Empirically
in sentence
34 examples of Empirically in a sentence
Like, a few years ago, I made a video series called "Every Single Word" where I edited down popular films to only the words spoken by people of color, as a way to
empirically
and accessibly talk about the issue of representation in Hollywood.
I'm going to shove it into my bag, I'm going to have this email template, and I'm going to fill it out and collect information on all these different data points during the date to prove to everybody that empirically, these dates really are terrible.
But what impressed me even more was that as I was waiting for my digital I.D., one Googler was telling me about the program that he was about to start to teach the many, many Googlers who practice yoga to become trainers in it, and the other Googler was telling me about the book that he was about to write on the inner search engine, and the ways in which science has
empirically
shown that sitting still, or meditation, can lead not just to better health or to clearer thinking, but even to emotional intelligence.
And I can't really
empirically
prove that to you, but I hope you'll believe me when I say that.
And what this shows, what this
empirically
demonstrates, is that GDP is not destiny.
So an entire philosophy, a body of knowledge about the natural world that had been
empirically
gleaned over centuries, goes away.
Elinor Ostrom, the latest Nobel laureate of economics, clearly shows
empirically
across the world that we can govern the commons if we invest in trust, local, action-based partnerships and cross-scale institutional innovations, where local actors, together, can deal with the global commons at a large scale.
If anyone ever seeks an example of an
empirically
perfect match of actor, role and story, this is it.
To be sure, elections
empirically
demonstrate support for particular politicians, parties, and even policies.
Aside from this supposition’s profoundly anti-democratic implications, it also happens to be
empirically
false.
We therefore conducted a study to examine
empirically
how often bipolar disorder might be over- and under-diagnosed.
Empirically, few firms get this right: America’s National Public Radio and the BBC were both recently hacked by the SEA, while McDonald’s and Burger King recently had their Twitter accounts compromised.
In a new paper, David Dollar, Tatjana Kleineberg, and Aart Kraay analyze
empirically
the relationship between growth and poverty.
In recent years, however, a new climate science of “detection and attribution” has made huge advances, both conceptually and
empirically.
After introducing a biological problem with 11 variables, I used a simple method called dimensional analysis to demonstrate that only three needed to be studied empirically; the relations among the rest of the variables could be inferred logically.
In my own research, I have always stressed the importance of examining the relationship between populism and democracy
empirically.
Empiricists: Convinced that observation is our only tool against economic ignorance, empiricists are certain that the only defensible theoretical propositions are those derived from discerning patterns whereby changes in exogenous variables constantly precede changes in endogenous variables, thus establishing
empirically
(for example, through Granger tests) the direction of causality.
It does not matter whether these claims are
empirically
true; they fit into a clear and compelling narrative, in which immigrants are portrayed as villains.
These oddities are perhaps to be expected for an institution that is being forced to backtrack from a position that has become analytically and
empirically
untenable.
Unfortunately, as Reinhart and I document
empirically
for hundreds of financial crises, covering 66 countries and eight centuries, the answer is all too simple: arrogance and ignorance.
But the one thing about which everyone seems to agree is the theoretically and
empirically
unjustified assumption that an equilibrium exchange rate actually exists.
Amartya Sen, a Nobel Laureate in economics, demonstrated
empirically
that no famine - mass starvation leading to mass death - ever occurred in a democratically governed country.
Knowing
empirically
the benefits in terms of peace and human welfare which democracy delivers, we must reaffirm our commitment to, and the necessity of, spreading Kant’s vision.
But their exuberance biases India’s global ranking relative to more
empirically
minded countries.
As constantly evolving organisms, there is nothing
empirically
inherent in countries’ characteristics.
This notion was extensively refuted both theoretically and
empirically
for advanced economies.
Since that fateful day in June 2016, many have tried to establish
empirically
that Leavers tend to be rural, white, older, uneducated, and – in some accounts – economically disadvantaged, while Remainers are none of the above.
He finds that the results are not just inconsistent with the authors’ own theoretical assumptions, but are also internally contradictory and
empirically
implausible.
A low real interest rate is often associated with a high real price of gold, both in theory and
empirically.
And in Sweden, increased labor-market insecurity has been linked
empirically
to the rise of the far-right Sweden Democrats.
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