Sentences with phrase «today as the any questions»

Trade unions and hedge funds were bundled together today as questions were flung across the floor about party funding
He still divides opinions today as the question remains: Where is the line between the «nude» and the «naked» and art and pornography?

Not exact matches

As Albrecht points out in a recent Psychology Today piece, all conversations are composed of three parts — declaratives, questions, and qualifiers.
The second edition of Damodaran on Valuation stands out as the most reliable book for answering many of today's critical valuation questions.
Today, this communication is increasingly happening over email or chat, which are seen as easier ways to share ideas, and get answers to questions.
With today's startups, even in non-IT sectors such as textiles, and manufacturing; adapting robust technology - driven models, the sixty four - thousand dollar question is obviously about whether these can attract quality investments (and mentoring) similar to that of their tier - 1 peers.
I am here today to address several issues that have been specifically raised before this committee, and I appreciate the opportunity to respond to questions as fully as I am able to do so.
Finance Minister Bill Morneau is usually so unflappable, his voice so unmodulated, his black brogues so unscuffed, that it almost came as a relief to hear him sounding more than just exasperated, maybe even a little hot under his well - ironed collar, answering reporters questions after an appearance today before the House finance committee.
«In light of the significant concerns that have been raised by members of our caucus, and in light of the irresponsible and inherently contradictory messages coming out of the White House today, I would recommend that we withdraw consideration of the bill today, to give us more time to address the privacy questions that have been raised, as well as to get a clear statement from the administration about their position on the bill,» Schiff said on the House floor.
«Today, the answers to those questions are different - you do not get much which does not come close to justifying the step function increase in the cost to upgrade, and as the below chart show the cost to upgrade changed dramatically with the introduction of the iPhone X.
EY's survey polled Millennials — the 20 - to -35-year-olds todayas well as Generation Z coming after them, and found that younger generations «question the longevity of the industry as they view natural gas and oil as their parents» fuels.
British MPs shouted «disgraceful» as the tweets were raised in the House Commons today after Prime Minister's Questions.
In answering this question, as my co-author Terry Simpson and I write in the new Market Perspectives paper, «Assessing the Value of Valuations,» it's helpful to look at what today's valuations can tell us about the possible distribution of future U.S. stock market returns.
Today, as companies struggle to come to terms with harsh economic realities, questions are being raised on whether there is any good in doing good, business-wise.
«I think, given the extraordinary evidence we've heard so far today, it is absolutely astonishing that Mark Zuckerberg is not prepared to submit himself to questioning in front of a parliamentary or congressional hearing, given these are questions of fundamental importance and concern to his users, as well as to this inquiry,» Damian Collins, the member of parliament heading the UK committee, said earlier on Tuesday.
In questioning before the House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce today, Mark Zuckerberg said that his personal Facebook data was harvested as part of the sweep of personal data that was used by third parties like Cambridge Analytica.
«Seeing this digital revolution up close has made me question whether the state as we know it today is fit for the 21st century.»
As part of his appearance on Capitol Hill today, Zuckerberg brought along a thick binder of notes to help him answer questions, stay on his talking points, and come up with quick and relatively innocuous responses to hot - button issues.
He cites a large imprudent acquisition as being one of the only things that could derail his love for Berkshire today, and says that the question of who will succeed Buffett is an important one, he thinks both Buffett and the company have done much to prepare for that eventuality, and he sees the company as being a great one for many years to come.
Michael Hasenstab: As we look toward the end of the year, we have to question whether the type of US government bond yields we have today make sense given rising inflation and the resiliency we've seen in the US economy.
This holds us to a higher standard and makes us ask pointed and uncomfortable questions — even on such seemingly carefree days as today, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average crossing 20,000 to hit a new all - time high.
Nonetheless, many investors today seem overly focused on how the market appears, as reflected in the questions they keep asking:
When any WHY is questioned and challenged — as it certainly is in the case of EM markets today — you get a tremor.
It is asking the question: are buyers today evaluating a company's social engagement capabilities as part of the overall buying experience as well as social experience?
I totally agree with you and with Buffett; nonetheless there's one question, that came to my mind regarding market valuations: Assuming bonds and interest rates go even lower as they are today, at which level (pe ratio or Shiller pe ratio — or whatever metric you'd like to take) would I call the market of today a bubble?
Facebook will talk about these numbers and take analyst questions at 5 pm ET today — we'll be listening in and will update here or post others at Recode as we learn more.
These questions are, as you know, at the heart of many problems in our society today, and it is against the background of such questions that I want to reflect upon the significance of human cloning.
The Reformation raised issues that remain live issues today» questions such as «How am I saved?»
Today, the theological differences are much too broad to classify them as Protestants and I question whether or not they even fall within the Christian umbrella.
Regrettably, a voice as influential as Christianity Today is addressing some of these questions in a simplistic and tendentious manner that reflects an ignorance of, or indifference toward, the larger discussion.
The Jesuit Missions of Paraguay and a Cultural History of Utopia ostensibly ends with the French Revolution, but it raises questions that still resonate today as Europe ponders its future.
Theologians usually misstep when they react to current moods, unless it is to take today's questions as an opportunity to think about eternal truths.
God's way of choosing the poor and humble as well as the element of the «unexpected» associated with Advent suggests several important questions for U.S. Christians today.
John Montague's searching for light in darkness, his helping us to find it, helps us even now as we struggle to answer the obverse of that ancient philosopher's questiontoday, why is there nothing rather than something?
If you have a question for Makoto about faith, art, or the challenges of living as an artist in today's world, leave it in the comment section.
What matters in the church is not religion but the form of Christ, and its taking form amidst a band of men.25 The problem as well as necessity of non-religious interpretation is posed before us by way of introducing a question with which he is struggling: «What is bothering me incessantly is the question what Christianity really is, or indeed who Christ really is, for us today.
As many have had occasion to observe, the one thing not allowed on today's diversity - obsessed campus is diversity on the questions that matter to those in charge.
Those who prize the freedom of the spirit must also question the control of the marriage covenant by ecclesiastical authority, as in Israel today, and as in traditional Roman Catholic practice.
It is entirely possible that the question of whether Shakespeare would have been best described as Roman Catholic, Anglo - Catholic, or Protestant would have been settled during his own time with the same degree of uncertainty as exists today.
Last week, you posed some excellent questions to Rabbi Rachel Barenblat as part of our ongoing «Ask a....» interview series, and Rabbi Rachel rose to the occasion with some really thoughtful and informative responses I'm thrilled to share with you today.
Just as earlier the official Church could not and would not give any authoritative answer to someone about their choice of a profession, even though it could be a moral question of importance for salvation, so today and tomorrow the Church in many questions, even those of public interest and far - reaching importance, will not, even ratione peccati, be able to give a specific answer officially and directly.
«The important thing today is to see that God exists... as a new emphasis we have to give priority to the question about God» (p. 65).
In one popular study of the problem of God today, John A. T. Robinson questions the relevance of a theism that would think of God as a heavenly, completely perfect person who resides above the world and mankind.4 The same issue is raised by Harvey Cox, who writes: The willingness of the classical philosophers to allow the God of the Bible to be blurred into Plato's Idea of the Good or Aristotle's Prime Mover was fatal.
Questions have also come up as to whether the comment «today is dying day» should be attributed to Tillich on the morning of his last day or at some other time in his final illness.
Today, however, a serious question has arisen as to whether there is any logical justification for this division.
He writes: «We need only survey the chronic and significant differences of opinion over the systematic grounding of natural law today, as well as the extraordinarily complicated and controversial skirmish lines over questions of moral theology, to see that this is so.»
Having said that, if the question has no merit and is clearly not reflective of an objective presupposition (such as «how many times did you beat your wife today?»)
This alone merits attention — as there is much talk about the relative dearth of Catholic authors today — but Trower's life and work offer something more, as they speak to questions that are currently circulating within the Church.
We need only survey the chronic and significant differences of opinion over the systematic grounding of natural law today, as well as the extraordinarily complicated and controversial skirmish lines over questions of moral theology, to see that this is so.
A crucial question for the Roman Catholic community today, for example, is whether or not it can respond creatively to the challenge of individual voices as diverse as those of Hans Küng and Daniel Berrigan, and adapt its communal life to the demands for change that they place upon it.
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