Ideas
in sentence
4274 examples of Ideas in a sentence
I'm an industrial designer, which means I create all these cool things from
ideas
that we surround ourselves with, or in this case, geeky people surround themselves with, for the most part.
I want to go full spectrum and tell you how, in the process of developing this new technology, we've uncovered some surprising heterodoxies that can serve as lessons for innovation,
ideas
worth spreading.
Now these two
ideas
are connected more than you may realize, because when you remove the fear of failure, impossible things suddenly become possible.
What I'm going to show you next are a couple of controversial
ideas.
So what we have to do, I think, is invent a new kind of agriculture that blends the best
ideas
of commercial agriculture and the green revolution with the best
ideas
of organic farming and local food and the best
ideas
of environmental conservation, not to have them fighting each other but to have them collaborating together to form a new kind of agriculture, something I call "terraculture," or farming for a whole planet.
I feel like I have all these
ideas
existing embedded inside of me, and it's these conversations and these experiences that connect these ideas, and they kind of instinctively come out.
I was interested in
ideas
surrounding fate and whether our fate is determined by blood, chance or circumstance.
I'm interested in these
ideas
of repetition.
And I say most of us with forethought, as my four-year-old daughter has heard me speak of these
ideas
since she was born.
Now when these
ideas
were first developed, there were only about five different candidate shapes, so you can imagine analyzing them one-by-one to determine if any yield the physical features we observe.
I'll conclude with a striking implication of all these
ideas
for the very far future.
The range of
ideas
you've just spoken about are dizzying, exhilarating, incredible.
But I'm going to use tools and
ideas
that are familiar to economists to think about a problem that's more traditionally part of public health and epidemiology.
This is what Warren Buffett's business partner Charlie Munger calls "a latticework on which to hang your ideas."
I think it's because there's an imbalance, an asymmetry in the way we treat creative, emotionally driven psychological
ideas
versus the way we treat rational, numerical, spreadsheet-driven
ideas.
If you're a creative person, I think, quite rightly, you have to share all your
ideas
for approval with people much more rational than you.
One project that explores these ideas, which was made about a year ago, is a piece called We Feel Fine.
Over the past 10 years, we have been paying bails for low-income residents of New York City, and what we have learned has exploded our
ideas
of why people come back to court and how the criminal legal system itself is operated.
So when we were talking to the Audacious
ideas
guys, we asked ourselves: If we really, really pushed ourselves over the next four or five years and we had the money, what do we think we could achieve?
It would be really great if you didn't let people divide the world into the creatives and the non-creatives, like it's some God-given thing, and to have people realize that they're naturally creative, and that those natural people should let their
ideas
fly; that they should achieve what Bandura calls self-efficacy, that you can do what you set out to do, and that you can reach a place of creative confidence and touch the snake.
Two days after Katrina, I started sketching and sketching and trying to brainstorm up
ideas
or solutions for this, and as things started to congeal or
ideas
started to form, I started sketching digitally on the computer, but it was an obsession, so I couldn't just stop there.
So they could see what she was seeing, but then, more importantly, they could participate, by interacting with each other and coming up with
ideas
about what she should do next and where she should go, and then conveying those to the Tele-Actor.
And when people talk about life after fossil fuels and climate change action, I think there's a lot of fluff, a lot of greenwash, a lot of misleading advertising, and I feel a duty as a physicist to try to guide people around the claptrap and help people understand the actions that really make a difference, and to focus on
ideas
that do add up.
Renewables is one of the leading
ideas
for how we could get off our 90 percent fossil-fuel habit.
But the sad truth is, it'll only get about 25 percent of the leakiness of your building if you do these things, which are good
ideas.
And yet, in 2016, I invited John Derbyshire as well as Charles Murray to speak at my school, knowing full well that I would be giving them a platform and attention for
ideas
that I despised and rejected.
I was excited to take my intellectual drive and interest in the world of
ideas
to the next level.
While I was fortunate to meet peers and professors who were interested in doing the same thing, my desire to engage with difficult
ideas
was also met with resistance.
By engaging with controversial and offensive ideas, I believe that we can find common ground, if not with the speakers themselves, then with the audiences they may attract or indoctrinate.
We got to look at the rocket industry and the developments to date, and we got to pick the best ideas, leverage them.
Back
Next
Related words
About
Their
People
Which
There
Other
Would
World
Could
Should
Movie
Think
Where
Really
Political
Great
Different
Through
Things
Economic