Increasingly
in sentence
5191 examples of Increasingly in a sentence
Now, part of the reason for this is that we have an oversimplified and
increasingly
outmoded view of the biological basis of psychiatric disorders.
What's happening increasingly, though, is these systems are beginning to use the Internet.
They have the people and the government with this exclusive dependency, but the problem here is that Congress has evolved a different dependence, no longer a dependence upon the people alone,
increasingly
a dependence upon the funders.
It blocks the right too, as it makes principled arguments of the right
increasingly
impossible.
Members and staffers and bureaucrats have an
increasingly
common business model in their head, a business model focused on their life after government, their life as lobbyists.
Because our social relations are
increasingly
mediated by data, and data turns our social relations into digital relations, and that means that our digital relations now depend extraordinarily on technology to bring to them a sense of robustness, a sense of discovery, a sense of surprise and unpredictability.
We're moving into this future where the factory is everywhere, and
increasingly
that means that the design team is everyone.
When riot police have to protect parliaments, a scene which is
increasingly
common around the world, then there's something deeply wrong with our democracies.
Increasingly, I would say explosive growth of technology.
Not because they've grown richer, but because the rest of the world has grown
increasingly
poorer.
And insulin resistance, as its name suggests, is when your cells get
increasingly
resistant to the effect of insulin trying to do its job.
I think gradually, as we see species all around the world, it's kind of a mantra that wildlife is
increasingly
not safe in the wild.
Then they could get promoted through four
increasingly
elite ranks: fuke [deputy section manager], ke [section manager], fuchu [deputy division manager], and chu [division manger].
Phosphorus, a nutrient essential to life, which is becoming
increasingly
scarce, yet nobody is talking about it.
The middle class is spending more on schooling too, but in the global educational arms race that starts at nursery school and ends at Harvard, Stanford or MIT, the 99 percent is
increasingly
outgunned by the One Percent.
The plutocracy may be a meritocracy, but
increasingly
you have to be born on the top rung of the ladder to even take part in that race.
They told me, for example, that if I proved myself worthy of their help, then they could change my life back to how it had been, and a series of
increasingly
bizarre tasks was set, a kind of labor of Hercules.
It's
increasingly
irrelevant to the kinds of decisions we face that have to do with global pandemics, a cross-border problem; with HIV, a transnational problem; with markets and immigration, something that goes beyond national borders; with terrorism, with war, all now cross-border problems.
And like many others, I've been thinking about what can one do about this, this asymmetry between 21st-century challenges and archaic and
increasingly
dysfunctional political institutions like nation-states.
That is the real world, and unless we find a way to globalize democracy or democratize globalization, we will
increasingly
not only risk the failure to address all of these transnational problems, but we will risk losing democracy itself, locked up in the old nation-state box, unable to address global problems democratically.
Against the background of rising inequality, marketizing every aspect of life leads to a condition where those who are affluent and those who are of modest means
increasingly
live separate lives.
In fact, the current dynamic that you see between Iran and Israel has its roots more so in the geopolitical reconfiguration of the region after the Cold War than in the events of 1979, because at this point, Iran and Israel emerge as two of the most powerful states in the region, and rather than viewing each other as potential security partners, they
increasingly
came to view each other as rivals and competitors.
I put it to you today that it is this system that is embodied by China that is gathering momentum amongst people in the emerging markets as the system to follow, because they believe
increasingly
that it is the system that will promise the best and fastest improvements in living standards in the shortest period of time.
There's millions and millions of these videos in
increasingly
baroque combinations of brands and materials, and there's more and more of them being uploaded every single day.
But the thing is, you have to remember, there really are still people within this algorithmically optimized system, people who are kind of
increasingly
forced to act out these
increasingly
bizarre combinations of words, like a desperate improvisation artist responding to the combined screams of a million toddlers at once.
It has huge implications, even with this whole notion that we have on where, when and why we should actually be cutting back on public spending and different types of public services which, of course, as we know, are
increasingly
being outsourced because of this juxtaposition.
So these SBIR and SDTR programs, which give small companies early-stage finance have not only been extremely important compared to private venture capital, but also have become
increasingly
important.
Time-warping technology challenges our deepest core, because we are able to archive the past and some of it becomes hard to forget, even as the current moment is
increasingly
unmemorable.
It is what your kids are as they
increasingly
understand digital technologies and their relationship to themselves.
At the worst extreme, many traditional societies get rid of their elderly in one of four
increasingly
direct ways: by neglecting their elderly and not feeding or cleaning them until they die, or by abandoning them when the group moves, or by encouraging older people to commit suicide, or by killing older people.
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