Sentences with phrase «way out of the author»

Not exact matches

«We're living in what I like to call the «Thank You Economy,» because only the companies that can figure out how to mind their manners in a very old - fashioned way — and do it authentically — are going to have a prayer of competing,» says social media expert and author of the book The Thank You Economy Gary Vaynerchuk in a recent Entrepreneur.com column.
E-mail has become so intrinsic to the way work is done at companies of all sizes, it's where most business records are stored, says Nancy Flynn, executive director of the ePolicy Institute, a Columbus, Ohio, an electronic communications consultant and author of a book on e-mail policies due out in December.
Tony Robbins, bestselling author of «Money: Master The Game,» reveals the best way to get yourself out of a funk.
Fredrick Petrie, author of «The End of Work: Financial Planning for People With Better Things To Do,» recommends «taxing» yourself in order to get more money out of your wallet and into the bank — this way you'll make savings a priority from the get - go, rather than budgeting everything else first and then seeing what is left over for savings.
«If your aversion to work is so strong that your body can't take it,» says the author of Careergasm: Find Your Way to Feel - Good Work, «you've got to get out pronto.»
The authors analyzed leading companies are sorted out the secrets of success in a way that suggested that it was a formula that could be replicated easily.
Despite Disney's apparent lack of concern about the potential to scare off remotely budget - conscious vacationers, Frommer.com's Jason Cochran, author of Frommer's Easy Guide to Walt Disney World and Orlando, says that the theme park giant is «playing a dangerous game» not only with the latest price hikes, but with an array of policies that all but force guests to book multi-day vacations (because the per - day costs are astronomical if the visit is short) and to plan every latest detail of one's visit far in advance (because that's the way to get the most out of one's trip).
Having said all that — I agree with the author that there are more effective ways of getting out our message.
Smith reminds readers of the idea of divine accommodation, which suggests that «in the process of divine inspiration, God did not correct every incomplete or mistaken viewpoint of the biblical authors in order to communicate through them with their readers... The point of the inspired scripture was to communicate its central point, not to straighten out every kink and dent in the views of all the people involved in biblical inscripturation and reception along the way
She is the author of Making a Way Out of No Way: a Womanist Theology, co-editor of Creating Women's Theologies: A Movement Engaging Process Thought, and editor of the forthcoming Ain't I a Womanist Too?
... So all this author was pointing out is that the theory of the big bang in no way refutes or is in conflict with a theological belief of creation, as in, «In the beginning god created the heavens and the earth» or for that matter a Buddhist belief of constant recreation.
What stands out in Matthew, in addition to its Jewish slant, is the orderly way in which the author groups the discourses of Jesus.
Rev Dr Sean Doherty, co-founder of Living Out and author of The Only Way is Ethics (Authentic) believes we must allow a reading of Genesis 1 - 3 to shape our view on gender dysphoria, and the possibility of subsequent surgery.
The author points out that the former works out very well, as the current standard of living in developed countries is way beyond anything even princes could have dreamt of just a century ago.
The author considers different ways of «explaining» miracles, but points out that miracles are in fact not religiously significant — a point apparently recognized by Jesus himself.
Books have always been overpriced, and publishing companies and individual authors who want to control the price of books had better figure out a new way to make money... and quick.
Lynn K Wilder is author of Unveiling Grace: The Story of How We Found Our Way Out of the Mormon Church (Zondervan) and is co-founder of Ex-Mormon Christians United for Jesus; unveilingmormonism.com
He did not condone or command their actions, but when they set out to live in a way that was contrary to His will and ways, He inspired the biblical authors to put the violent actions of Israel upon Himself, so that He could take the blame and the shame for their sin.
«Unwearyingly, the authors point out again and again that with such a program the World Council of Churches is on the way to Anti-Christ.
The author of the article is pointing out that Jesus had a human body and that body functioned, when he was nailed to the cross he bled, why should his body not react in other normal ways, he ate and drank thus had to eliminate waste.
Too many lazy authors take the principle of natural selection out of biology, where it belongs, and then apply it outside its proper sphere in ways that can only be regarded as completely preposterous.
Tom Bissell, author of Extra Lives: Why Video Games Matter, expresses it this way, «The games I am most interested in allow me a way out of myself....
It is somewhat ironic that the authors should set out to rescue from neglect this highly placed and vastly talented lady, versed in the ways of the world, entre deux ages, at a time when the documentary hypothesis can no longer be taken for granted, when the extent, the date, and even the existence of J as an independent, continuous narrative are being widely questioned.
The whole Genesis story is one of the author's envy at how animals seemed to have it all, including s3x whenever they felt like it, and drew the conclusion that we must somehow have decided to become «civilized» and left our paradise of a jungle and now can not have s3x, etc., because we made a bad choice and were driven out by an angry god for presuming to think for ourselves in complex ways.
From The Author: «Low - carb soups are a great way to break out of a rut because they're so versatile.
McWilliams, an associate professor at Texas State University and the author of A Revolution in Eating, the best food history of U.S. colonial and post-colonial food, goes way, way out on a limb here, and in an email last week I told him to watch his back because of the backlash of true believers in the above statement.
They have a shelf life of 8/10 years at the very top if they are lucky so who can begrudge them the opportunity to make hay whilst the sun is shining... am not saying Sanchez is not money driven but the way the guy plays i can mortgage my life he actually enjoys the game, enjoys wining first and foremost then money comes 2nd... like the author of the article rightly pointed out, he was in Messi's shadow at Barca and could not express himself fully, now he is at a club where he is the main man and given a free role and license to express himself and i very much doubt if he will want to go to a club like Madrid (as been rumoured in the dailies today) to relieve the bad experience he suffered at Barca because let us face facts, he is never going to displace CR7 as the main man, so even if Madrid sells Benzema or Bale to make room for him he will be back to the same position he was at Barca, this time he will be playing 2nd fiddle to CR7 so my guess is all the Madrid talks is been fed the press by his agents to drive a hard bargain when contract extension talks resumes.....
I am intrigued by the idea that there are many other ways to betray a loved one (a concept we address in The New I Do)-- denying sex, indifference, emotional neglect, contempt, lack of respect, years of refusal of intimacy, as Mating in Captivity author Ester Perel points out.
As study author Geneviève Beaulieu - Pelletier says, «These numbers indicate that even if we get married with the best of intentions, things don't always turn out the way we plan.»
I believe the author has seriously misjudged the reason for the inequality she senses in her home and decided to place all the blame on breastfeeding instead of looking deeper and figuring out other ways for her partner to bond with her son and the ways in which she has perhaps been «gate keeping» and keeping that from happening.
We spoke with developmental psychologist and author of the blog Child Myths, Dr. Jean Mercer, to find out the best ways to cope with the anxiety that may accompany a transition from summer to child care or preschool, and she gave us some great tips on how to deal with separation anxiety and transitions in our own families:
Any article such as this virtually requires the author to demonstrate her bona fides, so let me get that out of the way.
While the judgement from narrow - minded peers and hallway gossip may be out of parents» grasps, Dr. Niobe Way, author of Deep Secrets: Boys» Friendships and the Crisis of Connection, points out that parents unintentionally contribute to emotionally isolating their sons by stereotyping them.
Katheryn Kvols, author of Redirecting Children's Behavior, put it in a way that made sense to me: When a child is put into a time out, she really hears «I'm sick of you — go away.»
Melding the category strengths and bestselling authors of both imprints, TarcherPerigee's core publishing areas include: Self - improvement (such as the runaway successes Start Where You Are by Meera Patel, The Power of Kindness by Piero Ferrucci, Attached by Dr. Amir Levine, and A Mind for Numbers by Barbara Oakley); Creativity (including interactive books like Adam J. Kurtz's 1 Page at a Time and Me, You, Us by Lisa Currie as well as the multi-million-copy bestsellers Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards and The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron); Parenting (the New York Times bestseller Brainstorm by Dr. Daniel Siegel, Carol Kranowitz's go - to guide The Out - of - Sync Child, and Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids by Dr. Laura Markham); Spirituality (including bestselling titles like Transcendence by Dr. Norman Rosenthal, Goldie Hawn's 10 Mindful Minutes, The Science of Mind by Ernest Holmes, and I Am the Word by Paul Selig); and Gift / Inspiration (such as the Wall Street Journal bestseller Chasers of the Light by Tyler Knott Gregson, the New York Times bestseller Catification by Jackson Galaxy and the James Beard Award - winner Imbibe by David Wondrich).
Opinions make their way from keyboard to print while its author remains out of sight, save for a byline photo.
«But nobody has yet figured out a way to translate the information gathered by these devices into measures of health and longevity, let alone monetize this information — until now,» says S. Jay Olshansky, professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health and chief scientist at Lapetus Solutions, who is lead author on the paper.
It just turns out that the assumptions are wrong,» says Jeffrey Mogil, a professor of pain studies at McGill University in Montreal and a principal author of a paper showing that females and males process pain in fundamentally different ways.
Because of the way research groups are structured, the group leader is not always the senior author: A specific research project may be carried out by a Ph.D. student supervised by another permanent scientist who may have little or no available funding but who may nevertheless request last authorship on the publication.
«We can now look at each of the particles in a developing dispersion to see how the chemical reaction is progressing and whether the particles are turning out the way they should,» explains NYU Physics Professor David Grier, one of the paper's authors and director of the university's Center for Soft Matter Research.
Dr Ciro Chiappini, first author of the study from the Department of Materials, added: «If we can harness the power of nucleic acids and prompt them to carry out specific tasks, it will give us a way to regenerate lost function.
«This study, carried out using laboratory rats modeling stroke, demonstrated that ischemic stroke — in both its subacute and chronic stages — damages the BSCB in a variety of ways, creating a toxic environment in the spinal cord that can lead to further disability and exacerbate disease pathology,» said study lead author Dr. Svitlana Garbuzova - Davis, associate professor in USF's Center of Excellence for Aging and Brain Repair, Department of Neurosurgery and Brain Repair.
«When Fukushima occurred, I was astounded that Japan had no robots to help out in any significant way,» says Frederik Schodt near San Francisco, California, author of Inside the Robot Kingdom: Japan, Mechatronics, and the Coming Robotopia.
The authors point out that this study tested one model of stepped care within one local system, and the results might not apply in the same way across all societies.
Joining me was Harvard University economist Edward Glaeser, author of two pieces, who spoke about how, done right, with an emphasis on education, the greater density of humanity afforded by urban living can help us innovate our way out of the problems facing us today.
Asking why the stethoscope has not yet made way for its more technically advanced counterpart, ultrasound, the authors say that while the cheapest available stethoscopes are literally disposable (though many can cost hundreds of dollars), the cost of the cheapest ultrasound devices is still several thousand dollars, making roll - out, especially in developing nations, much more difficult.
And higher levels of salt in the urine may reflect greater disease activity rather than the other way round, the authors point out.
The new study definitively shows that the pseudogap is one of the things that stands in the way of getting superconductors to work at higher temperatures for everyday uses, said lead author Makoto Hashimoto, a staff scientist at SLAC's Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL), the DOE Office of Science User Facility where the experiments were carried out.
«The way most industrial processes are designed today is by doing an exhaustively large number of experiments to find out how crystals grow and at what rate they grow under different conditions,» said UCSB chemical engineer Michael Doherty, an author of a paper that appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
«Our findings suggest new ways of tackling the still - difficult task of working out which patients should receive which drug and how drugs should be combined to maximize therapeutic benefit,» said senior study author Peter Sorger, the Otto Krayer Professor of Systems Pharmacology and director of the Harvard Program in Therapeutic Science and the Laboratory of Systems Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School.
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