Mindset
in sentence
418 examples of Mindset in a sentence
Apollonian
mindset
creates mountains of waste.
Well that's just a matter of
mindset.
We need to change the
mindset
of acceptance in boys in elementary schools.
I want to tell you something, that the Internet and connectivity has created [a] new
mindset.
But this
mindset
has continued to be faithful to the soil and to the land that it emerged from.
With a humble mindset, I was able to form a lot richer connections with the people around me.
I too was fascinated by this new and disruptive cell technology, and this inspired a shift in my mindset, from transplanting whole organs to transplanting cells.
The role of Afrobeats in emancipating and getting over the colonial
mindset
of the youth cannot be ignored.
Not so if you're adopting a religious
mindset.
This is the mindset, I have to say, this is the
mindset
you need for effective teaming.
Because for us to team up to build the future we know we can create that none of us can do alone, that's the
mindset
we need.
Because of that, we still have the old
mindset
of developing in industrialized countries, which is wrong.
But it turns out, if you look into research on people's mindset, caring about outcomes, caring about public recognition, caring about these kinds of public tokens of recognition is not necessarily very helpful for your long-term psychological well-being.
Social media changed Chinese
mindset.
Yes, it's a little flippant word hiding a profound shift in mindset, but I believe this is the shift we need to make if we, humanity, are going to thrive here together this century.
I hope you're willing to come with me on this, but my real problem with the
mindset
that is so out to defeat death is if you're anti-death, which to me translates as anti-life, which to me translates as anti-nature, it also translates to me as anti-woman, because women have long been identified with nature.
So to me, the
mindset
that denies that, that denies that we're in sync with the biorhythms, the cyclical rhythms of the universe, does not create a hospitable environment for women or for people associated with labor, which is to say, people that we associate as descendants of slaves, or people who perform manual labor.
So here's how it looks from a banana-peel-universe point of view, from my mindset, which I call "Emily's universe."
There's an influential taxonomy by the anthropologist Alan Fiske, in which relationships can be categorized, more or less, into communality, which works on the principle "what's mine is thine, what's thine is mine," the kind of
mindset
that operates within a family, for example; dominance, whose principle is "don't mess with me;" reciprocity, "you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours;" and sexuality, in the immortal words of Cole Porter, "Let's do it."
So far, the best idea I've heard about building grit in kids is something called "growth mindset."
So growth
mindset
is a great idea for building grit.
Actually, we've got ourselves locked into this Industrial Era
mindset
which says that the only people who can make cities are large organizations or corporations who build on our behalf, procuring whole neighborhoods in single, monolithic projects, and of course, form follows finance.
The 20th century has shown enormous cognitive reserves in ordinary people that we have now realized, and the aristocracy was convinced that the average person couldn't make it, that they could never share their
mindset
or their cognitive abilities.
The first thing that I learned was that we need to change our
mindset.
Athletes have a different
mindset
than they once did.
Changing technology, changing genes, and a changing
mindset.
It's not a typical
mindset
for most Americans, but it is perforce typical of virtually all Hungarians.
This
mindset
has found what I think is its purest expression in a 2009 interview with the longtime CEO of Google, Eric Schmidt, who, when asked about all the different ways his company is causing invasions of privacy for hundreds of millions of people around the world, said this: He said, "If you're doing something that you don't want other people to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place."
And what he said was that this mindset, this framework discovered by Bentham, was the key means of societal control for modern, Western societies, which no longer need the overt weapons of tyranny — punishing or imprisoning or killing dissidents, or legally compelling loyalty to a particular party — because mass surveillance creates a prison in the mind that is a much more subtle though much more effective means of fostering compliance with social norms or with social orthodoxy, much more effective than brute force could ever be.
The last point I want to observe about this mindset, the idea that only people who are doing something wrong have things to hide and therefore reasons to care about privacy, is that it entrenches two very destructive messages, two destructive lessons, the first of which is that the only people who care about privacy, the only people who will seek out privacy, are by definition bad people.
Next
Related words
Which
Change
Their
People
About
Shift
Growth
World
Would
Other
Different
Could
There
Countries
Requires
Political
Global
Create
Years
Economy