Decisions
in sentence
2964 examples of Decisions in a sentence
This is the most information-connected, analytical and skeptical generation, making the most informed
decisions
of any generation before them.
They were influenceable: big decisions, like buying a house, overseas trips, buying a car, having children.
So Bhutan has this really wacky thing where they base most of their high-level governmental
decisions
around the concept of gross national happiness instead of gross domestic product, and they've been doing this since the '70s.
And to take part in the legislation and planning and budgeting, in all the
decisions.
In Pakistan and here in the United States, and everywhere in the world, this means women in politics, women in business and women in positions of power making important
decisions.
Nowadays, medical
decisions
are often based on a limited data set, where only a glimpse of a patient's medical history is available for decision-making.
Self-made millionaires tend to have one big trait in common: they make decisions, hold themselves accountable and push through in the face of challenges.
Side hustles are about embracing that hope that we can be the ones making the
decisions
in how we spend our work lives.
Peer educators are here to say they're armed with information that empowers you to make informed decisions; you are going to be OK.
Except now you're inside Glenn Gould's body playing the piano, and it feels like your fingers are making the
decisions
and moving through the whole process.
Every single one of us face changes in our lives, and often when we're faced with these changes, we've got some difficult
decisions
to make.
He then tells me why no one was going to approve this procedure, certainly not he, because of a concept called medical paternalism, which allows him, as my well-informed provider, to make
decisions
for me ... based on his perception of my best interest, regardless of what I, as the patient, want or believe.
And these
decisions
affect Africa.
Employers made prejudiced hiring
decisions
based on reductive decoding charts.
So as a classroom teacher, I have to make split-second
decisions
all the time.
And by this, I don't mean human-level AI, or science fiction artificial intelligence; I simply mean that machines and algorithms are making
decisions.
So while not everything was perfect, diversity and leadership
decisions
was something that would happen naturally over time, right?
So experience shows it's doable, and at the end of the day, it all boils down to two
decisions
that are taken every day in every organization by many of us: who to hire and who to develop and promote.
But it is these two
decisions
that at the end of the day send the most powerful change signal in any organization.
These two projects now have online databases that are allowing people to submit data, and this is converted into very interactive websites that the public can consume and make
decisions
from.
You see, once people understand the question, they can give you valuable information that allows the court to make meaningful
decisions
about the cases that are before them.
But Paul got those
decisions
overturned and confirmed a parade for the day before the presidential inauguration of Woodrow Wilson.
So, that's one general conclusion about why societies make bad decisions: conflicts of interest.
And the other generalization that I want to mention is that it's particularly hard for a society to make quote-unquote good
decisions
when there is a conflict involving strongly held values that are good in many circumstances but are poor in other circumstances.
Poor sleep makes us make risky, rash
decisions
and is a drain on our capacity for empathy.
We're really interested in all the issues of the digital divide, poverty worldwide, empowering people everywhere to have the information that they need to make good
decisions.
And that makes this data actionable and helps you understand what you're breathing by telling you where and when you've been exposed to poor air quality, and that way you can make informed
decisions
to take action against pollution.
When we talk about bottom-up, decentralized phenomena, the ant colony is the classic metaphor, because, no individual ant knows what it's doing, but collectively ants are able to reach incredibly intelligent
decisions.
Let's focus on what are the legitimate challenges and threats, but not lunge into bad
decisions
because of a panic, of a fear.
What are the elements that will most affect your ideas and
decisions?
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