Questions
in sentence
3998 examples of Questions in a sentence
Point is that five of the
questions
that the kids came up with were actually the basis of science publication the last five to 15 years.
So they were asking
questions
that were significant to expert scientists.
Now, science and asking
questions
is about courage.
If you raise
questions
about that formulation, you really are considered a bit of an antique.
Something similar seems to happen with exaggerated conceptions of how technology is going to overpower in the very immediate run all cultural barriers, all political barriers, all geographic barriers, because at this point I know you aren't allowed to ask me questions, but when I get to this point in my lecture with my students, hands go up, and people ask me, "Yeah, but what about Facebook?"
That, in the first Enlightenment, led to
questions
about the right of kings, the divine right of kings to rule over people, or that women should be subordinate to men, or that the Church was the official word of God.
After I speak to you today, I'm going on a radio program called "Any Questions," and the thing you will have noticed about politicians on these kinds of radio programs is that they never, ever say that they don't know the answer to a question.
And also we were able, with this sample, to look across the world, in 121 different countries we asked the same questions, and as you can see, this is 121 countries collapsed into 10 different geographical regions.
But even with all these data linking disgust sensitivity and political orientation, one of the
questions
that remains is what is the causal link here?
And when we asked them a variety of
questions
about the rightness or wrongness of certain acts, what we also found was that simply being reminded that they ought to wash their hands made them more morally conservative.
In particular, when we asked them
questions
about sort of taboo but fairly harmless sexual practices, just being reminded that they ought to wash their hands made them think that they were more morally wrong.
The question of whether disgust ought to influence our moral and political judgments certainly has to be complex, and might depend on exactly what judgments we're talking about, and as a scientist, we have to conclude sometimes that the scientific method is just ill-equipped to answer these sorts of
questions.
But one thing that I am fairly certain about is, at the very least, what we can do with this research is point to what
questions
we ought to ask in the first place.
So this simple mashup reveals that donors have not financed any schools in the areas with the most out-of-school children, provoking new
questions.
Before I put these people in the MRI machine, I would ask them all kinds of
questions.
I blogged about those letters and the days when they were necessary, and I posed a kind of crazy promise to the Internet: that if you asked me for a hand-written letter, I would write you one, no
questions
asked.
Basically, I send people signals at random points throughout the day, and then I ask them a bunch of
questions
about their moment-to-moment experience at the instant just before the signal.
Well, since I'm a scientist, I'd like to try to resolve this debate with some data, and in particular I'd like to present some data to you from three
questions
that I ask with Track Your Happiness.
There are three
questions.
Yuval Noah Harari: Well, in the end, there isn't such a big difference between the corporations and the governments, because, as I said, the
questions
is: Who controls the data?
Ask the tough
questions.
And then it was only later that I realized how very similar these
questions
were to the ones I used to ask myself as a child frightened in the night.
And the answer to those
questions
always took the form of a story.
What has changed is how people respond to vague
questions.
If you ask people vague questions, like, "Do you think there should be more government or less government?"
And they've captured the process through familiar ways, through a primary system which encourages that small group of people's voices, because that small group of people, the people who answer all yeses or all noes on those ideological questions, they might be small but every one of them has a blog, every one of them has been on Fox or MSNBC in the last week.
We have just created a form for girls who have heavy
questions
on their heart to be in a position to ask their fathers those
questions
and given the fathers the freedom to answer.
I'm going to answer the
questions
that people always ask me, but with an honest twist.
He does look good, because kids need structure, and the trick I play in all of my school appearances is that when I get through with my little homily to the kids, I then invite them to ask questions, and when they raise their hands, I say, "Come up," and I make them come up and stand in front of me.
There's just three
questions
you should ask: Is there more than one character in the movie that is female who has lines?
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