Sentences with phrase «what pieces of knowledge»

Not exact matches

He developed a practical solution, one that appeared not to be based on any piece of knowledge, and one that required that he believe what almost none of his contemporaries (except, possibly, his father) believed: that beliefs are founded largely on individual actions and interests rather than on evidence, reason, or worldviews.
I had zero knowledge of breast pumps prior to reading this piece, and I was horrified by what my future would look like.
What is still most necessary for aspiring editors is a broad and detailed knowledge of the field and the skills needed to refine a piece of scientific work and shepherd it through to publication.
That's sad, for it provides an important missing piece in our knowledge of heart disease development, a strong argument against the plant - based fad, and a bright new chapter in what the New York Times has called «The Fall and Rise of Kilmer McCully.»
This is why classic pieces, knowledge of what really works for your body and a strong sense of personal style are so important when shopping.
Questlove has become the go - to guy for pop - music perspective in music documentaries for a reason he proves once again here: He brings a musician's knowledge of why a piece of music is special (his analysis here of «Don't Stop «Til You Get Enough» is a mini-music class) as well as a fan's appreciation for what that music meant to millions of ordinary people — how Jackson's music during this era not only defined the time, but made the world a better place simply by its existence.
There is no question that our scientifically derived knowledge of human learning has expanded and deepened over the past decade, and Boser helpfully lumps the many pieces of what we know into a half dozen processes or actions that enhance learning: value, target, develop, extend, relate, and rethink, each of which serves as the focal point of a chapter.
Besides touting Sol Stern's piece on the success of one New York City public school's implementation of Core Knowledge, the organization's spokesman, Robert Pondiscio took fellow school reform advocate Whitney Tilson to task for supposedly lacking any understanding of what happens in classrooms.
What I'm trying to say is (and being completely honest) you can plan and plan for getting your hamster but your most valuable piece of knowledge is knowing that experience is key.
Using this knowledge (handily stored on an in - game chart) will help you piece together exactly what's going on and get to the bottom of the mystery you were summoned to solve.
What really drives this point home is the main story mode, which plays out like a «One Piece Battles Greatest Hits» montage instead of introducing new enemies or allies that don't require years of background knowledge of the series.
Gamers would have benefited from some recaps, but it's interesting to try and piece together what is happening with limited prior knowledge, although the over-posturing and some of the longest cutscenes can be a little boring.
As soon as the game begins, you'll soon find out that you'll need a bit of One Piece knowledge in order to understand what the heck is going on.
My piece tries to make the point that most of what scientists know is «tacit» (i.e. not explicitly or often written down in the technical literature) and it is that knowledge that allows them to quickly distinguish (with reasonable accuracy) what new papers are worth looking at in detail and which are not.
The collection was a valuable store of corporate knowledge and history, but it was difficult to know where to look for a particular piece of information or to know what questions might be answered by using these files.
«Students benefit because if you are exporting your knowledge, you need to know it completely — there is nothing like creating a piece of software to show what you don't know.»
This is what I want to walk around in this piece, questions such as: whether we, too, should pick up information with long tongs the way the author of the quote does; whether the information - knowledge distinction is right, useful, productive — whether the one is mere and the other more; whether the culture, or our cul - de-sac of it at least, really will go pop.
Legal Monitor has the look and feel of an insider's product — a piece of software aimed at those already in the business with a basic knowledge of what they're looking for, but seeking further nuance — rather than a product intended to be used publicly.
What I was before reading your piece: A clueless slacker with no skills to offer and nothing to show for in any field looking to leverage nothing but a basic knowledge of how to put together a sentence is looking for pointers on how to come up with the perfect «Objective.»
And what I mean by knowledge is knowing the product that you sell — the parts and pieces of a home as well as the new - home sales process from soup to nuts.
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