Fundamental
in sentence
2832 examples of Fundamental in a sentence
These are all exaggerations, slight exaggerations of a
fundamental
truth, which is Portlanders spend a lot more on recreation of all kinds than the rest of America.
So a
fundamental
shift, and now you have environmentalists and economists like Ed Glaeser saying we are a destructive species.
After all, happiness is not just a privilege for the lucky few, but a
fundamental
human right for all.
We think that this these "why" questions can give us clues about the
fundamental
principles of nature.
It has been speculated that our universe is only a bubble in a soapy multiverse made out of a multitude of bubbles, and each bubble is a different universe with different
fundamental
constants and different physical laws.
The power of motherland so
fundamental
to that part of the world seems palliative.
And the same thing with the Bill of Rights and all the amendments and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the E.U. conventions on human rights and
fundamental
freedoms and the press freedom?
And what is it that we do that no other animal does, and which I believe was
fundamental
to allow us to reach that large, largest number of neurons in the cortex?
In that tiny chip, you just witnessed one of the most
fundamental
responses our body has to an infection.
Something, again, that went back to something more
fundamental.
And that's one of the
fundamental
reasons that this problem is so hard to talk about, and, in general, I think it's the underlying reason that it's been politically unacceptable to talk about this.
So I just really want to share with you a reflection that the future of cities today depends less on buildings and, in fact, depends more on the
fundamental
reorganization of socioeconomic relations, that the best ideas in the shaping of the city in the future will not come from enclaves of economic power and abundance, but in fact from sectors of conflict and scarcity from which an urgent imagination can really inspire us to rethink urban growth today.
For me as an architect, it has become a
fundamental
narrative, because it begins to teach me that this micro-community not only designed another category of public space but they also designed the socioeconomic protocols that were necessary to be inscribed in that space for its long-term sustainability.
And so, several years ago, I undertook a program to try to understand the
fundamental
physical mechanisms underlying intelligence.
It's quite the opposite, that the urge to take control of all possible futures is a more
fundamental
principle than that of intelligence, that general intelligence may in fact emerge directly from this sort of control-grabbing, rather than vice versa.
It is seldom, if ever, extended to equally important arguments around the fragility of our present system of government, to the notion that honesty, accuracy and impartiality are
fundamental
to the process of building and embedding an informed, participatory democracy.
And these things are fundamental, of course, but they're not enough.
I'd like to talk today about a powerful and
fundamental
aspect of who we are: our voice.
Either way, what we are driven to is this horizontalization of the structure of industries, and that implies
fundamental
changes in how we think about strategy.
The main thing I want to talk about is this: that we have this remarkable experience in this field of
fundamental
physics that beauty is a very successful criterion for choosing the right theory.
And someday, we may actually figure out the
fundamental
unified theory of the particles and forces, what I call the
"fundamental
law."
So what that means is that the history of the universe is not determined just by the
fundamental
law.
It's the
fundamental
law and this incredibly long series of accidents, or chance outcomes, that are there in addition.
And the
fundamental
theory doesn't include those chance outcomes; they are in addition.
And in fact, a huge amount of the information in the universe around us comes from those accidents, and not just from the
fundamental
laws.
Now, it's often said that getting closer and closer to the
fundamental
laws by examining phenomena at low energies, and then higher energies, and then higher energies, or short distances, and then shorter distances, and then still shorter distances, and so on, is like peeling the skin of an onion.
We look deeper and deeper into the structure of particles, and in that way we get probably closer and closer to this
fundamental
law.
They are properties of the
fundamental
law.
The
fundamental
law is such that the different skins of the onion resemble one another, and therefore the math for one skin allows you to express beautifully and simply the phenomenon of the next skin.
They follow from the
fundamental
theory.
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