Knowledge
in sentence
3060 examples of Knowledge in a sentence
And parents in the room: depending on the state that you live in, your child can potentially waive these rights without your
knowledge
and without consulting any adult first.
The Paris Review got it out of James Baldwin when they asked him, "What do you think increases with knowledge?"
It's not really mathematical
knowledge.
You learn the next level of
knowledge.
So this is very conscious
knowledge.
So as a consequence, what we did was we changed the idea of information, instead of
knowledge
is power, to one where sharing is power.
He also took a lot of documents that he didn't have the
knowledge
to know the importance of, so I think we need to learn the facts about this case before we make snap judgments about Edward Snowden.
To my knowledge, this is the first time that we've been able to track the ongoing evolution of collective behavior in a natural population of animals and find out what's actually working best.
They are different people that have this thing connecting them, and I did not know if that is trivia or
knowledge
or inadvertent expertise, but I did wonder, is there maybe a cooler way to do this?
When your expectations and your
knowledge
clash with my artistic intentions.
You don't need any special
knowledge
to consider this question, and I've explored it with lots of people over the years.
Fruit of the tree of such
knowledge
To smack (thin air) meaning kiss or hit.
It's a pretty sophisticated example of computers actually understanding human language, and it actually got its
knowledge
by reading Wikipedia and several other encyclopedias.
They wanted her whole, though they came fractioned, half-hearted, half-soul, with no regards and no
knowledge
as to who she really was.
Barnaby Jack could have easily turned into a career criminal or James Bond villain with his knowledge, but he chose to show the world his research instead.
But I think it's worth the effort, because the alternative, to blindly fight all hackers, is to go against the power you cannot control at the cost of stifling innovation and regulating
knowledge.
Soon enough, after this, I started being invited to give talks to thousands of scientists across the world, but the
knowledge
about the cloud and saying "Yes, and" just stayed within my own lab, because you see, in science, we don't talk about the process, anything subjective or emotional.
You see, science seeks
knowledge
that's objective and rational.
But we also have a cultural myth that the doing of science, what we do every day to get that knowledge, is also only objective and rational, like Mr. Spock.
So finally that brings us to one more idea: If scientists judge evidence collectively, this has led historians to focus on the question of consensus, and to say that at the end of the day, what science is, what scientific
knowledge
is, is the consensus of the scientific experts who through this process of organized scrutiny, collective scrutiny, have judged the evidence and come to a conclusion about it, either yea or nay.
So we can think of scientific
knowledge
as a consensus of experts.
It's based on the collective wisdom, the collective knowledge, the collective work, of all of the scientists who have worked on a particular problem.
The world’s geographical
knowledge
was compiled in The Book of Roger, whose maps of the known world would remain the most accurate available for 300 years.
What's really cool as well is that there's a transfer of skills and
knowledge
across generations, from masters to apprentices, but it's done through active learning, through heuristic learning, learning by doing and by making.
To acquire and master existing ways of doing, access the
knowledge
of their ancestors.
Shortly before her death, Amel had said to her mother of herself and her sisters, "Nothing will happen to us, Inshallah, God willing, but if something happens, you must know that we are dead for
knowledge.
Now, we live in times with a lot of information, big data, a lot of
knowledge
about the insides of our bodies.
But surprisingly, people are more and more turning a blind eye in front of this
knowledge.
Now, psychoanalysts know very well that people surprisingly don't have passion for
knowledge
but passion for ignorance.
It's an online, open, democratic network for slime mold researchers and enthusiasts to share
knowledge
and experimentation across disciplinary divides and across academic divides.
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