Sentence examples for affected humanity from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

You could add history, culture and politics to the list, for almost every wall and display offers some startling revelation about how Caribbean flora affected humanity over the last 500 years.

Similar(59)

To that end, I sat down (digitally speaking) with him to ask about his journey and specifically talk about his favorite series of conceptual images, called Human Affliction, "which target issues affecting humanity, with portrayal of how to overcome along with encouraging quotes".

"Rick Smolan wanted to focus on how Big Data is affecting humanity".

With the move by Chile's government, he said, "we are demonstrating that South America can play, together, a role in the great global issues affecting humanity".

Perhaps you have noticed during the recent election coverage the way in which MPs have been distancing themselves from the expenses scandal and speaking as though it was one of those extreme weather events that occasionally affect humanity.

For the vividly molded account of Strauss's Suite from "Der Rosenkavalier" that ended the concert, Mr. Valcuha pulled out all the stops, spurring the orchestra through flamboyant waltzes without stinting on the wistful melancholy that gives "Rosenkavalier" its affecting humanity.

That Gifford forges these characters almost entirely out of dialogue makes their affecting humanity doubly impressive; by the novel's end, Roy and his mother are likely to live as vividly in the reader's mind as their unseen Wyoming lives in theirs.

If an oil company offered a £200,000 donation should they accept, knowing that the biggest issue affecting humanity over the next 20 years will be climate change, and knowing that their theatre forms part of a cultural narrative that must drive the shift towards a more sustainable future?

Sea level rise is just one of many ways in which global climate change will affect humanity, and serious repercussions from other phenomena like longer, more frequent, and more intense severe weather patterns will become meaningful problems long before rising seas begin disrupting the economy (unfortunately for those living in places like the Maldives).

This impulse dating as far back as the first hoe has been considered beneficial, Watson argues, because people have assumed that altering the shape of nature does not have real consequences, or because they have measured those consequences only in relation to how they affect humanity, or because they believe that they have a God-given right to do what they wish with plants and animals.

This impulse — dating as far back as the first hoe — has been considered beneficial, Watson argues, because people have assumed that altering the shape of nature does not have real consequences, or because they have measured those consequences only in relation to how they affect humanity, or because they believe that they have a God-given right to do what they wish with plants and animals.

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