
then drawing conclusions about the world...»
So, when I say that predation might play a role in a dog attack, people conjure up the idea that maybe a pit bull is similar to a human sexual predator, and
then draw conclusions that they are somehow defective, and that society needs to be protected
from them.
What follows here,
then, is a sprint through some of the artistic and curatorial highlights and low points, in search of commonalities, contradictions, and the ultimate
conclusions to be
drawn from three very different iterations of more or less the same idea: wresting art
from the thrall of the market and restoring it to a conscientious existence.
It
then seeks to extend the
conclusions drawn from the model to real - world observational studies.
But the difference is not enough to affect the main
conclusions drawn from that work — clearly not the most influential tree in the world
then.
All you have done is to call these details «spin», and
then simply say that the
conclusions drawn from these details are NOT true.
Then as now,
conclusions are
drawn from a combination of information
from paleoclimate, modeling, ongoing observations, and theory.
And, if you need to remove the trend
from the MWP to the present
from your proxy,
then I don't see how you can use this proxy to
draw to
conclusions on relative MWP - modern levels.
If you really want to
draw conclusions about an entire data set (ie,
from all the stations)
from a subset of the stations,
then you have to do proper random sampling of many of those stations (the greater the number, the higher the confidence in the result, of course).
If you're feeling uncertain about the
conclusions you've
drawn about an interviewee
then collect as many references
from their previous colleagues and employers as possible.
Of course, if you do use a lot of controls that involve complex patterns of risk,
then the
conclusion you want others to
draw from your findings should be tightly specified so that the average person does not
draw the wrong
conclusion.