Unconscious
in sentence
278 examples of Unconscious in a sentence
[Freud] says that the man is becoming the custodian of his wife's
unconscious.
You can fundamentally change your reaction to things so that it allows you to go places and see things and do things that otherwise would be completely denied to you ... where you could see the hardpan south of the Sahara, or you can see New York City in a way that is almost dreamlike, or the
unconscious
gingham of Eastern Europe fields or the Great Lakes as a collection of small puddles.
MK: Well, the first thing, for me, was Gabby was still kind of almost unconscious, but she did something when she was in the ICU hospital bed that she used to do when we might be out to dinner at a restaurant, in that she pulled my ring off and she flipped it from one finger to the next, and at that point I knew that she was still in there.
It is not
unconscious
like a termite mound fractal.
There was a fascinating study prior to the 2008 election where social psychologists looked at the extent to which the candidates were associated with America, as in an
unconscious
association with the American flag.
Choices are influenced by our unconscious, by our community.
It's linked to my unconscious, my guesses of what others are choosing, or what is a socially embraced choice.
I wanted to talk about biases, the
unconscious
ones and the conscious ones, and what we do.
Her friend was gagged, attacked, and knocked
unconscious.
The implicit association test, which measures
unconscious
bias, you can go online and take it.
There's the kind of grammar that lives inside your brain, and if you're a native speaker of a language or a good speaker of a language, it's the
unconscious
rules that you follow when you speak that language.
Why? Ladies and gentlemen, ultimately, that surprise and the behaviors associated with it are the product of something called
unconscious
bias, or implicit prejudice.
Let me just set something out from the outset:
Unconscious
bias is not the same as conscious discrimination.
The thing is, if we want to live in a world where the circumstances of your birth do not dictate your future and where equal opportunity is ubiquitous, then each and every one of us has a role to play in making sure
unconscious
bias does not determine our lives.
There's this really famous experiment in the space of
unconscious
bias and that's in the space of gender in the 1970s and 1980s.
There's evidence that that
unconscious
bias exists, but we all just have to acknowledge that it's there and then look at ways that we can move past it so that we can look at solutions.
Now one of the interesting things around the space of
unconscious
bias is the topic of quotas.
The
unconscious
bias is there, but we just have to look at how we can move past it.
There's a lack of opportunity, and that's due to
unconscious
bias.
We have to look past our
unconscious
bias, find someone to mentor who's at the opposite end of your spectrum because structural change takes time, and I don't have that level of patience.
Ladies and gentlemen, there is a problem in our community with lack of opportunity, especially due to
unconscious
bias.
Whitopian dreaming, Whitopia migration, is a push-pull phenomenon, full of alarming pushes and alluring pulls, and Whitopia operates at the level of conscious and
unconscious
bias.
In looking at this, the danger of Whitopia is that the more segregation we have, the less we can look at and confront conscious and
unconscious
bias.
When you get general anesthesia, it makes you unconscious, which means you have no sensation of anything.
It's caused by nitrogen dissolving in the blood, which causes confusion between the conscious and
unconscious
mind.
Now remember, if you have a collision mid-air that knocks you unconscious, you would experience free fall until you hit the ground.
During a normal REM cycle, you're experiencing a number of sensory stimuli in the form of a dream, and your brain is
unconscious
and fully asleep.
His
unconscious
motor centers remembered what the conscious mind had forgotten.
Freud theorized that everything we remember when we wake up from a dream is a symbolic representation of our
unconscious
primitive thoughts, urges, and desires.
Freud believed that by analyzing those remembered elements, the
unconscious
content would be revealed to our conscious mind, and psychological issues stemming from its repression could be addressed and resolved.
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