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145 Sentences With "makes sense of"

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

It makes sense of the senseless; it suggests a plan.
The great detective, inhumanly brilliant, makes sense of things again.
It just makes sense of a very base, gut-instinct level.
This is the link that makes sense of what Trump is doing.
MORE, who makes sense of another newsy week during The DeBrief segment.
Healthcare isn't the only scenario where a "remote advisor" makes sense, of course.
This makes sense, of course, because Miku is unlike any artist they've previously opened for.
And secular people have a parallel set of views that makes sense of their lives.
A successful algorithm will reveal important truths about how the brain makes sense of the world.
It doesn't just produce the movements; it unifies them, makes sense of them, makes them art.
Rather, it is anything—myths, rituals, even illusions—that makes sense of our passage through life.
I guess what I was uncertain of is how Lisicky makes sense of his own work.
This makes sense, of course: within the game's lore, vault 276 opens before most of the others.
Socrates's view also makes sense of our reluctance to adopt medication-assisted treatment and needle exchange programs.
Setting down the days makes sense of them; shaping the text requires an understanding of the story.
Platform that makes sense of the world's API data to change how APIs are created, debugged and used.
That's because you don't merely hear sound with your ears, your brain makes sense of what you hear.
Sampha makes sense of the pain, the growth, and the indescribable loss by turning it into unforgettable art.
Despite whether it makes sense of is absolutely irrelevant, it is what you thought at that very moment.
Her heat makes sense of the character's contradictions and is beautifully foiled by Mr. Wetherall's lizard sang-froid.
Last week we launched a newsletter to help everyone makes sense of what matters in the 2020 election race.
It could be because it makes sense of something that they had trouble to coming to grips with before.
His reasoning reveals some fascinating insights about the way the brain makes sense of language, whether written or spoken.
They will want to talk exclusively about the plan's merits and why it makes sense of the American people.
In the way that the brain makes sense of the world, it looked like it had always been there.
In their scramble to makes sense of nonsensical things, they distort, codify, blame, aggrandize, omit, betray, mythologize, you name it.
Lucia Moses, a deputy editor at Business Insider, makes sense of it all with a weekly newsletter sent every Wednesday.
It also makes sense of the dialogue at the end of the episode from the FBI, after Elliott shows up.
It makes sense, of course: Chris Pratt's Peter Quill and the gang have become as popular as Spider-Man and Captain America.
Deep learning software makes sense of data like images or audio by looking for statistical patterns it has extracted from past data.
So we have What in the World, which is where our world news editor Miriam Elder makes sense of it all for us.
So let's take a quick tour of his recent exploits and try to set them in a context that makes sense of them.
But rather than a cookbook, this is a glorious collection of tales about how one particular family makes sense of who they are.
It makes sense of course that schools should regulate the display banners, symbols and even words that might be considered inflammatory and divisive.
It is easy to look to him, to look to the moment of my conception, and hope for an answer that makes sense of myself.
"I think that, at some point, someone will create a digital book that completely makes sense of the format, and then the gates will open."
Here's an explanation that makes sense of all the research: The benefits of early childhood education aren't coming from the academic skills they teach students.
It's the kind of story we're hungry for now, because The Family, like any good conspiracy theory, makes sense of what would otherwise be absurd, nonsensical.
In other words, the political edge to Lee's work is understated, a way of understanding how the artist makes sense of the contradictions in his surroundings.
Unfortunately for me, I just don't believe there's a God or lots of gods or a Tao or anything else that makes sense of the world.
The intelligence layer makes sense of these millions of data points through an ensemble of machine learning algorithms, ranging in complexity from simple rules to advanced networks.
Baldwin makes sense of this struggle through a description of racism that is equally eloquent and heartbreaking, and reads as though it could have been written today.
Eli is, in his own words, "a rolling tumbleweed of confusion and despair," and the phone is a tool by which his mind makes sense of trauma.
It makes sense, of course: being thin helps you run on hardwood every night for 30 minutes a night, makes you faster, makes your respiratory system work better.
Re "Spiced-Up Breast Milk's Benefits" (The Checkup, March 29): Eating a balanced diet makes sense of course, in utero and then breastfeeding for as long as possible.
One particular scene makes sense of an impossible situation—not being Tammy Wynette but standing by your man—as the film's Hillary character deals with her husband's philandering.
The Hill's Reid Wilson makes sense of the conflicting metrics at play as Democrats seek to flip the 23 seats they need to take back the House (The Hill).
A reference point, in the way he worries what she'll think, worries what he thinks of her, makes sense of his own life by way of reporting it back.
Indeed, the idea of a pardon helps makes sense of Manafort's decision not to cooperate with investigators, even though cooperation could save him years or decades of prison time.
The startup's "Enterprise Immune System" consists of a box that sits on a company's network and listens to what's going on, combined with software that makes sense of that traffic.
The blame game: Democrats are struggling to makes sense of what went wrong in the Georgia special election this week, after Democrat Jon Ossoff lost to Republican candidate Karen Handel.
"I would say because we are social beings who need to place the things around ourselves into a social scheme that makes sense of them," she tells The Verge over email.
But Ms. Worsham makes sense of it with an energetic production that's lucid even in scenes of chaos, which she balances with slowed-down moments of intimacy and quietly concentrated monologues.
It helps makes sense of Strain's moral objection to Warren's wealth tax — a view that strikes me as largely wrongheaded, but makes sense under a set of very particular ideological assumptions.
In his new autobiographical novel, "Gone With the Mind," Mark Leyner seems to split the difference: He makes sense of his life by unpacking just how ridiculous it is to be alive.
Just like how I don't know anything about that (though I'll look into it), I don't know the first thing about how one makes sense of the 34,432 Krampus movies out there.
While it's hitting both platforms, it'll be a bit more capable on Android — which makes sense, of course, as Google has a whole lot more control over things on their own turf.
The eschatological orientation makes sense of the teaching on marriage, for now people will be able to fulfill their vows perfectly, in large part because marriage itself will soon come to an end.
And there is room for Legion's future to talk about something big and important in a way that not only better grounds the show but makes sense of its many thin supporting characters.
The circuit board also helped makes sense of an important aspect of the bombing: It controlled a timer, meaning that the bomb was not set off by a barometric trigger that registers altitude.
It makes sense, of course, why Jordan, thoughtful and focused in person, has become the man filmmakers turn to for roles that demand things of an actor -- be they physical, mental or both.
How can we aggregate all this data so that we can overlay these networks between shippers and carriers and makes sense of them in a digital format so we can move more with less?
This kind of parallelism—a current or slightly outré tic of M.F.A. workshops—always puts more weight on the second verb, and "makes sense of" is too weak to stand up to the pressure.
Not Really Nitasha Tiku makes sense of Google's recent pay equity study, which showed that in one case a group of men was about to be underpaid relative to women who do the same job.
It was around the same time that Magionos, a cellist and former employee at Deloitte & Touche, joined the FBI as a forensic accounting specialist who makes sense of complex financial transactions and ferrets out fraud.
The documentary tries to makes sense of how exoneration does not simply erase the negative impact the criminal justice system has had on exonerees, and the need for reentry programs that help formerly incarcerated individuals.
If we (the tribes in which we are embedded) start doing different things, being different kinds of people, beliefs are likely to shift in a way that justifies and makes sense of those new actions.
Horror common wisdom states that the scariest evil is unknown, inexplicable and random; once the monster is revealed in a movie and the mind makes sense of it, much of the fear it inspires dissipates.
On her trip to China for a sham marriage as a final goodbye to her dying grandmother, she doesn't unwind uncritically, but instead makes sense of the complicated, irreconcilable paradoxes of the East Asian diaspora.
A better mix of science education to make sense of the natural world and social studies to makes sense of how people live in the world can go a long way toward developing more effective citizens.
In this sense, "the axis of evil" is, arguably, a kind of myth, an explanation that makes sense of calamity in a world we think of as otherwise good and in which we can all participate.
But the entire chunk of code that understands what words you speak to Siri, that's an algorithm; and the chunk of code that then makes sense of what you just asked Siri, that's an algorithm, too.
Gradually, the quirks and the knowledge cohere into an argument that makes sense of all that melancholy: In small, homogeneous nations governed by a rigid social conformity, it takes a particularly extreme temperament to stand out.
Foreman makes sense of the images left behind by his dead father, Arthur MacCaig, a New Jersey-born Irish-American who settled in Paris and made documentaries about Northern Ireland that showcased the perspectives of Irish nationalists.
Meyers tries (and fails) to makes sense of Giuliani's story in his bonkers, shouty interview with CNN's Chris Cuomo, and also tracks how Trump's excuses and explanations to the press shifted over the course of the weekend.
He adds that the text analysis API was already being used by news and media companies "to makes sense of news articles at scale" — so the team has now stepped in with a tailored product to better serve that demand.
As more and more data is collected on people, both at home and in the hospital, Van Houten expects to see artificial intelligence that makes sense of it all — taking burdens off physicians and improving the precision of diagnosing disease.
When They See Us (which premiered on Netflix on May 403) richly understands that in America — a country that makes sense of itself through images on screens — who you appear to be matters far more than who you actually are.
It's integral to the way America makes sense of itself — and it's why, by saying that people who've been in America their whole lives aren't fully American, Donald Trump is turning his back on one of the country's noblest ideals.
Facts on the Ground is a puzzling and intellectually rankling show because it reminds us, that is, everyone who employs language to makes sense of the world around us, particularly in relation to power, that language has some profound limitations.
Tasha: For me, the time-travel train ending felt a little more definitive, because it wraps Stefan's guilt and sense of failure up into such a neat package, and makes sense of a backstory that might otherwise feel pretty irrelevant and random.
Yeshimabeit Milner and Lucas Mason-Brown are the co-founders of Data For Black Lives (D4BL), an organization that compiles facts and figures to try to makes sense of black people's individual and collective experiences as an act of social and political resistance.
Spend enough time with it, and I know too that the game will unveil some new surprise—an outfit that makes sense of that locked door outside the police station, something new to build from those piles and piles of Lego bricks.
When Hegel wrote that the owl of Minerva flies at dusk, he meant that philosophy makes sense of the world only retrospectively: After the world has given birth to a reality, the philosophers arrive on the scene to help us understand it.
This not only allowed him to end the book with a devastatingly funny punchline but created a context that makes sense of the rawness of protagonist Alexander Portnoy's rambling reflections on being young, horny, Jewish, and in thrall to an overbearing mother.
In this comedic "sociocultural history," the Bronx native pays a visit to the neighborhood where he grew up in the 1940s and makes sense of the fact that the majority-white Bronx of his youth is now mostly populated by black and brown people.
But while his last company (Amazon's Prime Air) folded, he has decided to try his hand at delivery by drone again with Tripperell, a San Francisco-based venture that makes sense of the cryptocurrency token space to create a bridge from blockchain to delivery.
But on top of that, I always want to make sure we're synthesizing the avalanche of bewildering news that seems to come at us every day in a way that makes sense of things for the viewer and gives them important context for understanding what's happening and why.
According to the complaint, State Department officials spoke with Giuliani "in an attempt to 'contain the damage' to U.S. national security," and at the same time met with Ukrainian leaders to help them makes sense of the differing messages they were receiving from official US channels and Giuliani.
But assuming that ego trumps strategy in Washington these days, the desire to cut a North Korean nuclear deal makes sense of some of the recent puzzling moves from the President, particularly the indecent alacrity with which he accepted Kim's olive branch delivered via Seoul a couple of weeks ago.
With his quintet, Inside Straight, this masterful bassist (and emerging impresario) makes sense of a broad lineage in jazz and black music: You'll detect hints of Blue Note swing, '60s soul, Afro-Caribbean lilt and Coltrane-esque modal muscle, though the band pulls it all together into a sound of its own.
The idea is that this data is delivered in a timely and actionable manner, helped in part by Tenzo being mobile-first, but also in the way the platform plugs into and makes sense of other data sources and software a restaurant runs its business on top of, such as POS systems, scheduling software or social media.
With it the Riethmuller floribunda reaches the height of sophisticated artifice, everything about it carefully designed for decorator effects. Nothing else makes sense of its still rather shocking red-orange colour.
Anthony Gregory of the Independent Institute named Eight Ways "the best explanation of the political spectrum," saying it "makes sense of all the major mysteries."Gregory, Anthony, "What About the 'Real' Left?", Lewrockwell.com, July 6, 2011.
Edward Said, "Between Worlds: Edward Said makes sense of his life", London Review of Books, vol. 20, no. 9, 7 May 1998, pp. 3-7. In 1997 "Amy Foster" was made into the film, Swept from the Sea.
Elie Maynard Adams (December 29, 1919 – November 17, 2003) was an American philosopher of value and meaning devoted to understanding and criticizing the philosophical foundations of modern Western culture and developing an intellectual vision that makes sense of the human condition.
Luna asks Regan to help her with her transitioning and, although she agrees, she finds herself worried about Luna and her safety. The novel follows Regan as she makes sense of her sister’s decision. Other problems arise for Regan as she is attending high school.
The first time was during the reign of Caligula when he was accused of majestas against the emperor. Cassius Dio provides a confused account.Dio, Historia Romana, LIX.25.5 Steven H. Rutledge provides an interpretation that makes sense of Dio: Cerialis and another senator, Sextus Papinius, were tortured, but neither provided any information.
Many techniques are used to analyze music. Metaphor and figurative description may be a part of analysis, and a metaphor used to describe pieces, "reifies their features and relations in a particularly pungent and insightful way: it makes sense of them in ways not formerly possible." Even absolute music may be viewed as a, "metaphor for the universe," or nature as, "perfect form" ( cited in ).
They are the descendants of Anjana Jata Shankara, the son of Atisur Bhadra, the son of Jat King Virabhadra. Muhnot Nainsi reported the existence of "Anjana Jat" in a large number of villages of Merta City. In the caste-census of 1891, they are reported to have taken their caste-title or nomenclature from their home village. This statement makes sense of the evidence of the vagat.
He communicates with thought transference, can float and can move through whole walls. Dispensing justice, Ky eradicates the Marshal. Jaeger has been killed too and the Investigator now makes sense of the situation. Sondergaard and Cotton elect to stay on Solos to see the other Solonians go through the mutation process, while Jo and the Doctor slip away, their mission from the Time Lords complete.
The Mahāyāna tradition includes the doctrine of the three bodies of the Buddha (trikāya). The first is the body of transformation (nirmānakāya), the second is the body of bliss/enjoyment (sambhogakāya), and the third is the body of law/essence (dharmakāya). Each body makes sense of a different function of the Buddha. Another common theme in the Mahāyāna tradition of Buddhism, is the path of the .
He immerses himself in the 'bewitching sensuousness of the rustic, amoral world', only to emerge as an 'involved outsider'. He finds rational inquiry meaningless and begins a metaphorical journey inwards. The narrative strategy of the novel is characterized by the matter-of-fact inclusion of fantastic or mythical elements into seemingly realistic fiction. The narration also makes sense of multiple separate realities (see magic realism).
Two-dimensionalism is an approach to semantics in analytic philosophy. It is a theory of how to determine the sense and reference of a word and the truth- value of a sentence. It is intended to resolve the puzzle: How is it possible to discover empirically that a necessary truth is true? Two-dimensionalism provides an analysis of the semantics of words and sentences that makes sense of this possibility.
She has published essays and articles in Exponent II, LDS Living, Journal of Mormon History, and Dialogue. She is also a frequent speaker on podcasts and at conferences. A longtime collaborator with her husband, Terryl Givens, she is the co-author of The God Who Weeps: How Mormonism Makes Sense of Life and Crucible of Doubt: Reflections on the Quest for Faith. Her most recent collaboration with her husband is entitled The Christ Who Heals.
As for forgotten evidence, PEC also makes sense of this phenomenon. An example would be where someone learned about relativity theory and came to hold the belief “E=mc^2”. After a long time, this person might have lost evidence supporting this specific belief, but we are intuitively drawn to claiming that they are still justified. PEC allows for this because the individual is justified in holding “E=mc^2” because they hold that belief.
Because of its great popularity, its message had a greater impact than many novels of its kind. Apart from the terrorist attacks of September 11, the novel also sheds light on the experience of terrible tragedy. Rebecca Miller of the Library Journal claims "Foer nimbly explores the misunderstandings that compound when grief silences its victims." The novel makes sense of and provides a way of moving on from the grief of the specific catastrophe.
Two- dimensionalism is an approach to semantics in analytic philosophy. It is a theory of how to determine the sense and reference of a word and the truth- value of a sentence. It is intended to resolve a puzzle that has plagued philosophy for some time, namely: How is it possible to discover empirically that a necessary truth is true? Two-dimensionalism provides an analysis of the semantics of words and sentences that makes sense of this possibility.
The Ptolemaic setting makes sense of many of the poet's enigmatic choices. Thus for example the final cluster of aitia is not an arbitrary addition but neatly associates the story's end with the beginning of Greek settlement in Egypt. The island of Thera was the mother city of Cyrene and symbolized Greek settlement of Libya. Aegina was once home to the Argonauts Peleus and Telamon, exiled thence for murdering their brother, thus symbolizing the Greek diaspora.
Gestalt means "form" or "shape" in German. However, another explanation of the Kanizsa's triangle is based in evolutionary psychology and the fact that in order to survive it was important to see form and edges. The use of perceptual organization to create meaning out of stimuli is the principle behind other well-known illusions including impossible objects. The brain makes sense of shapes and symbols putting them together like a jigsaw puzzle, formulating that which is not there to that which is believable.
Modern evolutionary theory continues to develop. Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, with its tree-like model of branching common descent, has become the unifying theory of the life sciences. The theory explains the diversity of living organisms and their adaptation to the environment. It makes sense of the geological record, biogeography, parallels in embryonic development, biological homologies, vestigiality, cladistics, phylogenetics and other fields, with unrivalled explanatory power; it has also become essential to applied sciences such as medicine and agriculture.
Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) is an approach to psychological qualitative research with an idiographic focus, which means that it aims to offer insights into how a given person, in a given context, makes sense of a given phenomenon. Usually these phenomena relate to experiences of some personal significance, such as a major life event, or the development of an important relationship. It has its theoretical origins in phenomenology and hermeneutics, and key ideas from Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty are often cited.Smith, J.A. (2007).
Andromeda Klein is a teenage girl with many problems. She is unattractive, hard of hearing, her best friend and former magick partner Daisy recently died of cancer, "St. Steve" her boyfriend has gone missing, her mother is completely overbearing and her father is a paranoid conspiracist. She makes sense of the world through her complete immersion in the world of Magick and tarot, even taking on a job at her local library, which conveniently houses an impressive collection of esoteric books on just such subjects.
Attempts to explain the symbolism of the rite also must negotiate the illogical placement of the coin in the mouth. The Latin term viaticum makes sense of Charon’s obol as "sustenance for the journey," and it has been suggested that coins replaced offerings of food for the dead in Roman tradition.Stevens, "Charon’s Obol," p. 220. This dichotomy of food for the living and gold for the dead is a theme in the myth of King Midas, versions of which draw on elements of the Dionysian mysteries.
The L-group is used heavily in the Langlands conjectures of Robert Langlands. It is used to make precise statements from ideas that automorphic forms are in a sense functorial in the group G, when k is a global field. It is not exactly G with respect to which automorphic forms and representations are functorial, but LG. This makes sense of numerous phenomena, such as 'lifting' of forms from one group to another larger one, and the general fact that certain groups that become isomorphic after field extensions have related automorphic representations.
This concept is similar to constructionism because user makes sense of the world around them using a tool, and the interaction with this tool is helpful in shaping the understanding of the world.Swan, K. (2005). A constructivist model for thinking about learning online. Elements of quality online education: Engaging communities, 6, 13-31. It is similar to distributed cognition because it focuses on “social and material setting of cognitive activity, so that culture, context and history can be linked with the core concepts of cognition.”Hutchins, E. (2000).
Chit () is a Sanskrit word meaning awareness or consciousness,Maharishi's Teaching, Meaning of the word “Satcitananda” (Sat Chit Ananda) "true awareness", "to be aware of",Sanskrit Dictionary, chit "to understand", "to comprehend". It is a core principle in all ancient spiritual traditions originating from the Indian subcontinent. In Upanishads it is referred to as the Drishta or the Seer, the Sense that makes sense of all other sense experiences. Chit is one of the three aspects forming the Satcitananda nature of the Absolute, according to the Vedic scriptures.
Joanne Quimby, 'How to Write "Women's Poetry" without Being a "Woman Poet": Public Persona in Itō Hiromi's Early Poetry,' U.S.-Japan Women's Journal, vol. 32 (2007): 7–16. Throughout her career, however, Itō has embraced the metaphor of the poet as a shamaness. In 1991, she collaborated with the prominent feminist scholar Chizuko Ueno from Tokyo University on a collection of essays and poetry called , which the two likened to the collaboration between an Okinawan shamaness and the figure who makes sense of her utterances for the outside world.
It gave "Kir'Shara" a rating of four and a half out of five. In Matthew Kappell's book Star Trek As Myth, he said that he felt that the revelation that the previous Vulcan administration was working with the Romulans all along "suddenly makes sense of years of previously incomprehensible Vulcan policy" and linked to The Next Generation episode "Unification".Kapell (2010): p. 175 Herc, in his review for Ain't It Cool News, praised the reliability of Jeffrey Combs as Shran, but thought that there were no major surprises.
A reading path is a term used by Gunther Kress in Literacy in the New Media Age (2003). According to Kress, a professor of English Education at the University of London, a reading path is the way that the text, or text plus other features, can determine or order the way that we read it. In a linear, written text, the reader makes sense of the text according to the arrangement of the words, both grammatically and syntactically. In such a reading path, there is a sequential time to the text.
Starting in 1971, est, short for Erhard Seminars Training and also Latin for "it is" offered in-depth personal and professional development workshops, the initial program of which was called "The est Training." The est Training's purpose was to transform the way one sees and makes sense of life so that the situations one had been trying to change or tolerating clear up in the process of living itself.name="Steven M. Tipton 1982, page 176" The point was to leave participants free to be, while increasing their effectiveness and the quality of their lives. The est Training was experiential and transformational in nature.
He realizes that the new-old cats are being specifically bred to bear attributes of their ancient Egyptian ancestors. Francis immediately begins to connect his dreams to the murders, and makes sense of Felicity's past comments: a cat had been attempting to keep standard males from breeding with the special females, and killed them after they failed to comply. He also recalls that Pascal's owner idolizes Mendel, that Pascal offhandedly mentioned his owner's name being Ziebold, and that Pascal spoke of Felidae with yearning. Francis concludes that the murderer is Pascal, who really is Claudandus, and goes to confront him.
These were added to create the completed score, which appeared in a highly legible hand.Source for this paragraph: Konrad, 103 This procedure makes sense of another letter Mozart wrote to Leopold, discussing his work in Munich on the opera Idomeneo (30 December 1780), where Mozart distinguishes "composed" from "written": > I must finish [writing this letter] now, because I've got to write at > breakneck speed—everything's composed—but not written yet. In Konrad's view, Mozart had completed the "draft score" of the work, but still needed to produce the completed, final version. Of the sketches that survive, none are for solo keyboard works.
The Stuart Hall Project, together with Akomfrah's three-screen video installation The Unfinished Conversation, tells the story of cultural theorist Stuart Hall narrated through Hall's archived audio interviews and television recordings. Akomfrah explores the myriad ways that Hall influenced black British constructions of identity in the second half of the 20th century."The Stuart Hall Project (2013)", BFI, Film Forever. Hall appeared on the British radio and television for more than 50 years and spent his whole career exploring how social change makes sense of who we are, what we are entitled to and what society makes available to us.
A Story about a Bad Dream is an account of the Holocaust told from the perspective of a young girl, who makes sense of the world from her parents' expressions and her own feelings of discomfort and unhappiness. “Suddenly I was like a grown up,” the young narrator confides, describing her arrival at the deportation camp, “I had to take care of myself.” Honest and unabashed, the girl Evie offers a unique and highly personal look at the brutality played out during the Second World War. Evie, like most children, believes her parents control the universe, so she's terrified and shocked when she sees them powerless to Nazi orders.
Hal Hinson of The Washington Post said the scenes where Daniel collects his actors are the best part of the film, but the rest is outdated. In terms of religious response, Jesus of Montreal met "dead calm" on its release, in contrast to Scorsese's more controversial The Last Temptation of Christ. Critics in the Toronto International Film Festival ranked the film second in the Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time in 1993 and 2004 and fourth in 2015. In 2003, Rob Mackie of The Guardian called the film "thought-provoking and wickedly funny" and said "Lothaire Bluteau, makes a charismatic focus whose performance makes sense of the whole thing".
Sader promoted "practical economics" for ordinary consumers and citizens as a contributing editor of Lorne Nystrom's 1999 book, Just Making Change, which makes sense of complex financial issues. Since 2001, Henri has taught economics at the Labour College of Canada to prepare students with for advancing the cause of trade unions. He is currently steward of the CULR-Local 1 (CEP; the Labour College union) and an active member of Local 232 of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union. He defeated Sandra Griffith-Bonaparte for the New Democratic Party nomination in the riding of Ottawa South for the 39th Canadian federal election, on November 10, 2005.
"Instead, he argued that the paradigm determines the kinds of experiments scientists perform, the types of questions they ask, and the problems they consider important." Subsequently, the coherentist approach to science, in which a theory is validated if it makes sense of observations as part of a coherent whole, became prominent due to W.V. Quine and others. Some thinkers such as Stephen Jay Gould seek to ground science in axiomatic assumptions, such as the uniformity of nature. A vocal minority of philosophers, and Paul Feyerabend in particular, argue that there is no such thing as the "scientific method", so all approaches to science should be allowed, including explicitly supernatural ones.
Pursued by the murderous Stark, Hatherley is forced to jump from a second story window, in the process getting his thumb severed by Stark's cleaver. Hatherley survives the fall but passes out in the rose-bushes, coming to hours later by a hedge near the rail station. Holmes then makes sense of the happenings, recognizing Stark and his allies as counterfeiters, but he, Watson, and the police arrive too late: the house is on fire, and the perpetrators have fled. The press was destroyed when Hatherley's lamp was crushed inside it, setting the machine on fire and ruining the criminals' operation, although they escaped with several "bulky boxes" presumably containing counterfeit coins.
In the specific context of Genesis 1, since the days are both numbered and are referred to as "evening and morning", this can mean only normal-length days. Further, they argue that the 24-hour day is the only interpretation that makes sense of the Sabbath command in Exodus 20:8–11. YECs argue that it is a glaring exegetical fallacy to take a meaning from one context (yom referring to a long period of time in Genesis 1) and apply it to a completely different one (yom referring to normal-length days in Exodus 20). Hebrew scholars reject the rule that yôm with a number or an "evening and morning" construct can only refer to 24-hour days.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on Kant's metaphysics. By Kant's account, when one employs a concept to describe or categorize noumena (the objects of inquiry, investigation or analysis of the workings of the world), one is employing a way of describing or categorizing phenomena (the observable manifestations of those objects of inquiry, investigation or analysis). Kant posited methods by which human understanding makes sense of and thus intuits phenomena that appear to the mind: the concepts of the transcendental aesthetic, as well as that of the transcendental analytic, transcendental logic and transcendental deduction.The Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Macmillan, 1967, 1996) Volume 4, "Kant, Immanuel", section on "Critique of Pure Reason: Theme and Preliminaries", p.
One of the themes is: if there is a God, what if that God is a prick; what if that God is just a bastard? For one of the characters, when he thinks that, it all makes sense, it makes sense of the world, that the world is such a slimy world of greed and selfishness and anguish and pain that the only way that it can make any sense is if the person who created the whole thing is... it's all a macabre joke. It's almost the opposite of Genesis 1: `We were made in God's image and likeness'. If you say, `We are sinful, horrible, we're in God's likeness, therefore that's what God is like'.
Selena Welz (2012); Meet R: a programming language that makes sense of Big Data, Technology @ Work, Tendo Communications, November 2012. # 2010 Survey: 50-item survey; 735 participants from 60 countries.Karl Rexer, Heather Allen, & Paul Gearan (2010); 2010 Data Miner Survey Summary, presented at Predictive Analytics World, Oct. 2010.Karl Rexer, Heather Allen, & Paul Gearan (2011); Understanding Data Miners, Analytics Magazine, May/June 2011 (INFORMS: Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences). Citations include:Emilia Mikołajewska and Dariusz Mikołajewski (2011); System eksploracji danych na potrzeby obronności państwa], Kwartalnik Bellona, 2011, Volume 3, pages 119-129 (Data Mining system for national security purposes, Bellona Quarterly, Scientific Journal of the Polish Ministry of National Defense; Article is in Polish).
Mazar, Eilat, Excavations at the Summit of the City of David, Preliminary Report of Seasons 2005-2007, Shoham, Jerusalem and New York, 2009. Mazar presents evidence that the Large Stone Structure was an Israelite royal palace in continuous use from the 10th century until 586 BC. Her conclusion that the stepped stone structure and the large stone structure are parts of a single, massive royal palace makes sense of the biblical reference to the Millo as the House of Millo in and , describing it as the place where King Joash was assassinated in 799 BC while he slept in his bed. Millo is derived from "fill" (Hebrew milui). The stepped stone support structure is built of fills.
This melodrama, therefore, assumes the dimensions of a political fable about people who look for love in the wrong places and find it on the run. The title role is played by a young actor, Patrick Garcia, who bears the full weight of his film's dilemmas, but never shows signs of weariness, only the strain of a kind of portrayal that acts, thinks, and makes sense of experience with the wish not so much to shift the burden of living with the imperialist trauma as to share it as part of the collective predicament. His character embodies the terms of his name Amboy or Batang PX, again allegorizing his nation as an American commissary of duty-free labor.Flores, Patrick.
In academic circles this case is generally seen as an example of the court taking different approaches to statutory interpretation, in relation to a complex Act. Chief Justice Gleeson in The High Court stated; > “Over a long period amendments to copyright law have comprised legislative > solutions to problems created by competing economic and social pressures > associated with the development of new technologies. The issues in the > present appeal indicate that this is very much the case today.… The task of > the Court on this appeal is to construe the particular compromises reflected > in the terms of the Amendment Act.” Gleeson CJ's statement makes sense of the considerable controversy felt in Australia and elsewhere concerning the proper scope of such legislation.
This allows for people to distinguish between adjacent and overlapping objects based on their visual texture and resemblance. # Closure: the principle of closure refers to the mind's tendency to see complete figures or forms even if a picture is incomplete, partially hidden by other objects, or if part of the information needed to make a complete picture in our minds is missing. For example, if part of a shape's border is missing people still tend to see the shape as completely enclosed by the border and ignore the gaps. # Good Continuation: the principle of good continuation makes sense of stimuli that overlap: when there is an intersection between two or more objects, people tend to perceive each as a single uninterrupted object.
After coaching two national championships at the National Parliamentary Tournament of Excellence in 2004 & 2005 and promoted to full professor, he returned to studying science and technology communication and cognitive psychology. This let him to participate as a principal investigator or co-principal investigator on an extensive series of National Science Foundation grants examining how the public unpacks and makes sense of complicated technical information in emerging science, especially the field of nanotechnology. He has authored and co-authored many articles on risk perceptions associated with nanoparticles both quantitative and critical in nature. In 1997, he wrote the famous "Berube 97" article on dehumanization that has been used by high school and collegiate debaters in almost every single debate thereafter.
They suggest that instead students first take biology and chemistry which are less mathematics-intensive so that by the time they are in their junior year, students will be advanced enough in mathematics with either an algebra 2 or pre-calculus education to be able to fully grasp the concepts presented in physics. Some argue this even further, saying that at least calculus should be a prerequisite for physics. Others point out that, for example, secondary school students will never study the advanced physics that underlies chemistry in the first place. “[I]nclined planes (frictionless or not) didn't come up in ... high school chemistry class ... and the same can be said for some of the chemistry that really makes sense of biological phenomena.” Brief remarks on 'physics first' and high school science.
According to Bertrand Russell's Theory of Descriptions, the negation operator in a singular sentence can take either wide or narrow scope: we distinguish between "some S is not P" (where negation takes "narrow scope") and "it is not the case that 'some S is P'" (where negation takes "wide scope"). The problem with this view is that there appears to be no such scope distinction in the case of proper names. The sentences "Socrates is not bald" and "it is not the case that Socrates is bald" both appear to have the same meaning, and they both appear to assert or presuppose the existence of someone (Socrates) who is not bald, so that negation takes a narrow scope. However, Russell's theory analyses proper names into a logical structure which makes sense of this problem.
A recent excavation by Eilat Mazar directly above the Stepped Stone Structure shows that the structure connects with and supports the Large Stone Structure.Mazar, Eilat, "Excavations at the Summit of the City of David, Preliminary Report of Seasons 2005–2007", Shoham, Jerusalem and New York, 2009. Mazar presents evidence that the Large Stone Structure was an Israelite royal palace in continuous use from the tenth century until 586 BC. Her conclusion that the stepped stone structure and the large stone structure are parts of a single, massive royal palace makes sense of the biblical reference to the millo as the House of Millo in and in as the place where King Joash was assassinated in 799 BC while he slept in his bed. Millo is derived from "fill", (Hebrew milui).
Inquiry based on PAR principles makes sense of the world through collective efforts to transform it, as opposed to simply observing and studying human behaviour and people's views about reality, in the hope that meaningful change will eventually emerge. PAR draws on a wide range of influences, both among those with professional training and those who draw on their life experience and those of their ancestors. Many draw on the work of Paulo Freire, new thinking on adult education research, the Civil Rights Movement, South Asian social movements such as the Bhoomi Sena, and key initiatives such as the Participatory Research Network created in 1978 and based in New Delhi. "It has benefited from an interdisciplinary development drawing its theoretical strength from adult education, sociology, political economy, community psychology, community development, feminist studies, critical psychology, organizational development and more".
Then, in order to recuperate from war losses, the Romans would have immediately adopted the already existing taxation system which had been in place since Hiero II and extended the tax across Sicily. This interpretation makes sense of the fact that Laevinus then encouraged the Sicilian who had been displaced from their farms during the war, to start farming again.Cornell T.(1996),'Hannibal's legacy: the effects of the Hannabalic War on Italy,' in T. Cornell, B. Rankov and P.Sabin (eds), The Second Punic War: A Reappraisal, London: Institute of Classical Studies, University of London, pg. 97-117 There are several sources which suggest that the Romans taxed their Sicilian subjects prior to 210 BCE. Polybius suggests that in 251 BC the Romans were cooperating with their Sicilian allies in the extraction of an agricultural tithe in Panormos.Poly. 1.40.
An aspect of Mailer's double life also includes his being born between two generations: one as part of the post-World War II writers like James Jones and the other as participant of the sixties' New Journalism. Lennon's challenge included adding as much information about Mailer's private life as he did about Mailer's well-known public exploits. "Mailer knew me as an archivist and a bibliographer and a fact fetishist who collected the bits of his life and work", Lennon says; "I really tried to bring in material that no one had ever seen before, and God knows I had plenty of it". Reviews of A Double Life have been mostly positive and enthusiastic. O'Hagan states that "Lennon often puts his finger on the kind of detail that makes sense of Mailer's character" and "Lennon's biography is dense with careful detail" presenting "more of Mailer than we’ve had from anyone other than Mailer".
These higher stress levels would probably be correlated positively with the propensity to commit a crime. Somewhat inconsistent evidence indicates a positive relationship between low income levels, the percentage of population under the poverty line, low education levels, and high income inequality in an area with more crime in said area. A 2013 study from Sweden argued that there was little effect of neighbourhood deprivation on criminality per se and rather that the higher rates of crime were due to observed and unobserved family and individual level factors, indicating that high-risk individuals were being selected into economically deprived areas. A World Bank study said, “Crime rates and inequality are positively correlated within countries and, particularly, between countries, and this correlation reflects causation from inequality to crime rates, even after controlling for other crime determinants.” Researchers in criminology have argued the effect of poverty upon crime is contextual: > As Levi (1997: 860) noted, macrolevel accounts ‘seldom generate anything > close to a causal account which makes sense of nonviolence as well as of > violence’.

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