Horizon
in sentence
686 examples of Horizon in a sentence
This time, there's new treatments on the
horizon.
And we also would be well informed to reach out to the people who do that work and get their expertise on how do we think about, how do we create systems around sustainability that perhaps take us from curbside recycling, which is a remarkable success across 40 years, across the United States and countries around the world, and lift us up to a broader
horizon
where we're looking at other forms of waste that could be lessened from manufacturing and industrial sources.
There was no bailout on the
horizon.
So thank you. (Applause) It's the fifth time I stand on this shore, the Cuban shore, looking out at that distant horizon, believing, again, that I'm going to make it all the way across that vast, dangerous wilderness of an ocean.
I saw a stream of white light along the horizon, and I said, "It's going to be morning soon."
And in my case, it's reaching for the
horizon.
And when you reach for the horizon, as I've proven, you may not get there.
It acts to maximize future freedom of action, or keep options open, with some strength T, with the diversity of possible accessible futures, S, up to some future time horizon, tau.
And I've been amazed, the more I learn about technology, the more I realize I don't know, and that's because this technological horizon, the thing that you can see to do next, the more you learn about technology, the more you learn what's possible.
And we can see some radically powerful technologies on the
horizon.
This is the view of the night sky that you would see, and it's a beautiful view, with the Milky Way just peeking out over the
horizon.
You see a work on the horizon, and you ride towards it.
Let me first say that probably the best model to explain why wealth is so much more concentrated than income is a dynamic, dynastic model where individuals have a long
horizon
and accumulate wealth for all sorts of reasons.
You could fit the entirety of Manhattan in the gap on the
horizon.
Yes, technology will replace a lot of jobs, but we will also see a lot of new jobs and new skills on the horizon, and that means technology will worsen our overall skill mismatch.
So I think there's really no end to the possibilities on the
horizon
for human expansion.
This is what I call the Earth's biological
horizon.
Beyond this
horizon
we don't know where we are coming from.
I want it to be hanging on the
horizon
so it lights these people, in all the potential glory that they could be presented.
And so I did at first think very literally about this in terms of all right, we'll take Pearl Harbor and we'll add it to Los Angeles and we'll make this apocalyptic dawn on the
horizon
of the city.
When young people see the economy through a circular lens, they see brand new opportunities on exactly the same
horizon.
Today we have a crisis because, because of 9/11, we are still looking in the wrong direction, and we know because we see transformational trends on the
horizon
that are far more important than what we saw on 9/11; far more important than the threat posed by these terrorists; far more important even than the instability that we've got in some areas of the world that are racked by instability today.
Nothing, not even light, can move fast enough to escape a black hole’s gravitational pull once it passes a certain boundary, known as the event
horizon.
Similarly, light that passes close enough to an event
horizon
will be deflected in a phenomenon known as gravitational lensing.
If we become aware of the constellation, the terms and conditions of communication, it not only broadens our horizon, it allows us to look behind the regulations that limit our worldview, our specific social, political or aesthetic conventions.
I think most people actually look past to the
horizon.
Or is it something else? Have you ever noticed how the full moon looks bigger when it's near the
horizon
than when it's high over head?
One of the first ideas suggested was that the image of the moon in the sky really is bigger near the
horizon.
Maybe the moon looks bigger near the
horizon
because it's next to tiny trees, houses, and towers in the distance.
If you've ever tried to draw in perspective, you know that the closer something is to the horizon, the smaller you should draw it.
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