Intelligence
in sentence
2639 examples of Intelligence in a sentence
True emotional
intelligence
requires that we understand the social, the political, the cultural forces that have shaped what we've come to believe about our emotions and understand how happiness or hatred or love or anger might still be changing now.
A neuron under the microscope is very elegant with little things sticking out and little things over here, but when you start to put them together in a complex system, and you start to see that it becomes a brain, and that brain can create intelligence, what we're talking about in the body, and cancer is starting to model it like a complex system.
It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages, the
intelligence
of our public debate.
And you can watch states rise and fall depending on their ability to speak a language of life, and you can watch New York fall off a cliff, and you can watch New Jersey fall off a cliff, and you can watch the rise of the new empires of
intelligence.
Let's give it
intelligence.
So I call this emotional
intelligence
in action.
Now you can cultivate this emotional
intelligence
yourself and use it in your everyday life.
Well, this has deep implications about the limits of science, about predictability and controllability of things like biological processes or economies, about
intelligence
in the universe, about questions like free will and about creating technology.
All the
intelligence
is external to the system; the materials don't have information.
And we do something different than what we did in the past; we add kind of a modicum of
intelligence
to that.
In fact, Blue School was founded on a balance between academic mastery, creative thinking, and self and social
intelligence.
This was a secret
intelligence
report commissioned by the Kenyan government after its election in 2004.
And it ran for 20 nights straight on Kenyan TV, shifted the vote by 10 percent, according to a Kenyan
intelligence
report, which changed the result of the election.
CA: I mean, there's been this U.S.
intelligence
analyst, Bradley Manning, arrested, and it's alleged that he confessed in a chat room to have leaked this video to you, along with 280,000 classified U.S. embassy cables.
I submit that the
intelligence
of a lancet fluke is down there, somewhere between petunia and carrot.
TC: My relationship to this concept of heart-to-heart connection, or mind-to-mind connection, is an interesting one, because, as a spiritual leader, I'm always attempting to open my heart to others and offer myself up for heart-to-heart and mind-to-mind connections in a genuine way with other people, but at the same time, I've always been advised that I need to emphasize
intelligence
over the heart-to-heart connections, because, being someone in a position like mine, if I don't rely primarily on intelligence, then something dangerous may happen to me.
One was that, in the summer of 2004, the British government, somewhat reluctantly, decided to have an official inquiry into the use of
intelligence
on WMD in the run up to the Iraq War, a very limited subject.
I had been steeped in the
intelligence
on Iraq and its WMD, and my testimony to the inquiry said three things: that the government exaggerated the intelligence, which was very clear in all the years I'd read it.
And they also are able to show and to exhibit such a wonderful and complex behavior that can be described just with the term of
intelligence.
Are there things about the universe that will be forever beyond our grasp, but not beyond the grasp of some superior
intelligence?
May I introduce Major General Albert Stubblebine III, commander of military
intelligence
in 1983.
Automation anxiety has been spreading lately, a fear that in the future, many jobs will be performed by machines rather than human beings, given the remarkable advances that are unfolding in artificial
intelligence
and robotics.
Now the second myth, what I call the
intelligence
myth.
They've fallen for the
intelligence
myth, the belief that machines have to copy the way that human beings think and reason in order to outperform them.
This view was popular in artificial
intelligence
at one point, too.
I know this because Richard Susskind, who is my dad and my coauthor, wrote his doctorate in the 1980s on artificial
intelligence
and the law at Oxford University, and he was part of the vanguard.
And with a professor called Phillip Capper and a legal publisher called Butterworths, they produced the world's first commercially available artificial
intelligence
system in the law.
Resolving the
intelligence
myth shows us that our limited understanding about human intelligence, about how we think and reason, is far less of a constraint on automation than it was in the past.
But resolving the
intelligence
myth shows us that that first force, machine substitution, is gathering strength.
With the advent of artificial
intelligence
and automation, many of the jobs we see today will either not exist or be transformed to require less routine work and more analysis and application of expertise.
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