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"empirically" Definitions
  1. in a way that is based on experiments or experience rather than ideas or theories

284 Sentences With "empirically"

How to use empirically in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "empirically" and check conjugation/comparative form for "empirically". Mastering all the usages of "empirically" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That's empirically ... it resonates to me that empirically that would be true, that when situations are really hard maybe we disproportionately ask women to lead.
It is time we admit that Barb is empirically lame.
"Both sides might be empirically correct," Kelly told BuzzFeed News.
Empirically grounded, rigorously researched advice is hard to come by.
Empirically, though, a shift is much harder to pin down.
It is empirically indecent to make fun of the disabled.
And who, empirically, will this pay hike most likely affect?
It's a strategy that has recently been borne out empirically.
The staircase in the mountain seemed, empirically, to ascend forever.
"It's very difficult to test this all empirically," he says.
Empirically, that isn't true: There are options beyond detention and separation.
I don't know if it could ever be empirically used now.
This is a remarkable, well-researched, empirically informed and important book.
I discovered this empirically by doing the opposite of what I'm saying.
He never makes a statement or claim that is not empirically verifiable.
Is there an empirically superior lunch to which we should all aspire?
"All the applications regarding crystal growth are dealt with empirically," Singh said.
The power of conspiracy theories isn't that they can be empirically proven.
And the programmatic markets will tell you what works or not, empirically.
This is bigoted — and, according to the best data we have, empirically false.
I cannot prove empirically that I would've won, but we will never know.
A lot of these critics' worries can be, and have been, empirically debunked.
Such practice has been empirically shown to strengthen emotional resilience and increase happiness.
That claim is "empirically false," said Chris Wilson, a pollster for Mr. Cruz.
But some criminologists say these claims are highly questionable — both empirically and logically.
That observation seems empirically true, at least on a global scale over time.
Each level wasn't some metaphor for an outdated, empirically unsupported model of grief.
And by more, I mean Asian at all — which the actress empirically is not.
I haven't even had the time to empirically complain about the purged headphone jack.
"Empirically, there wasn't a whole lot of data to back that up," Hale said.
Because pain is a purely subjective phenomenon, it is notoriously difficult to measure empirically.
Policymakers should use such studies as a basis for developing empirically grounded, practical rules.
The Vikings are an empirically worse team than the Seahawks in every conceivable way.
This empirically-proven method will have you speaking correctly and confidently in no time.
Thus, reducing access to guns should (and empirically generally does) reduce the overall suicide rate.
Narwhals are empirically cute—they're the closest we'll ever get to seeing real-life unicorns.
"I think, empirically — not opinion, not anecdote, not politics — something is going on," says Greenblatt.
Thankfully, Thomas pushed back, pointing out that truth is not empirically verifiable, but a conception.
One can argue about whether these "profiling" generalizations are empirically sound, but they are prevalent.
A body of research empirically confirms what we hear from these anecdotal stories from students.
While the study makes a convincing argument, identifying chilling effects empirically has always been tricky.
I'm just saying that she's empirically and objectively better than what you're currently listening to.
Fortunately, the theory that tax cuts "starve the beast" of government largesse is empirically unfounded.
It turns out it's empirically ... Is it because you were ... I mean, I was. Yeah.
A handful of doctors have embraced his mind-body theories and started testing them empirically.
McGonigal agrees that these apps need to be designed ethically, validated empirically, and used judiciously.
My research team and I tested this gut hypothesis empirically through a series of studies.
Tanya: I mean, I didn't hate it, but I also wouldn't say it was empirically good.
And while these models have yet to be empirically verified, they haven't been ruled out either.
But it wasn't until the 1990s that this longstanding hunch finally began to be empirically validated.
But Graham's focus on startups as a cause and consequence of inequality is also empirically wrong.
The Texans have an empirically better pass defense, but they are cut from the same cloth.
"But this is the first work I'm aware of that shows that empirically," Ms. Friedler said.
And researchers can only speculate about what that vanquishing entailed until they ask, systematically and empirically.
Well, empirically, I think you're seeing Republicans really running away from him for the first time.
It's the empirically verifiable conclusion from the 20th century's bitter contest between capitalist and socialist states.
One should look empirically: We have a tax code that's so long ... that nobody figures it out.
"Much of the 'conservative' worldview consists of ideas that are known empirically to be false," said Carmi.
So in the running category, we can tell you empirically that the average run is 3.116 miles.
His struggles were starkly clear to him, and his failings measured empirically on stopwatches and result sheets.
Empirically, there are fewer and fewer use cases for which accepting or paying with Bitcoin makes sense.
That's something that's hard for me to wake up to every day because, empirically speaking, we're failing.
It empirically has been the best-performing asset class since the financial crisis, by a long way.
They said they were the first to demonstrate empirically that people's lies grow bolder the more they fib.
Quantum theory was empirically motivated, and its rules were simply ones that seemed to fit what was observed.
"The most frustrating part is that people have not been empirically based," despite advances in technology, said Phillips.
Because claims about individual cells remain so difficult to corroborate empirically, most investigators today choose their words carefully.
"We know empirically that the crisis is driven and exacerbated by a lack of permanent housing," White said.
The arguments about diversity are important, empirically supported by extensive social science, and should be taken into account.
But Niskanen thinkers like Ed Dolan, Samuel Hammond and Will Wilkinson made a simple and empirically verifiable observation.
But now, this informal knowledge has been empirically confirmed, and the case for change couldn't be more compelling.
Granted, Blanchett does have empirically wonderful cheekbones, but realizing such a thing can make you feel a bit ... obsessive.
If you are having sex to deal with depression, there are dozens of excellent empirically supported treatments for depression.
Empirically, this has capped her support, both in opinion polls and at the ballot box, at just over 40%.
Research from the Brookings Institute, among others, has empirically concluded that it is the most segregated city in America.
Naturally, it didn't go over well: Journalists in the 60s realized racism/discrimination were empirically evil and reported accordingly.
It was a rare bright spot in this bleak last year, a blow struck for reasoned, empirically informed policy.
The study's findings build on the authors' prior research that has empirically substantiated two insights about intergenerational economic mobility.
And according to JPMorgan, there's a quirky yet empirically sound way to figure out the future path of yields.
If I can empirically show you facts and I can show you reality, that's supposed to win the day.
"There is no empirically based definition of 'high-quality preschool,' " says Mark Lipsey, a social scientist at Vanderbilt University.
First and foremost, it's empirically inaccurate for someone with a Ph.D. who studies vulnerable communities to assert such a thing.
OK, maybe you could go the über-Karl Popper route and side with whoever provides the most empirically grounded research.
Their argument is that, empirically, CEO pay and pretax inequality is higher in countries with lower top marginal tax rates.
Then, you go correlate all of that, and it's then proven out clinically, empirically in published data that it works.
The study claims to be the first that has empirically examined the gender performance gap in an established video game.
The notion that we may mistake a simulation of the world for the world is both conceptually and empirically flawed.
"Tariffs are taxes and empirically and theoretically, the more you tax something, the less you get of it," he said.
Todd Schifeling (of Temple University) and Andrew John Hoffman (of University of Michigan) set out to examine this question empirically.
These reframing techniques have been widely and empirically applied with success in everything from zen meditation to cognitive behavioral therapy.
Empirically, it's going to depend on somebody with a lot more polling expertise and access to that ability than I've got.
And in our current universe, with our current technology, "it's essentially impossible for us to answer this question empirically," said Beacham.
" The researchers conclude by asking rhetorically "if the attention that researchers and clinicians give this immensely popular activity is empirically justified.
So one should look empirically and we have a tax code that's got so many pages nobody can figure it out.
But this theory hasn't been borne out empirically; studies have shown that avian brains are structured quite similarly to mammalian brains.
My goal is to pick up where she left off, while addressing the limitations of her important and empirically grounded work.
Though the diagrams in their texts differed from what they were observing empirically, the students memorized what the textbooks told them.
Nearly every chapter in the American anti-meritocracy literature makes this charge, in what is usually its most empirically reinforced chapter.
They are the commodification and dehumanization of Natives and have been empirically proven to harm the mental health and stability of kids.
Empirically, increasing computational power will not necessarily transform the water of computer games into the wine of a full-fledged simulated world.
But that's a difficult question to study empirically, and previous research hasn't found much evidence for a strong mismeasurement effect on productivity.
Why were these supposedly forward-thinking, empirically-driven media outlets so dismissive of Mr Trump's chances, and what did they get wrong?
Once the idea takes root, he starts doing his research — seeking advice, reading books — to empirically approach the volatile teen dating scene.
The link was only empirically tested when scientists began collecting amniotic samples from mothers of affected children in northeast Brazil last year.
In 1998, the psychologists Anthony G. Greenwald, Mahzarin R. Banaji and Brian Nosek began a groundbreaking project to test these ideas empirically.
Especially in their fungal forms, they can be both plant and animal, their alienness at once unabashedly fictive yet almost empirically cataloged.
The progressive center is supposed to be empirically minded, challenging business interests where appropriate but granting them free rein at other times.
Mexican immigration, Islamic terrorism, free trade: For Trump, truth is always more about how people feel than what may be empirically verifiable.
Since the explosive rise of in-car navigation systems around 10 years ago, several studies have demonstrated empirically what we already know instinctively.
"We empirically studied the behavior these apps using a combination of static and dynamic analysis techniques," the  researchers explained  in an online statement.
If we seek empirically to link Malevich and Lenin, convincing connections between art and politics are very hard if not impossible to establish.
They are the commodification and dehumanization of Natives and have been empirically proven to harm the mental health and stability of kids. 943.
" Whether knowing a lot about studying and developing positive feelings towards studying actually causes bloggers to study more, she says, is "empirically questionable.
"If you are failing to consistently use condoms when you should, there are excellent empirically supported interventions to improve condom use," she said.
The scientists were thus able to confirm empirically, in a rigorous way, the hypothesis that the psychedelic trip 'feels' the same as dreams.
Even targeting the Fed's current natural rate (4.2 percent) would sacrifice a million potential workers to the altar of an empirically elusive concept.
That contrast is why I'm grateful for Jon Snow every single time he does what can empirically be described as the right thing.
Now, these aerial excursions have been empirically determined to be largely powered by electricity, according to new research published Thursday in Current Biology.
The agency has not empirically determined the safest amount of intramuscularly injected aluminum, relying instead on mere belief that current levels are safe.
There are many reasons, political and otherwise, why certain crimes may not be reported as hate crimes when they empirically or arguably are.
It seems almost beside the point to note that Barr's claim that secularism is responsible for violence happens to be empirically verifiable nonsense.
While the petitioners' arguments are grounded in First Amendment protections, the union's legal position that mandatory dues promote "labor peace" is empirically unsupportable.
They're often beneficial and at what point they stop being beneficial is something we can test empirically rather than relying just on theory.
The other (Filabi) has empirically studied culture as executive director of Ethical Systems, a research collaboration studying the social science of business ethics.
"I think the willingness to go for such consistent, not empirically informed, crazy theories has to do, in part, with her gender," O'Brien said.
The unfortunate reality is that in the 1990s and onward, most of that research was sort of exposed as being not very empirically true.
Empirically, that's not the case, particularly when you look at the Chinese stock market, which does matter," Cramer said on "Squawk on the Street.
The market "corrections" that are made are empirically a big, if not the biggest, source of impediments to the functioning of competitive transactional processes.
On interest rate policy: "The notion you can fix the economy with very low interest rates I think is not empirically validated," he added.
Empirically, we find people feeling awe are more humble, and their sense of self diminishes, their sense of network expands, they become more altruistic.
Early testing of promising innovations should both time limited and involve the number of providers to empirically prove or disprove the innovation thesis. 2.
In any case, as we shall see, such vehement opposition to open immigration usually rests on empirically false assumptions about the results of immigration.
It's too early to say whether red flag laws work, but one thing is certain and empirically verifiable: stronger fundamental gun policies, fewer deaths.
Yet, by seeking to insert the question so late in the process, he has prevented officials from empirically testing how people will react to it.
It is difficult to prove empirically, as anyone who admits to this "nudge nudge, wink wink" approach to end-of-life care would be in jail.
I think we should regard religions as great works of the human imagination rather than pictures of the world intended to capture what is empirically true.
"The question about the reason for the increased assaults is not something that can be left to debate and must be scrutinised empirically," concludes the paper.
Constructing a border wall has not been empirically shown to deter undocumented migration; instead, it displaces crossing methods and increases the use and cost of smugglers.
In her empirically grounded research paper, Gallagher leans on the relationship between the probability of falling on financial hardships and liquid assets to bolster her thesis.
School and mass shootings are not empirically different from attacks that are labelled "terrorist," such as Omar Mateen's attack on the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. Fla.
The government has committed to not just reducing carbon emissions but reducing them to net zero — that is clearly empirically impossible if they build another runway.
Preventing the spread will require extensive intra-border reductions in social mixing and better, sounder, more empirically grounded government — in short, better domestic and international leadership.
And recent, unprecedented gridlock within EPA's Science Advisory Board—the body tasked with ensuring that EPA policy is empirically grounded—only serves to exacerbate the problem.
Instead, he is openly asserting that any empirically derived suggestion that his policies might be unpopular -- or not enjoying broad support -- are by definition misleading or false.
Earlier this year, my colleague Vlad Savov covered the Corsair Vengeance LED DDR4 RAM, which science had empirically determined to be the most lit RAM ever made.
Therefore, we were able to empirically prove that venture capital investors do add value to their investments further to the cash injection they are able to provide.
Josef Schuster, the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany said the study empirically proved that online anti-Semitism was increasing and becoming more aggressive.
A good deal of work at the CHORUS lab has to do with empirically investigating how people use existing security tools, and evaluating how effective they are.
This is empirically false – the private equity industry as a whole is responsible for large job creation as well as destruction, with only modest net job losses.
"As a consumer of news, I'd like to see much more empirically based reporting and much less commentary," said Michael McFaul, the former U.S. ambassador to Russia.
It has long been demonstrated, empirically and anecdotally, that organizations and decision-makers regularly make better and more comprehensive decisions when a diversity of voices is included.
Now we have seen empirically that when you are exposed to a given piece of information multiple times, your chances of adopting this information increase every time.
It would have been an empirically worse title that sounds like a Blues Clues character, but it also would've represented the content of the mixtape much better.
We criticize conservatives for relying on simplistic slogans like "cut taxes" and "drill, baby, drill" instead of nuanced, empirically informed assessments of economic growth and environmental management.
Whether the survey is about NRA memberships or magazine subscriptions, such surveys produce estimates that can be many times larger than empirically known rates in the population.
But "even at double time, the labor cost figures are empirically questionable," Mr. Bartel said after reviewing the contract at the request of The New York Times.
Government needs to refocus its efforts toward providing empirically supported dietary guidance that relies upon valid scientific data and rigorous evaluations of the consequences of such advice.
It's just to say that from the perspective of empirically grounded risk assessment, this barely ranks as a minor threat to American or Western life and limb.
You apply to become a member of The Cru, and then our empirically-based mechanism matches you with nine other women who can help you to be successful.
Meaning also comes from "experiencing yourself as a self over time," Metzinger says—a theory that researchers like Texas A&M psychology Professor Rebecca Schlegel have validated empirically.
What lies in the future might be a new era that draws from the best of neutral theory while also recognizing the real, empirically supported influence of selection.
The group is tasked not just with fighting an impending apocalypse, but—and here's the modern take—proving empirically to a sceptical audience that ghosts really do exist.
A story is a constellation of stars, with a recognizable shape made from shining bits of fact that may exist, empirically, at different levels and different spatial depths.
Chilling election official disclosures allows vendors to continue uttering their claim – while empirically false -- that no proof has established any successful attacks against an electronic voting system.  3.
The problem with her myriad of "free" giveaways is it's unbelievably naïve and empirically falsifiable to think the federal government is more cost-efficient than the free market.
To make headway on this question, it is crucial to clearly distinguish two conceptually and empirically separable aspects of "big government" — the regulatory state and the redistributive state.
Like the Keltner List, my approach to relationship assessment is intentionally not scientific and has not been tested empirically (though that isn't a bad idea for future research).
Anderson, by contrast, sought to work empirically, using information gathered from the world, identifying problems to be solved not abstractly but through the experienced problems of real people.
Still, from a few interactions I've had with her, Dalilah Muhammad is as your correspondent describes: empirically beautiful, yes, but also reserved and focused without nonchalance or affectation.
And wherever you come down on striking the right balance, it's hard to see this situation as empirically deserving the level of political controversy that's attached to it.
It is a more extreme and naked bid to help coal plants than even jaded observers expected from what has historically been a fairly reasonable, empirically grounded commission.
And while it's hard to measure empirically, that means fewer people — some of whom could go on to commit horrific atrocities — would be able to obtain these weapons.
And when they finally started working on the project, empirically we found that they didn't see it as as difficult or as stressful as earlier in the week.
According to Halberstadt, the study's findings are some of the first to empirically show that a similar bias for seeing anger exists toward black women as well as men.
Krueger was scientifically and empirically minded in his work, according to the Times, but he did not take a narrow view of the role of economics in the world.
Empirically careful where The Virtue of Nationalism is sloppy, conceptually precise where Hazony is loose, the book is in many ways a model of scholarship on right-wing populism.
I should note that there is some controversy about the thesis that black-swan events are increasing due to global complexity, and the claim is difficult to prove empirically.
It is time for a change in Social Security: a thoughtful, empirically based answer to one of this society's basic tenets, which is appropriate support for all its citizens.
A suit of ceramic body armor at once threatening and fragile, the sculpture hangs on the wall in pieces, as if reconstructed empirically from a series of bruising discoveries.
Although it was once convenient to dismiss such observations as anecdotal and unrepresentative, now the AMCHA Initiative, a campus anti-Semitism watchdog group, documents empirically what we all know.
Still, at least when it comes to electricity transmission and wholesale markets, FERC has generally been seen as an empirically grounded straight shooter, an outpost of old fashioned technocracy.
That boundary melding allowed him to posit the existence of cognitive mechanisms that wouldn't be empirically proved for decades, but it also led him astray in problematic, ultimately hurtful ways.
Wrong. Research we undertook over the last year was trying to empirically prove or disprove the idea that venture capital investors actually added value further to the capital they invested.
Pot is empirically known as a neuroprotectant, and the way that we see it help people who suffer from epilepsy suggests that it can help the neurons actually protect themselves.
In our book, The VP Advantage: How Running Mates Influence Home State Voting in Presidential Elections, we employed a multi-method approach to empirically test the purported home state advantage.
Either this man gives fewer fucks than any human on the planet, or he has a divine respect for the joint—empirically verified as the best way to get blazed.
Karen Bleier/AFP via Getty Images GL: As someone who covers this issue, I'm often surprised by how many empirically supported ideas just get little coverage on a national scale.
The Rothman Index empirically validates nurses' gut feelings by showing that nursing assessments — what nurses see and document when they "lay eyeballs" on patients — offer crucial information about patient stability.
Soft spoken, but honest in his aim, James Sands operates on the field as he does off; with an empirically earned confidence, he sets his goal, he moves towards it.
So, what you empirically have to do is look at your content and look at everything else out on the Internet that covers the same thing, and is yours better?
As critical-thinking, morally responsible adults in our own right, we should instead carefully scrutinize the rhetoric and promises of those in power, comparing them to real-world outcomes, measured empirically.
And by returning to monopoly, which is a venerable part of the American political populist tradition, they're able to — in an evidence-based, empirically minded way — make an honest populist case.
In 1981, she added a bankruptcy class and discovered a question that she wanted to answer empirically: Why were personal bankruptcy rates rising even when the economy was on the upswing?
By denying what we hold sacred — the existence of empirically derived truths — the Republican Party has made enemies of those who make new vaccines, build bridges and send humans into space.
The presumption that the government needs to actively police what banks are doing has been replaced by the empirically dubious assumption that the private sector can mostly look out for itself.
What is interesting, however, is that this particular anti-Semitic cliché — that Jews are greedy, and that their political behavior is especially driven by their financial interests — is empirically dead wrong.
"Empirically, presidential systems are associated with lower government spending and lower redistribution," Claremont Graduate University's Melissa Ziegler Rogers writes in her book The Politics of Place and the Limits of Redistribution.
But despite plenty of anecdotes, there's apparently been no attempts to empirically study whether dogs become more willing to help when they perceive that humans are in distress, at least until now.
The notion that people will care more about opposing war when they pay more for it is both empirically wrong, given how much Americans already pay in defense dollars, and deeply cynical.
Conditioning benefits on work requirements has empirically had little impact on overall employment levels, according to Elaine Waxman, a senior fellow in the Income and Benefits Policy Center at the Urban Institute.
"Arguments that a wealth tax will 'hurt the economy' always ignore negative effects of wealth inequality, and rely on an empirically unsupported idea of the relationship between taxes and investment," Linden tweeted.
In each case, she points out, it was "neither assured nor assumed" before the passage of the legislation that the strategy of "getting tough" would be either politically successful or empirically effective.
Neither statement — "There is no supernatural reality beyond this world" and "There is a transcendent reality beyond this material world" — can be proven empirically, nor is either self-evident to most people.
But even Buttigieg's intended point here is an empirically false trope: Throughout the Cold War, policymakers felt they must necessarily wage war against communism to stop its steady march across the globe.
We looked at the issue empirically, by analyzing more than two decades' worth of electoral maps — from 1992 to 2006 — from 240 states that that had majority-minority districts in this period.
Zach Sommers, a law and science fellow at Northwestern University School of Law undertook a study to empirically prove the largely anecdotal theory that women of color receive different treatment from the media.
This is empirically true — just look at Wayfair, Braintree, Shutterstock, SurveyMonkey, Plenty of Fish, Shopify, Lynda, GitHub, Atlassian, MailChimp, Epic, Campaign Monitor, Minecraft, LootCrate, Unity, CarGurus and SimpliSafe to name just a few.
This wrongheaded, empirically falsifiable obsession with deterring crime by coming down hard on the most minor among them — once called "broken windows," though more aptly called "broken families" — has bled to the border.
Meanwhile, in indicting Trump's response, Biden focused squarely on Trump's serial lying and downplaying of coronavirus's seriousness in defiance of his own experts, and his systematic degradation of science and empirically grounded government.
"Spanking appears to be empirically similar to physical abuse," says Tracie Afifi, a psychiatric epidemiologist at University of Manitoba in Canada, who recently led a large study confirming the lasting effects of spanking.
Instead of working to empirically determine which entities are and aren't sentient, you might sidestep that whole question and believe instead that anything that's alive or that supports life is worthy of moral consideration.
There's not exactly an easy way to test that question empirically, but there are some comparable things about the way people circle back to catch the stuff they missed, whether they're reading or listening.
"This is the first study to empirically evaluate the impact of natural disasters on cancer survival," said Leticia Nogueira, lead author of the study and a researcher at the American Cancer Society in Atlanta.
For example, Facebook's recent decision to release its data to a group of academic researchers may allow us to one day determine, empirically, what effects its content policies are really having on the world.
Alan Fierstein, an acoustic consultant and noise-abatement expert who has been measuring New York City's clamor for over four decades, said that the city is empirically noisier because there's just more of everything.
I believe that statements on the controversy that begin, "I believe Blasey," or "I believe Kavanaugh" — because they jibe with personal experience or align with a partisan motive — are empirically worthless and intellectually dishonest.
The legacy of those careful, consensus-building leaders is replaced by populist risk-takers, willing to roll the dice with no empirically crafted calculation of what lies on the other side of the decision.
Whether it's when I fold napkin lotuses for my soup kitchen's Christmas dinner, or bake challah bread French toast sticks for my chemistry class, I'm aware that achievement doesn't have to be measured empirically.
This process has never been empirically observed, but the radiation would supposedly be stripped of all information about its original properties—and that would violate the rules of the universe as we know them.
Empirically, negative views of immigrant cultures and traditions seem to persist, as does a view that immigrants should behave more like native-born "locals," that they conform more tightly to the attitudes of the majority.
One of the most well-established conclusions in economics, both theoretically and empirically, is that moves toward free trade, except in very rare circumstances, make the vast majority of citizens in partner countries better off.
In order to start breaking the cycle of mass incarceration of predominantly poor Americans of color, we need to move away from fixed-dollar bail requirements, and instead toward empirically validated pretrial risk assessment tools.
The world is complex enough, and empirically messy enough, that it will simply always be possible for governments to whip up a "rational" justification for illegitimate acts, even if the true motivations are quite different.
"So it's very tricky to actually look at this question empirically, but some of the best data suggest maybe the time famine is partly in our heads and if so, there's good news," she said.
The less religious people are, the more likely they are to endorse empirically unsupported ideas about U.F.O.s, intelligent aliens monitoring the lives of humans and related conspiracies about a government cover-up of these phenomena.
At this point, it's both anecdotally and empirically true that booze is at the root of many terrible decisions—a vast array of bad behavior spanning from sex to food to crime to tipping and beyond.
At least that's what Sigmund Freud said when he theorized that our adult personality develops from early childhood experiences, an insight empirically tested by attachment theory and developmental psychology through the 20th century up until today.
"If you look at an area, any area — take one that has moderate degree of activity — you can't just empirically say, I'm going to loosen restrictions there," Fauci said on CNN's State of the Union Sunday.
They know this because he went on live TV twice last week — in a Cabinet meeting and in a long Rose Garden ramble — and said numerous things about this very topic that were demonstrably, empirically false.
Next month's UNGASS meeting — the General Assembly's first special session on drugs since 1998 — is seen as a crucial indicator of just how much the global consensus has shifted away from an empirically failed war on drugs.
"Gun violence is a serious public health problem that requires attention to these risk factors, as well as more research to inform the development and implementation of empirically based prevention and threat assessment strategies," Dr. Puente said.
Felix Goltz, research director at the Edhec Risk Institute, a research institution that has developed smart beta indices, said it was "well documented, both empirically and theoretically" that smart-beta strategies deliver outperformance in the long term.
And please put this in, because it's so tiresome when I tweet something about Louis Farrakhan, just reporting on things he said that were just empirically anti-Semitic, and people act as though I'm making an equivalence.
" Their foundations, he wrote in 1920, were "not hypothetical constituents, but empirically observed general properties of phenomena, principles from which mathematical formulae are deduced of a such a kind that they apply to every case which presents itself.
Nonprofit organizations that seek to make empirically driven, objectivity-oriented information more available to the public should top the list: Wikipedia, the Poynter Institute, First Draft, the Ida B. Wells Society, and the American Press Institute among them.
Even if you don't think this is awesome (c'mon, it's empirically proven to be awesome), it's still a great source for some physics problems you can work out at home, while we're all doing this social distancing thing.
"This is the first paper to empirically show that predators are good for your health with respect to tick-borne pathogens," said Dr. Taal Levi, an ecologist at Oregon State University who was not involved in the study.
When we train middle managers, we don't just train them about how to spot and address problem behavior — we teach them empirically sound things to do and say when an employee seeks them out to discuss a problem.
Asserting that the relatively poorer intellectual performance of racial groups is based on their genes is mistaken theoretically and unfounded empirically; and given the consequences of promulgating the policies that follow from such assertions, it is egregiously wrong morally.
"We've got lots of theories about how planetary atmospheres fare around M dwarfs, but we haven't been able to study them empirically," said Laura Kreidberg, lead study author and a researcher at the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
More broadly, it is difficult to know empirically whether your feeling of fear is identical to my feeling of fear, so it's hard to say to what extent an adult experience of fear is similar or different to a child's.
On the request of the New York Times's David Leonhardt (who has a knack for smart suggestions for research from empirically minded economists), Piketty, Saez, and Zucman reproduced the same graph for every 34-year period from 1946 to the present.
Tillerson also may be more equipped to ignore the Arabists and their empirically unsupportable assertion that Israel is the source of all Middle East problems and solving the Palestinian issue by putting the screws to Israel will make them go away.
People talk about "sense" as though it were some inherent property of language that can be empirically tested—like you can feed it into a machine and get back a 100 percent accurate evaluation of whether it's sense or nonsense.
Stem-cell injections and platelet-rich plasma treatments are already being performed in the United States to accelerate healing; though their effectiveness has not been empirically proven, it's not hard to imagine something along those lines becoming standard practice down the road.
The paper not only contributes to debates about the role of the Internet in the Arab Spring and other recent waves of mobilization, but also demonstrates how scholarship on the Internet in politics might move toward making more discrete, empirically grounded causal claims.
In other words, Coates' analysis of black history is not truth, but one proposition among many, and by no means so self-evident or empirically impregnable that anyone deserves to be beaten over the head as morally obtuse for not agreeing with it.
Chicks are, empirically speaking, the cutest thing on our planet Sure, not every chicken will remain cute once it grows up, but there are some strikingly beautiful subspecies, some of whom produce blue and green eggs and even have dark blue skin.
If the above is true, the core premises of Buckley that provided the framework for the linkage between the First Amendment and money in politics have eroded and the precedent might be overturned, as it is no longer empirically or conceptually valid.
My claim is that you're conflating — I get that you hate his social policies, I get that you see that he thinks his social policies are justified by what he thinks empirically true in the world of data and facts and human difference.
The discovery of supergravity in 1976 has yet to be empirically proven, which has kept the achievement out of the running for a Nobel prize despite its influence over the development of string theory and the advancement of physics as a whole.
"We have empirically shown for the first time that in the vast majority of cases, a crab which has one sea anemone removed will split the other into two new ones," the researchers write in the paper published this week in the journal Peerj.
While there is no empirically concrete link between joblessness and terrorism, unemployment can contribute to a broader sense of marginalization and grievance that can drive young people to commit acts of violence, whether they live in Nairobi, Baghdad, or the Brussels neighborhood of Molenbeek.
Even if Robinson just gets a suspension—something that, empirically speaking, is far more likely to happen to a premium player after a first offense than an outright dismissal—then Alabama would be out its two most gifted tackles for however long Robinson is sidelined.
While the new study pushes back the timeline of empirically proven bread-baking, previous research suggested humans experimented with proto-flour as early as 30,000 years ago, so bread may have a much more extended history than is currently borne out by concrete evidence.
An answer lies in two core features of Gazan individual and collective psychology, which my colleagues and I have studied empirically and as I have come to observe them personally in now over two decades of regular stays in Gaza: being marginalized and dehumanized.
With that baneful "illusion" gone, and with all our psychopharmaceuticals and empirically grounded cognitive therapy techniques firmly in place, can we assert that we've advanced toward some more rational state of mental health than that enjoyed by our forebears in the heyday of analysis?
" But it's not partisan, he insists, to put Trump in another category given that he "says more things that are demonstrably, empirically false on a daily basis than any other president before him in the modern era and more so than any major U.S. politician.
"Empirically, in Saudi Arabia, the granting of a robot rights seems to be correlated with increases rather than decreases in general human rights," he says, pointing to recent changes like letting Jewish people work in the country, and the decision to give women the right to drive.
Not only could all this clearly be seen in the data to be empirically false (later verified by careful academic work), but it was inconsistent with trade theory, which unequivocally predicts that production workers in the rich country will be hurt by expanded trade with poorer exporters.
What's more, in a stronger economy banks should be able to find more worthwhile investment opportunities to lend against, and borrowers are more likely to be able to repay those loans; • Third, empirically, negative interest rates have not crippled the banking sectors in Denmark, Switzerland or Sweden.
We're not going to jump into the minefield of ethnography here or determine whether this is empirically the case for an entire group of people (especially one as broadly defined as "white people"); certain members of our staff's liberal usage of hot sauce would suggest otherwise.
That was a reaction to the arid logical positivism he was taught as a student—the idea, once dominant in the English-speaking academic world, that philosophy is really a branch of science and that the only knowledge that matters is what can be empirically verified.
Of course, this environment does not exactly replicate the angel investing environment (and we take great pains to empirically analyze the differences), yet it provides a variety of remarkably substantial benefits, particularly since systematic data from angel investment and venture capital deals is almost impossible to access.
In contrast to the real, photographic beauty of the universe, captured by sophisticated observatories like the Hubble Space Telescope, the work of space artists bridges the gap between what is empirically known about the cosmos, and what can be realistically imaged from our perspective on our planet.
It may be impossible and foolhardy to empirically assign a particular sound or style to represent an entire decade, but you could do a lot worse than pinpointing the pulsating thrust of Trent Reznor's output in the 2010s as the defining reverberations of the last ten years.
A college degree is empirically more valuable than it's been in decades, but if higher education becomes a proxy for the unwinnable war over American political identity, Congress will never pass comprehensive legislation, the country won't solve the student debt crisis, and, most critically, our institutions will languish.
Long-term conclusions showed possible negative impacts on the infant's behavior and cognition, but again, there was no way to tell whether these impacts were from marijuana or other factors known empirically to have similar effects, such as poverty, low socioeconomic status, and use of nicotine or alcohol.
Their mission is to sketch an empirically and theoretically plausible scenario in which the fast-food industry is subjected to a $15-an-hour minimum wage over a fairly aggressive phase-in schedule without leading to layoffs, reduced profits, or massive financial reallocations away from other categories of spending.
So after tossing 83% of my entire closet on my bedroom floor, I ended up in a black V-neck; a sports bra that didn't look too sports bra-ish; and patterned, mesh-inset, double-layered mushroom-hued shorts (an empirically ugly color that's somehow very chic for workout gear).
But where Zymergen concentrates on empirically derived ways to improve productivity, the expertise of Arzeda's machine-learning systems and scientists is in applying a theoretical understanding of how the shape into which proteins fold determines their function, thus making them better at what they do, or able to do something new.
If Murray and Harris want to make a science out of their intuitions about how different groups of people have been "tuned" to behave, they will need to come up with a coherent biological account of what exactly genetic "tuning" of behavior entails and how it might be assessed empirically.
I heard an interesting piece on NPR recently, about "post-truth" news: In a nutshell, it's no longer how empirically convincing an article or narrative may be to an audience that counts, but how powerfully the account "reverberates emotionally" and corresponds to the beliefs and values already held by specific, "niche" audiences.
The intense hostility to political establishments of all kinds among what could be called "chaos voters" helps explain what Pew Research and others have found: a growing distrust among Republican voters of higher education as well as empirically based science, both of which are increasingly seen as allied with the liberal establishment.
Tapper, in an interview with POLITICO, defended the unusually aggressive posture of TV anchors by saying he doesn't think it should be controversial to say "using your political office to push foreign nations to dig up dirt on your political opponents" is empirically wrong, as he implored Republicans to say on his show.
Rabbi Geoffrey Mitelman, the founding director of Sinai and Synapses, an organization that seeks to bridge the scientific and religious worlds, told me recently that science can help clergy better aid those they counsel by showing which types of social and behavioral practices are empirically most likely to foster their emotional, moral and spiritual goals.
Now, as some critics have pointed out, it's impossible to empirically confirm how strong domestically grown pot was back in the day due to inferior testing and sampling methods, however, there does seem to be enough prevailing research, firsthand testimony, and common sense to show that the illicit reefer from decades ago wasn't nearly as powerful as today's.
"What frustrated me when I first entered the resume writing industry was experts throwing around pieces of wisdom without having any real data to support the advice they gave beyond their own personal experience," says Peter Yang, CEO of Resume Writing Services, parent company of ResumeGo, who designed the study to try to empirically settle the debate over resume length.
"This study is the first, to our knowledge, to empirically support the long held belief that psoriasis patients are more prone to serious liver problems compared to patients without psoriasis and those with diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis which are treated with similar medications," said senior study author Dr. Joel Gelfand of the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia.
It's not just that they are baggy and sort of shapeless, it's not just that there's nothing less suave than digging your wallet/phone out of a pocket on your leg, it's that cargo shorts have been known for years to be empirically ugly, yet men—only men, these things are the most male clothing item since the codpiece—insist on wearing them.
Yes, performing a rim job at a festival is empirically disgusting because of the sweat and dirt and overall griminess, but what is not disgusting is freedom—freedom to explore sexuality; freedom to consensually partake in sexual acts; freedom to learn through experience the specific top notes and combination flavors found within the folds of a desert-dipped, sweat-tinged ass.
Drivers often expressed frustration that despite the deluge of reporting on poor working conditions, multiple studies empirically proving subminimum wages, a wave of suicides among app-based drivers and traditional taxi drivers, all the exposés on the fundamental exploitation that underwrites the UberLyft business model, and fierce rhetoric from politicians along with rounds of uncoordinated regulations, things have only gotten worse.
My empirically-based model of the new administration's tax, infrastructure and government spending policies (especially the tax policies) forecasts that they'd combine to make a bad situation far worse, derailing the U.S. economy and if enacted now, "Trumponomics" could create a primary drag of up to 2 percent on U.S. GDP (gross domestic product) - excluding such secondary effects as higher interest rates, stronger USD FX rates and viciously spiraling deflation.
Timothy Bartik has articulated an empirically based approach to revitalizing communities that lost jobs in tradable sectors: expand Commerce Department services that help small manufacturers overcome financing and technology barriers, while helping to link them up to global supply chains; invest in local infrastructure, services and improved land quality (brownfields, troubled neighborhoods) to encourage business development; and close local skills gaps with training and apprenticeship (earn while you learn) programs.

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