Sentences with phrase «things like human»

Things like human resource issues, limited budgets, lack of mission understanding or alignment, and much more lay the foundation of difficult leadership.
And because you can't process all the data you have to start to rely on probabilistic techniques... statistics, analytics... You have to start developing systems that can understand things like human language... define the meaning of words, the meaning of information as it's stored on disc.
I'm currently interested in things that could be perceived as objects, things like the human voice and atmosphere.
And those tiny particles are made up of a combination of all sorts of icky things like human skin, animal fur, food debris, lead, and even arsenic.
«The money goes to criminal organizations and a lot of them are involved in really despicable things like human trafficking,» Cappos says.
Because we can not reverseengineer things like the human eye, they say, it follows that all must be designed by a higher being.
Once you get in there and look, you find things like human factors and other subjective elements that are opportunities for improvement.»
Scientific research managers coordinate the efforts of other scientists to achieve larger goals, and handle things like human resources, budgeting, and the other managerial tasks necessary to keep a lab — or a bunch of labs — running smoothly.
It's only a matter of time, Kurzweil says, until it can do those things like humans can.
You people need to get a grip these are dogs not demons their dogs they don't deliberately do evil things like humans.

Not exact matches

Humans, meanwhile, have things they don't — like emotions and common sense.
Often, the things that cause breaches are individual human factors, like, «I wasn't able to patch all the computers.»»
«There are things that humans do that are not yet in [purview] of systems like Quill.
Costandi shares the latest neurobiology research, and gives us smart, quirky things like, «According to my calculations, the human brain produces approximately 8.73 gadzillion nervous impulses every second.»
«Human memory is very good at things like faces and factual information that connects well to other information you already know,» Reber said.
We're human beings, not machines, and we need to do things like that.
A lot of human nature will drive us to do the small things that make us look busy and feel like we've somehow contributing to the company.
«Supporting the needs of our employees is one of the most important things we do, especially during significant moments in their lives like having or adopting a child,» said global human - resources executive Sheri Bronstein.
Perhaps most importantly, great company cultures are like great societies — they can expand human potential by empowering people to do exceptional things.
At a higher level, franchises offer support for things like conflicts that fall under the responsibilities of the human resources department, cash flow solutions, as well as any logistical problems that may arise.
And they're justified in doing so with opinions about things that don't change much, like human nature.
Sure, you can randomly shake up things and form a new instance, like throwing a bucket of sand to the ground and find a form of a human, but you won't find the form actually live and breathe.
Yeah, go back to your X-Box and let the real thinkers like DumbG there conjecture about all the things no one can disprove, for to truly disprove anything you need complete knowledge of everything in the universe, and since no human will ever achieve that, people like DumbG can tell as many unproven «truths» as they want.
So how do you go from that reasoning to «Since it wasn't accidental then it must have been this ancient male diety named (fill in blank depending on religion) who loves me and knows me and cares for me and wants me to perform rituals that have nothing to do with morality like prayer, not eating certain things, sabaath and many more just because he said so, even though we have no record of him saying anything, just records of humans who wrote things down that they claim he said, but I want to believe it all so badly I will base my beliefs on no other evidence than «it just can't be accident».
But I do understand that human nature is deceitful, and likes to gloat over material / outward things.
U r the Robot V and it is an idiot, deceiver, false prophet, man eater that eat human raw just like an Ape Lincoln as Obama and whoever believe the Under god have done the same thing and u r guilty from the beginning and u r still guilty now!
One thing abt the major religions is that they make U accept a ridiculously impossible thing as the center of one's faith like the nailing to a cross a human body & not having it tear away.
Human beings can do amazing thingslike peacefully protest a racial injustice — but they always seem to leave a reminder that they are not perfect.
If the purpose of our existence were to learn to know God, return to God, or some such thing human history would be nothing like it is.
In this sense we say things like, «it is in the nature of human beings» or «it is natural for human beings» to, for example, conceive and be conceived in male - female coitus, nurse their young, employ productive and practical reason, desire to know, live in walkable settlements, think in symbolic narrative, live well, etc..
But I would like to highlight one crucial aspect of Nat's body of work that obituary writers in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press, and other mainstream media outlets (though not First Things) woefully downplayed: Nat stood steadfastly — sometimes at great professional and personal cost — for the sanctity and equality of human life from conception to natural death.
It makes sense for the U.S. to use its scarce natural and human resources to manufacture airplanes, high - end computer chips and advanced software — products that command better prices than do less complex things like shoes or textiles.
We find that what we can not do through human efforts, can be done by Christ, if we're humble enough to accept it (Remember, the — I believe allegorical — story of the «The Fall» in Genesis was about mankind wanting to do things on its own and be «like God»).
And then that moment of birth being one of complete relief and release and joy, yes absolutely, but instead of popping champagne corks or bursting into laughter, I cried from the core of myself — like some ancient writer said, I lifted up my voice and I wept, because she was finally here and we were alive and we were safe and I felt held by the God - with - us; it was the most human and most sacred thing I'd ever done in my life, it felt like a glimpse of Incarnation.
I live with an atheist, one of the finest human beings I have met in my life, and I never say things like that lightly.
«Whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery... the selling of women and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed... they are a supreme dishonour to the Creator.»
How many mothers like Erik's, in the time of the early church, became models of the great high priest, whose solidarity with us in all things human inspired bold witness and teaching of the paschal mystery?
but if anyone truley had God in thier heart and had faith in the Lord... simply by folding your hands and asking God to enter your heart... (try it he will be there for you, and you will feel the joy of His love), then they would never do things like this... he obviously was not a person who loved God because No one with God in thier heart would want to do thing s like that... you HATE sin when you truely love God, No ones perfect though, even those who belive in God we all stray from our beliefs, its human nature and the devil takes advantage of this.
Like most things in life iron clad principles of action for human beings are hard to make due to the inherent uniqueness of each circumstance.
A thought, a harmony, the achievement of a perfection in material things, some special nuance in human love, the exquisite complexity of a smile or a glance, every new embodiment of beauty appearing in me or around me on the human face of the earth: I cherish them all like children whose flesh I can not believe destined to complete extinction.
everything is made up of atoms (don't believe me do some research) its the different variables of heat and light and things like that that cause different reactions to make different things and these things when they interact can create something completely different and you and slowly the process of mitosis or miosis starts to work and form stuff hell i learnt that in high school and it was a catholic one at that a millions of years ago i bet the universe was completely different and had things in it that our minds cant even imagine that have since changed over time from action and reaction to what we have today and in another million years who knows with all the different gases we pump into the air and the weather getting more intense on both ends of the scale life as we know it will be different the human race will have to evolve to survive and will probibly form into a slightly different species hell maybe well evolve into 2 different species like in the movie time machine
you would have shown your admiration for the human spirit; you wouldn't have castigated those who do the right thing in the name of religion; and lastly, you wouldn't have made yourself seem like an a ss hole.
He had time to say things like don't covet, but he couldn't say don't own other humans?
But when we miss out on trying new things and taking risks, we're missing out on what it looks like to live fully alive as humans made in the image of God.
Radiant Word, blazing Power, you who mould the manifold so as to breathe your life into it; I pray you, lay on us those your hands — powerful, considerate, omnipresent, those hands which do not (like our human hands) touch now here, now there, but which plunge into the depths and the totality, present and past, of things so as to reach us simultaneously through all that is most immense and most inward within us and around us.
This is difficult because, as human beings, we like to be in the know and have a grip on things.
We would explore things like grace, generosity and compassion, and things like forgiveness and our solidarity with the whole human race.
consciousness is present in all matter, just like gravity it is inherent and innate to everything produced after the big bang, only its level of existence varies with evolution, highest is that of living things, at the top is us humans because of the biological nature of our existence we evolve fastest and our brains has attained the highest level of complexity
It is none of these things — it is a living and breathing body of humans trying to become more like Jesus who is our Head and love each other like he loved us.
But Thanksgivukkah offers a reminder that the more things change, the more some things - like the human need to express gratitude - stay the same, Kuiper said.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z