Sentences with phrase «win for skeptics»

Score another win for skeptics.
In the long run, the CPDO deals will be net losers for Moody's and S&P, and a net win for skeptics like Fitch and Dominion.

Not exact matches

That's a winning formula for anyone, but it especially matters to entrepreneurs, who often face skeptics in their professional lives and need to know the people closest to them believe in them.
I made this last night for some people who were squash skeptics — and won them over!
Now that you know more about Febreze ONE and my journey from scent skeptic to Febreze ONE user, how about the chance to win a bottle for yourself?
Award - winning journalist, coauthor of «The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels» (Seal Press), blogger at OMG Chronicles, mom
is an award - winning journalist and co-author of The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels (2014).
Vicki Larson is an award - winning journalist and coauthor of The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels.
Vicki Larson is an award - winning journalist, blogger and co-author The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels (Seal Press, September 2014.)
Professor Jim Al - Khalili, President of the BHA Phillip Pullman, author Dan Snow, historian and broadcaster Tim Minchin, musician and writer Dr Simon Singh, science writer Ken Follett, novelist Dr Adam Rutherford, broadcaster and science writer Sir John Sulston FRS, Nobel Prize winning scientist Sir David Smith FRS FRSE, eminent botanist Professor Jonathan Glover, philosopher Professor Anthony Grayling, philosopher Nick Ross, broadcaster CJ De Mooi, actor and professional quizzer Virginia Ironside, writer Professor Steven Rose, scientist and writer Natalie Haynes, comedian and writer Peter Tatchell, human rights campaigner Professor Raymond Tallis FMedSci, physician, philosopher and author Dr Iolo ap Gwynn FRMS, scientist and mountaineer Stephen Volk, screenwriter and author Professor Steve Jones, Professor of Genetics, science writer and broadcaster Sir Terry Pratchett OBE, Fantasy fiction author, satirist Dr Evan Harris, Former Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament and Vice-President of the BHA Dr Richard Bartle, Professor of Computer Game Design Sian Berry, Green campaigner, politician and author Professor John A Lee, Consultant Histopathologist and Professor of Pathology Professor Richard Norman, philosopher Zoe Margolis, author Joan Smith, journalist and author Michael Gore, CVO CBE Derek McAuley, General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches Lorraine Barratt, former member of the Welsh Assembly Dr Susan Blackmore, writer and broadcaster Dr Harry Stopes - Roe, Vice President of the BHA Sir Geoffrey Bindman QC (Hon), human rights lawyer Adele Anderson, actor and singer Dr Helena Cronin, Co-Director, Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Science Professor Alice Roberts, Anatomist, author and broadcaster Professor Chris French, Professor of Psychology, editor of The Skeptic Sir Tom Blundell, scientist Maureen Duffy, poet, playwright and novelist Baroness Whitaker, Labour peer Lord Avebury, Liberal Democrat peer Richard Herring, writer and comedian Martin Rowson, writer and cartoonist Tony Hawks, comedian, writer, musician and philanthropist Peter Cave, philosopher and author Diane Munday, campaigner Professor Norman MacLean, Biologist Professor Sir Harold Kroto FRS, Nobel prize winner, Professor of Chemistry Sir Richard Dalton, former Diplomat Sir David Blatherwick, KCMG, OBE, Diplomat and writer Michael Rubenstein, writer and legal expert Polly Toynbee, columnist and broadcaster Lord O'Neill, labour peer
ATLANTA — The bizarre discovery that the cosmos may expand at an ever - increasing rate — hailed by Science as the «Breakthrough of the Year» for 1998 — has won endorsement from an erstwhile skeptic, Stephen Hawking.
As a result, Pepperberg's work has won accolades for its persuasiveness from the likes of Oxford animal behaviorist Marian Stamp Dawkins, an authority on animal consciousness and a skeptic about many studies in the field.
It's unlikely to win over Merchant - Ivory skeptics, but it does represent an intriguing transition from the India - centered social realism of their earlier work to the lavish literary adaptations for which they would become famous.
For those interested in private school choice, two political advantages are claimed: 1) High - regulation addresses some objections, winning votes among skeptics to improve the political prospects of passing and sustaining those programs; 2) High - regulation protects private school choice programs from the political damage caused by scandals and embarrassing outcomes.
worked for months to win support they needed from their colleagues to bring the bill back up for a vote, discussing the bill in meetings and one - on - one to skeptics.
But the more crucial question for dyed - in - the - wool gearheads is whether the Chiron is alluring enough to win over the skeptics and convert the non-believers.
As long as the reporters never found out this individual never won a Pulitzer, didn't discover the memo, never proved it was a top - down industry directive and that he gleaned his «unfair media balance for skeptics» talking point from an IPCC scientist who earlier speculated whether the solutions to global cooling were worth the cost, then everything would be just fine.
And wouldn't those talking points pack a fatal punch with reporters if you could say a Pulitzer winning investigative reporter discovered a leaked coal industry memo which was proof for skeptic climate scientists being paid to «reposition global warming as theory rather than fact.»
Now that Gore has won the Nobel Peace Prize, it seems that — at least for now — the skeptics are losing the public - relations war.
As for «strategies that are win - win whether or not CO2 turns out to be a problem of the magnitude suggested by the IPCC» that is essentially saying that we should forget about policies which specifically address AGW as a distinct issue which presents its own set of problems and just do stuff which the skeptics want to do anyway.
I'm thrilled for your success and only somewhat disappointed that you didn't win Handsomest Climate Skeptic of 2014.
That would be a win - no loss for both believers - skeptics of Copenhagen.
I've already detailed the way Desmog's founder James Hoggan essentially torpedoes his site's entire existence with the way he first admits he knows nothing about climate science, but is certain that skeptic climate scientists are liars, the latter of which he derives entirely from Ross Gelbspan, the «Pulitzer - winning investigator» who Al Gore says discovered the supposedly leaked Western Fuels Association «Information Council for the Environment» (ICE) PR campaign's sinister strategy to «reposition global warming as theory rather than fact.»
That's a win for AGW in the raw data with the skeptics still scratching their heads over why it is warming this much.
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