Solutions
in sentence
2288 examples of Solutions in a sentence
Solving those simpler problems can give you insight into the harder problems, and sometimes produces pretty good
solutions
in their own right.
How do we take an understanding of the money mistakes people make, and then turning the behavioral challenges into behavioral
solutions?
We have to understand why people are not saving, and then we can hopefully flip the behavioral challenges into behavioral solutions, and then see how powerful it might be.
One more before we flip the challenges into solutions, having to do with monkeys and apples.
But I am saying that the more freedom that we give introverts to be themselves, the more likely that they are to come up with their own unique
solutions
to these problems.
I need your help to communicate the gravity and the urgency of this situation and its
solutions
more effectively.
But there are
solutions
to the free-rider problem.
The body, to us, is not a mechanical entity, where mechanical-only
solutions
can address them.
All of these
solutions
derive their origins from the text of the book, but once the book designer has read the text, then he has to be an interpreter and a translator.
We need to invest in real solutions: incentives for farmers, precision agriculture, new crop varieties, drip irrigation, gray water recycling, better tillage practices, smarter diets.
You can find really novel
solutions
that have never been looked at before, very quickly and easily.
Skill two is devise
solutions.
If we invest in science and technology and find
solutions
for the real problems that older people face and we capitalize on the very real strengths of older people, then added years of life can dramatically improve quality of life at all ages.
So people who believed in psychological
solutions
didn't have a model.
And what that means is that, in looking at solutions, we've probably given too much priority to what I call technical engineering solutions, Newtonian solutions, and not nearly enough to the psychological ones.
I'm merely saying that when you solve problems, you should look at all three of these equally, and you should seek as far as possible to find
solutions
which sit in the sweet spot in the middle.
How the best
solutions
come from answering people's aspirations for prosperity, things like being safe and healthy and thriving in this world.
So I joined the Environmental Defense Fund to build those kind of
solutions.
And instead of applying feeble human minds to designing these tools from scratch, there were these ready-made
solutions
right out there in nature developed and refined steadily for millions of years by the greatest engineer of all.
Two days after Katrina, I started sketching and sketching and trying to brainstorm up ideas or
solutions
for this, and as things started to congeal or ideas started to form, I started sketching digitally on the computer, but it was an obsession, so I couldn't just stop there.
[Banks and legacies bringing down the system from within] [Offline
solutions
do not work online] I'm guessing everyone's got a chip and PIN card, right?
And what I do is I look for similarities and differences in the
solutions
that they've evolved for fundamental biological problems.
The next solo, blah blah blah blah, yeah, and both at the same time, you do the last
solutions.
Problems are inevitable and
solutions
create new problems which have to be solved in their turn.
The unsolved problems facing the world today are gargantuan, including the risks of climate change and nuclear war, but we must see them as problems to be solved, not apocalypses in waiting, and aggressively pursue
solutions
like Deep Decarbonization for climate change and Global Zero for nuclear war.
We're trying to train leaders of exceptional integrity, who have the ability to confront the complex problems, ask the right questions, and come up with workable
solutions.
Sustainable
solutions
for our future problems are going to be diverse and are going to be many.
So some
solutions
to heat can provide for win-win-wins.
Beyond these technical solutions, our work at the Georgetown Climate Center with communities encourages them to look at what existing legal and policy tools are available and to consider how they can accommodate change.
But back above ground, these raised ventilation grates for the subway system show that
solutions
can be both functional and attractive.
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