Which
in sentence
83315 examples of Which in a sentence
So throughout vertebrates, the design of the brain stem is very similar to ours,
which
is one of the reasons why I think those other species have conscious minds like we do.
It's the autobiographical self
which
some species have, I think.
So the bottom one is the state-of-the-art device that's out there right now,
which
is basically made up of light detectors, but no encoder.
Not only can you tell that it's a baby's face, but you can tell that it's this baby's face,
which
is a really challenging task.
Well resisting temptation is hard, as the 19th century English economist Nassau William Senior said, "To abstain from the enjoyment
which
is in our power, or to seek distant rather than immediate results, are among the most painful exertions of the human will."
To bring this to a wider audience, I've been working with Hal and Allianz to create something we call the behavioral time machine, in
which
you not only get to see yourself in the future, but you get to see anticipated emotional reactions to different levels of retirement wealth.
It's not telling you
which
way to put the slider, it's just reminding you that you are connected to and legally tied to this future self.
I've spent the last decade subjecting myself to pain and humiliation, hopefully for a good cause,
which
is self-improvement.
Now, let me say something about the staircase,
which
may seem like an odd metaphor for seniors, given the fact that many seniors are challenged by stairs.
There's only one exception to this universal law, and that is the human spirit,
which
can continue to evolve upwards, the staircase, bringing us into wholeness, authenticity, and wisdom.
And he wrote that, while he was in the camp, he could tell, should they ever be released,
which
of the people would be OK, and
which
would not.
And my message for you is that I believe we are condemned, if you like, to live at just one of those moments in history when the gimbals upon
which
the established order of power is beginning to change and the new look of the world, the new powers that exist in the world, are beginning to take form.
And the second is about some new dimension
which
I want to refer to,
which
has never quite happened in the way it's happening now.
These live in a global space
which
is largely unregulated, not subject to the rule of law, and in
which
people may act free of constraint.
It's said that something like 60 percent of the four million dollars that was taken to fund 9/11 actually passed through the institutions of the Twin Towers
which
9/11 destroyed.
It needs a means by
which
you can legitimize international action.
The G20: we know now that we have to put together an institution
which
is capable of bringing governance to that financial space for financial speculation.
Now there's a problem there, and we'll come back to it in a minute,
which
is that if you bring the most powerful together to make the rules in treaty-based institutions, to fill that governance space, then what happens to the weak who are left out?
My guess is, for what it's worth, is that the United States will remain the most powerful nation on earth for the next 10 years, 15, but the context in
which
she holds her power has now radically altered; it has radically changed.
And that's the world we're coming into, in
which
we will increasingly see that our alliances are not fixed.
Let me make a prediction for you,
which
is probably even more startling.
And here's the third factor,
which
is totally different.
We are now interlocked, as nations, as individuals, in a way
which
has never been the case before, never been the case before.
Now take this together, and you end up with 2.3 million words of TED Talks,
which
is about three Bibles-worth of content.
For example, Dan Pink's talk on motivation,
which
was pretty good, if you haven't seen it: "Drop carrot.
Or some even included references to the speakers, such as Nathan Myhrvold's speaking style, or the one of Tim Ferriss,
which
might be considered a bit strenuous at times.
And luckily, there's a website for that, called Mechanical Turk,
which
is a website where you can post tasks that you don't want to do yourself, such as "Please summarize this text for me in six words."
And I didn't allow any low-cost countries to work on this, but I found out I could get a six-word summary for just 10 cents,
which
I think is a pretty good price.
So for $60, I could summarize a thousand TED Talks into just 600 summaries,
which
would actually be quite nice.
For example, for the TED Talks about food, someone summed this up into: "Food shaping body, brains and environment,
" which
I think is pretty good.
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