Sentences with phrase «to be conscious of something»

You take a little bit from here and a little from there without being conscious of it.
Thank your fellow educators for the contribution they are making to sustainability that they may not even be conscious of themselves.
Here despair is conscious of itself as a deed, it does not come from without as a suffering under the pressure of circumstances, it comes directly from the self.
The players were conscious of it and knew we had to play at a higher pace.
Taking advantage of them and being conscious of them takes some effort but is worth the time.
In other words, we do most of our «thinking» without ever being conscious of it.
I'm not saying don't have any personal items around, I'm just saying be conscious of them.
You might not even be conscious of it, it's automatic.
Even more importantly, and without being conscious of it, they are learning how to control the pressure of their bite.
The minimum redemption, however, is 5,000 points, so be conscious of that
Here are some elements of charisma that you can add to your career toolbox just by being conscious of them, and my recommendations for developing new habits:
The despairing man who is unconscious of being in despair is, in comparison with him who is conscious of it, merely a negative step further from the truth and from salvation.
As it is, if we were on some occasion exposed only to a particular shade of red, we would still be conscious of it, because we would compare what we saw with other colors we had seen in the past.
The story doesn't matter so much as long as it's well written, which for me means that the activity of writing itself is perceptible, that the printed object you have in your hands is conscious of itself.
I'm being conscious of us trying to listen to each other, and being considerate and helpful.
Difficult to eliminate, and indicative of other problems, an inspector will certainly be conscious of them.
A consciousness which could reveal and intuit an object without being conscious of itself as doing so would be an unconscious consciousness, which (as Sartre points out) is absurd.
What we need today is more awareness, a wider recognition of how the vast systems we are caught up in can do terrible things and how we can contribute to that evil without even being conscious of it.
This unity becomes especially clear in religious language; the high forms of religion, the most subtle mystic, as well as the most vigorous prophetism, constantly speak the language of primitive magical religion without being conscious of it.
I think we all naturally gravitate towards engineering things in our favor, whether we're conscious of it or not.
In fact, it's becoming more and more clear to me that many men think it's okay to make advances towards women, touch them, innuendo them, hit them or penetrate them, all without her permission or, in the case of alcohol or drugs, without them even being conscious of it.
In other words, to be conscious of something is to be explicitly aware that it could be other than it is, and so one is aware of what it is.
It makes its appearance through being differentiated from other individualities and is conscious of itself as a particular kind of being.
In its concept all despair is doubtless conscious; but from this it does not follow that he in whom it exists, he to whom it can rightly be attributed in conformity with the concept, is himself conscious of it.
Insofar as he was conscious of himself, it was of himself as he appeared in the public world.
The expression of such a little old man — perhaps without he himself being conscious of it — is unspeakably touching when he sits so quietly in his chimney corner.
That's what all of our lives are about, whether we're conscious of it or not.
Is there individual immortality in the sense that I will be conscious of myself as a thread of actual occasions?
You love to put claims together as if the CLAIMS are the PROOF, they aren't and the dishonesty (whither you are conscious of it or not) is arguing that they ARE the proof.
I believe that after a believer dies, they are immediately with God in heaven, and are conscious of it, and are conscious of other people there as well.
Rather, I am talking about a pattern and dynamic that people's lives show whether they are conscious of it or not.
So vaguely drawn are the outlines between what is actual and what is only potential at any moment of our conscious life, that it is always hard to say of certain mental elements whether we are conscious of them or not.
In order to be conscious of themselves and to realize their destiny, the masses need to turn toward the names of transhistoric personalities, like the names of prophets invoked in the recommandatio animae borrowed from the Essenes by the Church of the Catacombs, a real elite if there ever was one.
Are we conscious of it or always feeling the need to be thankful for it?
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