Sentences with phrase «what observations would»

What observations would you like to share with the CEO's of the industry?
What observations have you had using the Egg and what would you recommend for ribs, pork butt and brisket?
What observations have you had using...

Not exact matches

Led by Canadian researchers under what's called the ALPHA Collaboration, the first detailed observation of «home made» anti-hydrogen's structure has shown its spectral lines are virtually identical to those of hydrogen.
Peter Neff, a glaciologist at the University of Rochester who travels regularly to the Antarctic, said ground observations would never tell you the full story of what's going on with ice sheets in that part of the world.
I was kind of like I said interested in gambling or at least speculating or figuring things out and then taking a calculated gamble and what they were telling me was don't try, there were saying that no one can beat the market and the stock prices are efficient and just through simple observation looking at the newspaper and they used to have the 52 - week high low prices in the newspaper, it seemed unreasonable that you know the fair price was 51 day and eight months later, it was 120, and that was pretty much every stock had that kind of range every year and it didn't make sense to me that the fundamentals of the underlying businesses were actually changing that much.
Through my own experience and observations of the space, I have had a lot of time to ruminate on what it might take to make bitcoin go mainstream.
After challenging more than 50 entrepreneurs to do cold showers since 2011, I've come to the observation that they work so well mainly because they alter your relationship with what it means to be uncomfortable.
Drawing on our expertise in evaluating leaders and observations about what makes the most successful leaders, we have developed a wide range of articles to help you achieve your career goals.
One particular trend I have noticed this year, in participant observations with B2B buyers, is the movement towards what I would label Intelligent Engagement.
The problem is that particularly since March 2012, our estimates of prospective market returns (on a blended horizon of 2 - weeks to 18 months) have moved from the worst 2 % of historical observations, to the worst 1 % of observations, to what is now such rarified air that only a handful of atoms remain.
Based on notes of conversations he had with Chanel in 1946, Morand gives us Chanel's observations on friends and rivals like Picasso («He destroyed, but then he constructed»), Misia Sert («Misia is to Paris what Kali is to the Hindu pantheon), Diaghalev («he traveled through Europe in the role of a penniless patron»), Stravinsky (««You're married, Igor,» I told him... and he, very Russian: «She knows I love you.
But what has always been true is that we were born with powers of making judgments, making observations and forming conclusions, and I think to let such a given power just sit rotting on a shelf somewhere is like not walking and letting perfectly good legs atrophy into useless attachments.
The material can't be eternal due to what we know of the laws of thermodynamics and the observations I've already noted.
But Malinin's observation is that he would not be sacrificing himself for a noble principle, but «For what would you sacrifice yourself?»
I welcome anyone to add their observations what a fundamentalist theocracy would be like.
We aren't told what Thompson believes now» and his art does not require us to place him in any doctrinal camp» but by the end of Habibi he seems to have least worked his way to a beautiful observation: «God's followers worship not out of the hope for reward nor fear of punishment but out of love.»
What you have posted is not evidence — it is a series of observations or unsupported claims that by themsleves prove nothing.
I «ve written stories and made observations based on what I've been privy tve been privy to.
Here's an observation, too: if these people are debating over what the best objects are to strike children with, they've gone beyond violent discipline into an area of seriously evil pathology.
What I will note is that despite the lack of ritualized outward observations, on the whole Quakers don't seem to have a problem remembering that we have an embodied, enacted faith, nor a problem recognizing that all life is sacred — hence the question above about our notable counter-cultural activities.
Firstly, it must be remembered, that he disclaims very early in the book that he can only speak for the mainline denominations with which he is familiar, and although my memory may fail me, he implies that he can only speak for his observations of the churches / leaders with whom he is familiar, and also that he may be wrong, and also, that he is only pointing out what he calls a possible cause for the problems he has seen, and hopes that his suggestions / ideas, will be considered, researched, etc, and that time will tell if his thesis bears any truth or not.
That said, Cardinal Kasper has done the Church a service because the observation that there is an «abyss» between what the Church teaches and how so many of her children actually live is demonstrably true.
It was clear to him that she believed what she had spoken, but he wanted to make one observation.
Tietjen quotes longtime Concordia professor Arthur Repp's observation that «the Preus people... think we have to have a system of doctrine that spells out everything in detail to nail down what the Bible teaches.
You're just putting your faith in our human powers of observation and believe that what we have thought up based on those observations is correct.
At one point, in what appears a clever lawyerlike play, Pagels discredits Augustine's doctrine of the literal fall of Adam and Eve with the observation that it is hopelessly unscientific, and as a historian she feels compelled to add that Augustine's great foe, Pelagius, would also have had no use for science.
Eliade sums it up thus: «These few cursory observations have shown us in what sense Christianity is prolonging a «mythical» conduct of life into the modern world.
What is important, however, once sociologists and historians have made their observation, is how mainline church leaders react to this «postliberal» state of affairs.
In other scientific disciplines, the road of progress has been the road of sensuous observation with its implicit assumption that the primary and determinative reality is what is sensuously given.
But that would take a lifetime of dedicated work and relentless patience to make those observations and of course, not to mention HONESTY in stating what you truly observe.
Those who shudder at inscriptions on monuments or passages in history books which refer simply to «the Great War» or «the World War» — written as though what we call World War I would indeed prove to be «the war to end war» — will feel saddened to read her portentous observation that «we have no guarantee that it will not recur.»
No rational, decent person gives a damn what your «observation» has been.
What changes is not simply the interpretation of observations that themselves are fixed once and for all, as many would like to argue.
In Spong's «rethinking of the birth of Jesus,» the sound if unexceptional observation that the infancy narratives are late in composition and provide little significant historical information quickly becomes the claim that «what really happened» has been «covered up» by the evangelists.
Just my observation, but I think nakedpastor would not have been comfortable in a gathering of believers in the early first century church unless he found it fully in compliance with HIS expectations of what it should be.
What additional observations would you add regarding Genesis 1 - 3?
I have tried to distill my observations about the church over the last few years into a few bullet points, both to help myself understand what I have been through and to see if any of these conclusions resonate with anyone else.
What is more, he sees that to talk in the fashion in which he has done is intimately tied in with a picture of deity that is both biblically responsible and in accordance with what our contemporary knowledge has to tell us about the way things appear to us through observation and investigatWhat is more, he sees that to talk in the fashion in which he has done is intimately tied in with a picture of deity that is both biblically responsible and in accordance with what our contemporary knowledge has to tell us about the way things appear to us through observation and investigatwhat our contemporary knowledge has to tell us about the way things appear to us through observation and investigation.
Had a friend at work offer this opinion — thought it might fit; sort of: This philosophy has been condensed from hours upon hours of observation of one Greg MacKinnon and how he gets away with what he is able to.
But that conclusion we would reach through what... observation?
His observations remind me of what I've witnessed so often when offering pastoral support to people facing minor, drip - drip troubles versus the great crises that bring larger energies into play.
Great observation Jeremy... I too wonder what Jesus would do, and where he would travel in America should he come back incognito today.
I lean liberal, but I am very willing to listen to what you have to say if I see that you make your decisions and policy in the real world based upon tested observations in the real world.
: no, it can not be, but at least science has a good crack at a timetable based on observation, deduction and research, whereas the Biblical number has what backing it up?
we have as yet no consensus as to where and what it was, other than the remarkably astute observation that it must have been a body of water in which reeds commonly grew.
What Rayleigh and Ramsay did was this: They at once perceived that they had hit upon a line of investigation which would disclose some subtlety of chemical theory that had hitherto eluded observation.
There is nothing in the New Testament, for example, to parallel the large collections of «observations on life and the world - order,» which we call the wisdom literature of the Hebrew Scriptures, or its extensive range of liturgical poetry, or the detailed corpus of its laws on what we would regard as secular matters.
Suffice it to say that the conceptuality which I accept — and accept because it seems to do justice to deep analysis of human experience and observation, as well as to the knowledge we now have of the way «things go» in the world — lays stress on the dynamic «event» character of that world; on the inter-relationships which exist in what is a societal universe, on the inadequacy of «substance» thinking to describe such a universe of «becoming» and «belonging», on the place of decisions in freedom by the creatures with the consequences which such decisions bring about, and on the central importance of persuasion rather than coercive force as a clue to the «going» of things in that universe.
It's pretty hard to spare the feelings of someone who believes in mysticism and magic when you tell them that what they believe in is mystical and magical, and has no basis in fact / observation / evidence.
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