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48 Sentences With "makes human"

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

And oh yeah, by the way, menstruation makes human life possible!
He thinks they still lack one major component that makes human-machine conversations more complete: visual interactions.
Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg is optimistic about a future where AI makes human life better.
But while that makes human interactions go smoothly, it's less adaptive when we use it on animals.
Chicago-based StratEx, which makes human resources software, no longer demands that sales reps have college degrees.
Radiolab makes human interest stories out of science and philosophy's most difficult questions, interweaving these mysteries with music.
In its blog post, Google does a great job explaining what makes human actions so difficult to classify.
At least, he added coyly, not within "the finite period of time remaining before machine intelligence makes human intelligence irrelevant."
Gusto, which makes human-resources software for small businesses, has a helpful guide to hiring your first employee (in the US).
It was now our turn to face mortality and, more than ever, to follow the question of what makes human life meaningful.
During calls, Portal's native AI code recognizes shapes of faces to zoom in, and makes human voices sound crisp against background noise.
It makes human interface hardware and software, including touchpads for computer laptops, and touch, display driver, and fingerprint biometrics technology for smartphones.
"I truly think that every natural mark or scar tells a story and makes human body even more beautiful and interesting!" added another supporter.
Back projection makes human beings appear miniscule in comparison to the images of a giant raging ape displayed on a screen in the background.
A lecturer at the University of East London, Lomas specializes in a field known as positive psychology, the study of what makes human beings happy.
In May last year, it bought Cellular Dynamics International Inc, a U.S. biotechnology firm that makes human-induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell lines and tissue cells.
So do you think we should value art and culture not just for strategic reasons but as an important part of what makes human civilization worthwhile?
Past deals include the 2015 purchase of Cellular Dynamics International Inc, a U.S. biotechnology firm that makes human-induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell lines and tissue cells.
San Francisco-based Zenefits, a health insurance broker that makes human resources software for other startups, achieved its $103 billion valuation just two years after its 2013 debut.
But that's a narrow view of what makes human beings human: Human-level AI is not human-level sociability, or appearance, or personality, or a million other things.
Zapruder is a gifted writer and storyteller who delicately unravels a minor mystery few people know or care about, but that she makes human, complex and quite interesting.
They need to push for a thorough re-evaluation of US foreign policy that makes human rights a much bigger priority in how we handle business beyond our borders.
Pangolin scales are made of keratin, the same material that makes human fingernails and hair, and practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine believe they can improve blood circulation, cure skin disorders and infections.
I wanted to ask what it is that makes human beings harm others so brutally, and how we ought to understand those who never lose hold of their humanity in the face of violence.
There are people who argue that what really makes human beings more moral over time is simply GDP growth — as economies become richer, people have more of the psychological preconditions met for acting altruistically.
Myers-Briggs makes human resources into an algorithm: Give your employee an online quiz, and within minutes you'll know whether they're social (E) or quiet (I), interested in details (S) or the big picture (N).
It has a saving grace, though, in Riseborough, who overcomes an attention-grabbing hairdo — a two-tone affair resembling an alien warrior's helmet — and makes human and disarmingly charming what could have been a flat, cartoonish character.
But my preference would be a slow, safe, and incremental approach, a la Wernher von Braun's vision for spaceflight, rather than rushing into another space race that makes human life and safety secondary to symbolic victories BEN: Slow and steady wins the race, for sure.
Among other problems, Zenefits, which makes human resources software for small companies, said it had discovered that one of its founders and a former chief executive, Parker Conrad, created a program to allow sales representatives to skirt requirements on a state insurance licensing course.
Spiers is a weekly business columnist for Gulf News,"Carole Spiers: Respect makes human interactions work" Gulf News.
Bentham thought that society was dependent upon people's ability to pursue the greater good, not just the short-term satisfaction of their own desires. The advancement of natural rights, which he saw as celebrating selfishness, was to provide the means to break down the social community that makes human life bearable.
How much life should we construct in space? In general, biotic ethics may approve these developments if they help to propagate life. This ethical guidance may be in fact vital when advancing technology makes human designs self-fulfilling. Life can then survive only if the will to survive is itself always propagated.
In most cases he turns out to be right, but occasionally certain phantasy creatures do turn out to exist after all. Despite his high I.Q. Adhemar does sometimes makes human errors or turns out to be fallible. His inventions sometimes fail or his laboratory explodes. Some of this failings also lead to new adventures, for instance in "Het Zevende Spuitje" or "Aboe-Markoeb" (1966).
The OED has "its use is now widely seen as depreciatory or offensive", referring to English Today no. 39 (1992): "The term Mohammedan [...] is considered offensive or pejorative to most Muslims since it makes human beings central in their religion, a position which only Allah may occupy". Other dictionaries, such as Merriam-Webster, do not label the term as offensive. The term remains in limited use.
It excludes the experiences of other nations, but offers Semitic history as if it were the history of all humanity. The principle of submission (both in Islam as well as in Christianity) is disregarded as one of the major failings. It allows rich people to abuse the ordinary people and makes human development stagnant. They advocate Turanism and abandonment of Islam as an Arab religion (Nihal Atsiz and others).
Human beings, writes social anthropologist Ernest Gellner, are not genetically programmed to be members of this or that social order. You can take a human infant and place it into any kind of social order and it will function acceptably. What makes human society so distinctive is the fabulous range of quite different forms it takes across the world. Yet in any given society, the range of permitted behaviours is quite narrowly constrained.
Contemporary rhetoric focuses on cultural contexts and general structures of rhetoric structures. Kenneth Burke is one of the most notable contemporary U.S. rhetoricians who made major contributions to the rhetoric of identification. One of his most foundational ideas is as follows, “rhetoric makes human unity possible, that language use is symbolic action, and that rhetoric is symbolic inducement.” Branching from this, Herrick states that identification in rhetoric is crucial to persuasion, and thus to cooperation, consensus, compromise, and action.
"Free will does not exist", according to Luther in his letter De Servo Arbitrio to Erasmus translated into German by Justus Jonas (1526), in that sin makes human beings completely incapable of bringing themselves to God. Noting Luther's criticism of the Catholic Church, Erasmus described him as "a mighty trumpet of gospel truth" while agreeing, "It is clear that many of the reforms for which Luther calls are urgently needed."Galli, Mark, and Olsen, Ted. 131 Christians Everyone Should Know.
Additionally, the 45th Amendment to the constitution makes human rights treaties approved by Congress by a special procedure enjoy the same hierarchical position as a constitutional amendment. The hierarchical position of treaties in relation to domestic legislation is of relevance to the discussion on whether and how the latter can abrogate the former and vice versa. The constitution does not have a supremacy clause with the same effects as the one in the US constitution, which is of interest to the discussion on the relation between treaties and legislation of the states of Brazil.
Aside from the title, both stories involving a gardener who operates a lawnmower, and two minor references, the film has no similarity to the original Stephen King story which involves a satyr who makes human sacrifices to Pan. The film was originally titled Stephen King's The Lawnmower Man, but King won a lawsuit to have his name removed from the credits. He then won further damages when his name was included in the film title for its home video release. A sequel, Lawnmower Man 2: Beyond Cyberspace, was released in 1996, with Austin O'Brien as the only returning actor from the original film.
He speculates that maybe what makes human cognition unique is "the peculiar way we explicitly formulate our ideas using nested or recursive structures of symbols" (p. 250). Dehaene suggests that computers could become more like animal brains if they had greater communication between processes, more learning plasticity, and more autonomy over decisions. Of these design changes, he suggests that "at least in principle, I see no reason why they would not lead to an artificial consciousness" (p. 261). Dehaene suggests that the hard problem of consciousness "just seems hard because it engages ill- defined intuitions", and it "will evaporate" as people better understand "cognitive neuroscience and computer simulations" (p. 262).
Other tracks combine personal and political themes, implicating a connection between global capitalism and personal struggle; "Nat West-Barclays-Midlands-Lloyds" was written as a critique of overseas banking credit policies, but also concerned Richey Edwards' issues involving overdrafts and refused loans. Marc Burrows of Drowned in Sound considered the song to be an accurate prediction of "global financial meltdown" and its effects on everyday life. The single "Motorcycle Emptiness", meanwhile, criticizes consumerism as a "shallow dream" that makes human life overtly commercialized. "Little Baby Nothing", a duet between Traci Lords and Bradfield, was described by Priya Elan of the NME as a "perfect snapshot of [female] innocence bodysnatched and twisted".
Schopenhauer, Arthur, The world as will and representation, vol II, pg 635 Moreover, the business of biological life is a war of all against all filled with constant physical pain and distress, not merely unsatisfied desires. There is also the constant dread of death on the horizon to consider, which makes human life worse than animals. Reason only compounds our suffering by allowing us to realize that biology's agenda is not something we would have chosen had we been given a choice, but it is ultimately helpless to prevent us from serving it. Schopenhauer saw in artistic contemplation a temporary escape from the act of willing.
In their book, Metaphors We Live By, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson helped pioneer this approach, claiming that metaphor is what makes human thought special. All language, they argued, is permeated with metaphor, whose use in fact constitutes distinctively human — that is, distinctively abstract — thought. To conceptualize things which cannot be directly perceived — intangibles such as time, life, reason, mind, society or justice — we have no choice but to set out from more concrete and directly perceptible phenomena such as motion, location, distance, size and so forth. In all cultures across the world, according to Lakoff and Johnson, people resort to such familiar metaphors as ideas are locations, thinking is moving and mind is body.
In 2014, the Phoenix City Council approved a five-year plan to combat trafficking in the city. During this time, they hope to create a cultural shift that makes human trafficking unacceptable by having a Stop Human Trafficking campaign, partnering with media outlets, promoting the national hotline, putting up awareness posters. They hope to educate the media on how to report human trafficking, partner with human trafficking experts, and conduct trainings for businesses and organizations that are more likely to come in contact with victims. They plan to increase law enforcement by holding mandatory training through law enforcement, identifying runaways through partnerships with the police missing persons unit, getting a better diversion program for trafficking victims, and better technology to identify pimps and victims.
Rahner states that spirit represents the unique mode of existence of a single person when that person becomes self-conscious and is always oriented towards the incomprehensible Mystery called God. However, it is only in the free acceptance by the subject of this mystery and in its unpredictable disposal of the subject that the person can genuinely undertake this process of returning to the self. Conversely, matter is the condition which makes human beings estranged from themselves towards other objects in the world and makes possible an immediate intercommunication with other spiritual creatures in time and space. Even if there is an essential difference between spirit and matter, that is not understood as an essential opposition: the relationship between the two can be said as "the intrinsic nature of matter to develop towards spirit".
It is at the same time the "vapor" (Dampf), which is at the bottom of all life, driving forward all life up to its highest manifestations." and Spirit (Geist)."Frings, pp 15-17. "...the essential difference between animal and man is the presence of Spirit (Geist), which makes human life highly independent of drives, and independent of attachment to environment (in contrast to the basically environment-stricken animal).... This is clear when we consider that man forms his own environment in social life and history as well as in using artificial means to change it for better adjustment and comfort.... Spirit elevates man above world and above himself (as organic being).... Spirit, then, cannot have its foundation or source in this objective world, but only in the primordial principal of the cosmos (Urgrund) itself." Likewise, science alone can not fully account the sustaining spiritual forces that lift man and culture beyond the limitations of practical necessity, adaptation and natural selection.
First 4d9f from Castellers de la Vila de Gràcia presented during the Fiesta Mayor de Gràcia festivities in 2014.) 2 de 8 with folre from Castellers de la Vila de Gràcia in November 20, 2011 in Plaza de la Vila de Gràcia square. 3 de 9 with folre done in the XXV Concurs de Castells competition, in Tarragona (2014) Vano de cinc of Castellers de la Vila de Gràcia at Plaça de la Vila de Gràcia in the Festa Major de Gràcia (22/08/2009) 3 de 7 aixecat per sota about to be loaded. Festa Major de Gràcia (22/08/2009) 4 de 8 in Gràcia (9/5/2010) The Castellers de la Vila de Gràcia (), created in 1996, are a colla castellera, based in Vila de Gràcia that makes human castles. They made their first public presentation in 1997 supported by the groups Castellers de Terrassa, the Castellers de Sants and the Castellers de Sant Andreu de la Barca.

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