Vision
in sentence
2465 examples of Vision in a sentence
They have a moral component just in the kind of
vision
and the aspiration of the good life that they present to us.
And if you look into the designed environment around us with that kind of lens, asking, "What is the
vision
of the good life that our products, our design, present to us?", then you often get the shivers, because of how little we expect of each other, of how little we actually seem to expect of our life, and what the good life looks like.
So that's a fourth question I'd like to leave you with: What
vision
of the good life do your designs convey?
It puts a certain
vision
of the good life out there in front of us, which is what Peter-Paul Verbeek, the Dutch philosopher of technology, says.
We put a certain
vision
of what good or bad or normal or usual is in front of people, by everything we put out there in the world.
Because ultimately, how can you ask yourselves and how can you find an answer on what
vision
of the good life you want to convey and create with your designs without asking the question: What
vision
of the good life do you yourself want to live?
But he said this, "Rebecca, when you have a vision, you have an obligation to realize that
vision.
You must pursue that vision."
But the truth is I've spent every waking minute nearly since then chasing that
vision.
I believe that we all have a
vision
for healthcare in this country.
But for my father, the emotional and artistic importance of De Sica's
vision
was so great that he chose to celebrate his half-century with his three teenage children and 30 of their friends, "In order," he said, "to pass the baton of concern and hope on to the next generation."
They had satellite phones, and they even had night
vision
goggles.
So I got to a point when I was able to perceive 360 colors, just like human
vision.
But then, I just thought that this human
vision
wasn't good enough.
The
vision
statement of Wikipedia is very simple: a world in which every human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge.
It's about how our brain is tricked into seeing a persistence of
vision
that creates a motion picture, and one of the things I had to do is, we — Sasha Baron Cohen is a very clever, very smart guy, comedian, wanted to basically do an homage to the kind of the Buster Keaton sort of slapstick things, and he wanted his leg brace to get caught on a moving train.
It's called "Learning To See" because it's about an object that hopefully works reflexively and talks about that
vision
or connection with the darkness of the body that I see as a space of potential.
The system needs to change, and change starts with us all sharing a new humanitarian vision, one where you, global citizens with skills, expertise and resources, stand together with the local responders; one where we are all humanitarians, putting the necessary resources in the hands of those who need them most and are best placed to use them effectively and efficiently.
We've been paying a lot of attention to Marvin Minsky's
vision
for artificial intelligence over the last 50 years.
It's a sexy vision, for sure.
But as we enter the era of big data, of network systems, of open platforms, and embedded technology, I'd like to suggest it's time to reevaluate an alternative
vision
that was actually developed around the same time.
His
vision
was to enable man and machine to cooperate in making decisions, controlling complex situations without the inflexible dependence on predetermined programs.
So the more you look around you, the more you see Licklider's
vision
everywhere.
We're more than 50 years into Licklider's
vision
for the future, and the data suggests that we should be quite excited about tackling this century's hardest problems, man and machine in cooperation together.
But also because I have expertise and testify about the nature of human night
vision.
And one of the side effects of having major massive blood loss is you get tunnel vision, so I remember being on the stretcher and having a little nickel-sized cone of vision, and I was moving my head around and we got to St. Vincent's, and we're racing down this hallway, and I see the lights going, and it's a peculiar effect of memories like that.
And that, to me, today, is now the challenge and the fun of my job, supporting the
vision
of my curators, whether it's an exhibition of Samurai swords, early Byzantine artifacts, Renaissance portraits, or the show we heard mentioned earlier, the McQueen show, with which we enjoyed so much success last summer.
The Met was set up not as a museum of American art, but of an encyclopedic museum, and today, 140 years later, that
vision
is as prescient as ever, because, of course, we live in a world of crisis, of challenge, and we're exposed to it through the 24/7 newsreels.
We have the
vision.
Larry Maloney, expert in vision, says, "The paper is magnificent.
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