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37 Sentences With "more intrinsic"

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

But there's something deeper and more intrinsic in play here.
The more invisible Twitter starts to appear, the more intrinsic it becomes.
That, I would say, is more intrinsic to the advertising business model.
If they could make something more exclusive, could they say it had more intrinsic value?
For Martin Daly, a Canadian evolutionary psychologist, there are deeper, more intrinsic forces at play.
This matters because data suggest that when motivations are more intrinsic (sex for pleasure), we experience greater well-being.
They absolutely deserve to have their capabilities understood on a more intrinsic level, in a more defined statistical lexicon.
In 2019, Miller led holding company Omnicom's effort to make data a more intrinsic part of the account and media planning.
This is, of course, where the debate around AI and jobs comes in — but it is also something more intrinsic in nature.
Rather than the more intrinsic properties of a circuit, the unclonable property is in the optical response or reflectivity of cholesteric liquid crystal microspheres.
For the superhumans of Britain's music industry, a yearly migration to Brighton has become a more intrinsic part of natural life than the salmon run.
Miletitch thought that the drawings had a more intrinsic effect on the game, and approached Cortial to put together something where that would be the case.
Both Mr. Cruz and Mr. Rubio are eloquent proponents of the aspirational narrative — my father had nothing — that is more universal and more intrinsic to Latino identity than the Spanish language.
It would be wrong to suggest that Carol, a big-budget period piece about white lesbians, has more intrinsic value than Moonlight, a low budget contemporary story about black gay men.
Ultimately, though, as fitness becomes more intrinsic to the kind of wellness-focused lifestyles we're supposed to aspire to, it's natural that we're increasingly accustomed to seeing the minutiae of our friends' workouts on the platform.
Yet with some of these artifacts that reflect religious beliefs, she traces a continuum between Africa and its diaspora such as in Beaded Prayers Project (1999–2004), an accumulative installation that comprises over 4000 beaded prayers, she explores amulets as body adornment, and for their more intrinsic value as divination, protective, spiritual, and healing objects in the African and African Diaspora traditions.
Warwick Long claims that using somatics in dance training, by strengthening dancers' knowledge of the soma, makes their technique more "intrinsic, internal and personalised." He claims the direct self-knowledge somatics offers is valuable for today's professional dancers, who are increasingly asked to work outside the structures of canonically codified techniques such as ballet or Graham technique.
Further, he argued, the stereotypical denigration based on race was a matter of early indoctrination, had economic ends, and was supported by the way white clergy condoned slavery.Rita Roberts, Evangelicalism and the Politics of Reform in Northern Black Thought, 1776-1863 (2011), p. 134; Google Books. Easton argued for race as no more intrinsic than any other effect of variegation.
One particular study was on Taiwanese adolescents and their drive of addiction to games. Two studies by the same people were conducted. The first study revealed that addicted players showed higher intrinsic than extrinsic motivation and more intrinsic motivation than the non-addicted players. It can then be said that addicted players, according to the studies findings, are more internally motivated to play games.
P. 48. (This is a refrain repeated in various formats throughout the book.) Charny follows this section by describing feats done in real war, then arguing that the added danger gives such feats more intrinsic worth. A similar theme emerges throughout the book: those feats that involve less danger or are performed for shallow reasons are still chivalrous and worthy of honor, but deeds involving great peril and done for pure motives bring a knight greater glory and renown.
However, motivation is dynamic and, as a L2 learner's fluency develops, their extrinsic motivation may evolve to become more intrinsic. Learner motivation can develop through contact with the L2 community and culture, as learners often desire to communicate and identify with individuals in the L2 community. Further, a supportive learning environment facilitates motivation through the increase in self-confidence and autonomy. Learners in a supportive environment are more often willing to take on challenging tasks, thus encouraging L2 development.
He was excommunicated three times and rejoined the church each time. He was a ghost writer for Smith, was called by Smith to serve as assistant president of the church in Missouri,The position of "assistant president of the church in Missouri" was analogous to a modern stake or area president, but with more intrinsic authority and autonomy. However, it was not the same as Assistant President of the Church, who was a member of the First Presidency. and served on the Council of Fifty.
Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar believes that Optimalists and Perfectionists show distinct different motives. Optimalists tend to have more intrinsic, inward desires, with a motivation to learn, while perfectionists are highly motivated by a need to consistently prove themselves worthy. Optimalism has also been classified into two: product optimalism and process optimalism. The former is described as an outlook that looks to provide the realization of the best possible result while the latter looks for a maximization of the chances of achieving the best possible result.
Public subsidies for major league sports stadiums and arenas are far less common in Europe than in the United States. The relationship between the local clubs and the cities that host them is typically much stronger than in the United States, with the team being more intrinsic to the cities' identity. Cities would be significantly more upset at the departure of their beloved local teams, and viable alternative cities already have their own clubs to whom their residents are loyal. As a result, the leagues in Europe have significantly less bargaining power.
Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful properties that can significantly help in proving results. One downside of nets is their dependence on the directed sets that constitute their domains, which in general may be entirely unrelated to the space . In fact, the class of nets in a given set is too large to even be a set (it is a proper class); this is because nets in can have domains of any cardinality. In contrast, filters, like topologies, are in a sense more "intrinsic" to the set .
Jackson declared that rotation of appointments in political office was "a leading principle in the republican creed." Jackson noted, "In a country where offices are created solely for the benefit of the people no one man has any more intrinsic right to official station than another." Jackson believed that rotating political appointments would prevent the development of a corrupt bureaucracy. The number of federal office holders removed by Jackson were exaggerated by his opponents; Jackson rotated only about 20% of federal office holders during his first term, some for dereliction of duty rather than political purposes.
Here, the form has a well-defined Riemann or Lebesgue integral as before. The change of variables formula and the assumption that the chart is positively oriented together ensure that the integral of is independent of the chosen chart. In the general case, use a partition of unity to write as a sum of -forms, each of which is supported in a single positively oriented chart, and define the integral of to be the sum of the integrals of each term in the partition of unity. It is also possible to integrate -forms on oriented -dimensional submanifolds using this more intrinsic approach.
Jackson removed an unprecedented number of presidential appointees from office, though Thomas Jefferson had dismissed a smaller but still significant number of Federalists during his own presidency. Jackson believed that a rotation in office (the removal of governmental officials) was actually a democratic reform preventing nepotism, and that it made civil service responsible to the popular will. Reflecting this view, Jackson told Congress in December 1829, "In a country where offices are created solely for the benefit of the people, no one man has any more intrinsic right to official station than another."David Resnick and Norman C. Thomas.
Note that this means that X and G are isomorphic (in the category in question; not as groups: see the following). However --and this is the essential point--, there is no preferred 'identity' point in X. That is, X looks exactly like G except that which point is the identity has been forgotten. (This concept is often used in mathematics as a way of passing to a more intrinsic point of view, under the heading 'throw away the origin'.) Since X is not a group, we cannot multiply elements; we can, however, take their "quotient". That is, there is a map that sends to the unique element such that .
Because of the vague language of the document, there has been much scholarly debate over how it should be interpreted. John Maddicott saw the wording as a hostile warning to the new king to avoid the mistakes of his father, or face the consequences. J. R. S. Phillips, on the other hand, took the signatories to be positively inclined towards Edward II. There were others who were more intrinsic in their opposition to the king and Gaveston, primarily the Earl of Warwick. The purpose of the document, in Phillips view, was to present the king with a warning, and hopefully protect him against the more antagonistic members of the nobility.
Despite the agreement among model sponsors on a uniform set of instruments to evaluate the effectiveness of their models—that model sponsors believed their programs achieved gains on more intrinsic, less measurable indicators of performance, such as increased self-worth or greater parental involvement. To the extent that these desired outcomes occurred, and benefited the lives of students in ways that might never be measurably through quantitative means, those aspects of many models were successful. Both the House et al. critique and others (cited in Wisler) express concerns about the inadequacy of the instruments used to measure self-esteem the Follow Through evaluation (i.e.
Robert Peel, a life-long Christian Scientist and member of the church's Committee on Publication, also used it extensively as a source in his own three-part biography of Eddy (1966–1977). A New York Times reviewer wrote in February 1910 that the book "ranks among the really great biographies—or would were its subject of more intrinsic importance": > Since this Life first appeared in McClure's Magazine not one important > statement as of fact in it has been disproved or even seriously questioned. > It is a product of much and highly intelligent labor, and were Christian > Scientists open to argument or amenable to reason the wretched cult would > not have survived its publication for a single month.
These objects have received little study, perhaps because edged tools and weapons have more intrinsic interest to private collectors, but closer study of them might reveal something of domestic practices and toolmaking technology. There is no agreement upon their purpose or purposes, which may have included the processing of food, medicine or pigments, storage, arrow-production or fire- drilling. As such, they could represent a primitive form of mortar and pestle. The age of these man-made structures are difficult to ascertain, but generally they are believed to have been produced in the Bronze Age and Upper Paleolithic although some, for example in North America and Europe, were generated at a later date.
After some early season trouble Denver got hot after the new year and didn't lose another game all season. Powers set new team records with 7 shutouts that season as well as 22 consecutive wins (still team records as of 2018). The WCHA had realigned its tournament and abandoned the regional matchups meaning top-seeded Denver would play the worst team in each round and dominated the competition, being named co-champions of the 1968 Tournament. While Powers wasn't called upon much in the conference championship he was much more intrinsic to Denver's chances in the National Tournament. After opening with a 4–1 win over Boston College Denver met North Dakota in the final.
Image for 9-points theorem, special case, when both and are unions of 3 lines In mathematics, the Cayley–Bacharach theorem is a statement about cubic curves (plane curves of degree three) in the projective plane . The original form states: :Assume that two cubics and in the projective plane meet in nine (different) points, as they do in general over an algebraically closed field. Then every cubic that passes through any eight of the points also passes through the ninth point. A more intrinsic form of the Cayley–Bacharach theorem reads as follows: :Every cubic curve on an algebraically closed field that passes through a given set of eight points also passes through a certain (fixed) ninth point , counting multiplicities.
The pragmatic factor usually results in a "pure time preference" factor in the social discount rate, that a pleasurable experience at a certain date is intrinsically more valuable than the exact same experience at a later date, and that the life of a person born sooner has more intrinsic value than the life of a person born later. According to philosopher Toby Ord, while this is common practice in the economics community, most philosophers consider a "pure time preference" to lack intrinsic moral justification. Frank Ramsey, himself, labeled it "ethically indefensible". Ord also argues that, given the long and unfortunate human history of discounting the welfare of outgroups, the burden should be on those proposing a pure time preference to establish its necessity.
Medieval Islam's receptiveness to new ideas and heritages helped it make major advances in medicine during this time, adding to earlier medical ideas and techniques, expanding the development of the health sciences and corresponding institutions, and advancing medical knowledge in areas such as surgery and understanding of the human body, although many Western scholars have not fully acknowledged its influence (independent of Roman and Greek influence) on the development of medicine. Through the establishment and development of hospitals, ancient Islamic physicians were able to provide more intrinsic operations to cure patients, such as in the area of ophthalmology. This allowed for medical practices to be expanded and developed for future reference. The contributions of the two major Muslim philosophers and physicians, Al-Razi and Ibn Sina, provided a lasting impact on Muslim medicine.

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