Mystery
in sentence
1379 examples of Mystery in a sentence
What's a bigger
mystery
box than a movie theater?
The most incredible sort of mystery, I think, is now the question of what comes next.
And the
mystery
box, in honor of my grandfather, stays closed.
This is a cosmic
mystery.
So I'm going to talk about the
mystery
of existence, the puzzle of existence, where we are now in addressing it, and why you should care, and I hope you do care.
So this has been called the most sublime and awesome mystery, the deepest and most far-reaching question man can pose.
And my friend Martin Amis — sorry that I'll be doing a lot of name-dropping in this talk, so get used to it — my dear friend Martin Amis once said that we're about five Einsteins away from answering the
mystery
of where the universe came from.
It was towards the end of the 17th century, the philosopher Leibniz who asked it, a very smart guy, Leibniz, who invented the calculus independently of Isaac Newton, at about the same time, but for Leibniz, who asked why is there something rather than nothing, this was not a great
mystery.
There is no
mystery
of existence for them.
So I would like to propose that the resolution to the
mystery
of existence is that the reality we exist in is one of these generic realities.
So anyway, you may say, this puzzle, the
mystery
of existence, it's just silly mystery-mongering.
It's a
mystery
how the stars in the outer ring are just floating there in such an orderly manner.
And why we can't institute that policy in every school and in every city and every town remains a
mystery
to me.
It's a complete mystery, but the point is that this is what information used to look like 4,000 years ago.
It's a
mystery.
Let's live on a planet full of luxuriant vegetation, in which isolated peoples can remain in isolation, can maintain that
mystery
and that knowledge if they so choose.
Real security is not only being able to tolerate mystery, complexity, ambiguity, but hungering for them and only trusting a situation when they are present.
In particular, in my lab in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT, I have spent the past decade trying to understand the
mystery
of how children learn so much from so little so quickly.
Oh, into each dark, starry night, oh, what a
mystery
that's sealed so tight.
Into each dark and starry night, oh, what a
mystery
that's sealed so tight.
I love a great mystery, and I'm fascinated by the greatest unsolved
mystery
in science, perhaps because it's personal.
The
mystery
is this: What is the relationship between your brain and your conscious experiences, such as your experience of the taste of chocolate or the feeling of velvet?
Now, this
mystery
is not new.
To the science of his day, it was a
mystery.
In the years since Huxley, science has learned a lot about brain activity, but the relationship between brain activity and conscious experiences is still a
mystery.
What does this mean for the
mystery
of consciousness?
But here's the point: Once we let go of our massively intuitive but massively false assumption about the nature of reality, it opens up new ways to think about life's greatest
mystery.
The winner to a game the other kids couldn't play, I was the
mystery
of an anatomy, a question asked but not answered, tightroping between awkward boy and apologetic girl, and when I turned 12, the boy phase wasn't deemed cute anymore.
Clarity or
mystery?
So let's look at the yin to the clarity yang, and that is
mystery.
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