Beliefs
in sentence
618 examples of Beliefs in a sentence
How did you get all these money
beliefs
to begin with?
In fact, we all have a default set of feelings and
beliefs
that gets triggered whenever we encounter frustrations and setbacks.
When I first started, the people who inspired me were the ones with the amazing stories, and I thought, as an 18-year-old with a happy life, it was too normal, but I could create these worlds where I could talk about my experiences and dreams and
beliefs.
Changing behavior begins with evolving
beliefs.
As we've changed
beliefs
about same-sex marriage, more people have been offered equal freedoms.
They are often people who are deeply monogamous in their beliefs, and at least for their partner.
MR: Well, Chris, what we're working on is creating a situation where people can create a mind file, and a mind file is the collection of their mannerisms, personality, recollection, feelings, beliefs, attitudes and values, everything that we've poured today into Google, into Amazon, into Facebook, and all of this information stored there will be able, in the next couple decades, once software is able to recapitulate consciousness, be able to revive the consciousness which is imminent in our mind file.
And this doesn't even require us to fully understand others' beliefs, only that we respect them.
My poker mates may have been bluffing about the hands that they drew, but they weren't bluffing about their social
beliefs.
We have a wide range of
beliefs
about what that something wrong is.
A memo from the Counterterrorism Unit cited McGowan's "anti-government beliefs."
Prisoners are sent to a CMU because of their race, their religion or their political
beliefs.
But the unknown reality is that the US has a dark history of disproportionately punishing people because of their political
beliefs.
So when we started the exploration, we had to explore with a great respect, both because of the religious
beliefs
of the indigenous people, but also because it was really a sacred place, because no human had entered there before.
So I'm asking you to remember that behind every algorithm is always a person, a person with a set of personal
beliefs
that no code can ever completely eradicate.
How do we respect someone's religious
beliefs
while still holding them accountable for the harm or damage that those
beliefs
may cause others?
And so my parents and I have been walking this tightrope, explaining our sides, respecting one another, but actually invalidating each other's very basic
beliefs
by the way we live our lives, and it's been difficult.
On the sixth rung, we adjust our
beliefs
about the world around us, including the person or people involved in our experience of the moment.
On the seventh and final rung, we take action based on our adjusted
beliefs.
On our sixth rung, we adjust our
beliefs
based on the experience.
In our parking lot example, our
beliefs
were short-circuited by the ladder of the other individual.
Ask yourself what
beliefs
are at play, where do they come from?
What data and observations did you filter in as a result of your beliefs, and why?
And in a way, it's all thanks to him, because he challenged known facts, and with a sweep of his hand, got rid of the theoretical
beliefs
and all the mental limits that we like to impose on ourselves.
Unger wrote that his results should prompt investigation into other parental beliefs, like the importance of eating spinach.
These
beliefs
matter because they can influence how you act when you're faced with setbacks.
Now, these
beliefs
did not come naturally to me, because trusting big institutions, not really part of my family legacy.
And if you are one of those people who is sitting out there right now already coming up with a list of reasons in your head why this is not a priority, or it's too expensive, or telling yourself that giving a trans person a safe place to pee or get changed in supports a lifestyle choice that you feel offends your morality, or your masculinity, or your religious beliefs, then let me just appeal to the part of your heart that probably, hopefully, does care about the rest of the population.
Many cults may be hard to identify, and for some, their beliefs, no matter how strange, are protected under religious freedom.
All kinds of beliefs, gender identities or physical impairments, a newborn or terminally ill.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
About
People
Religious
Which
Political
Other
Values
There
World
Should
Movie
Social
Where
Would
Cultural
Religion
Often
Rather
Economic