Decisions
in sentence
2964 examples of Decisions in a sentence
Yet, these parents also wanted to justify their
decisions
through the tales they tell.
And that is really a shame, because right now, we need Generation Possible to help us make some really important
decisions
about nuclear weapons.
So depending on the
decisions
we make in the next few months, the next year or so, if designer baby number one is born, within a few decades, there could well be millions of genetically modified humans.
We don't trust her to make her own
decisions.
Don't ask her private details about her medical
decisions.
It reflects our
decisions
as individuals, as governments and as industries.
Our society routinely makes
decisions
without consulting a quarter of the population.
All that noise made it harder to make the right
decisions.
I have the impression that our delegates who vote on the internet regulation laws are not fully aware of their
decisions.
With bounded ethicality, the human mind, the same human mind, is making decisions, and here, it's about who to hire next, or what joke to tell or that slippery business decision.
So most of the time, nobody's challenging our good person identity, and so we're not thinking too much about the ethical implications of our decisions, and our model shows that we're then spiraling towards less and less ethical behavior most of the time.
So the ethical implications of our
decisions
become really salient, and in those cases, we spiral towards more and more good person behavior, or, to be more precise, towards more and more behavior that makes us feel like a good person, which isn't always the same, of course.
The idea with bounded ethicality is that we are perhaps overestimating the importance our inner compass is playing in our ethical
decisions.
We perhaps are overestimating how much our self-interest is driving our decisions, and perhaps we don't realize how much our self-view as a good person is affecting our behavior, that in fact, we're working so hard to protect that good person identity, to keep out of that red zone, that we're not actually giving ourselves space to learn from our mistakes and actually be better people.
But the phonetic approach is also absent today, because when, in the 18th century, we decided how we would standardize our writing, there was another approach which guided a good part of the
decisions.
Decisions
have been made, technologies have been developed, and suddenly the world has changed, possibly in a way that's worse for everyone.
We reached from 1917 to 2017, not by some divine miracle, but simply by human decisions, and if we now start making the wrong decisions, we could be back in an analogous situation to 1917 in a few years.
But still, given the dangers that we are facing, I think the imperative of having some kind of real ability to force through difficult
decisions
on the global level is more important than almost anything else.
I was getting outside my comfort zone, I was calling upon my resilience, and I was finding confidence in myself and my own
decisions.
The fear we learn and the experiences we don't stay with us as we become women and morphs into all those things that we face and try to shed: our hesitation in speaking out, our deference so that we can be liked and our lack of confidence in our own
decisions.
So we really have to think about these
decisions.
And that's so very important because we live, as no doubt you're sick of hearing people tell you, in a globalized, hyperconnected, massively interdependent world where the political
decisions
of people in other countries can and will have an impact on our lives no matter who we are, no matter where we live.
Huge
decisions
that affect all of us being decided by relatively very small numbers of people.
Rather, when they're making
decisions
in private, they worry about their own problems, about what to put on the table for dinner or how to pay their bills on time.
But don't give up on the numbers altogether, because if you do, we'll be making public policy
decisions
in the dark, using nothing but private interests to guide us.
And so, dream with me what a 21st-century scientist slash engineer could look like: individuals who are driven to master the sciences so that they can serve society, and are also aware of the tremendous power their knowledge and
decisions
have; folks who are developing their moral courage at all times, and who realize that conflict and controversy are not necessarily bad things if our ultimate loyalty is to the public and the planet.
We call it FEEL, and it teaches how do you separate your emotional
decisions
from your financial decisions, and the four timeless rules to personal finance: the proper way to save, control your cost of living, borrow money effectively and diversify your finances by allowing your money to work for you instead of you working for it.
As new life-saving technologies are created, we're going to have really complicated
decisions
to make.
And as we tried to make the right
decisions
and follow my mother's wishes, we found that we were depending upon the guidance of nurses.
And they'll have some difficult
decisions
to make.
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