Sentence examples for concrete knowledge of from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

Most important, there was a feeling of unpredictability; there was no concrete knowledge of who would be the next president.The Russian presidential election this year was a sharp contrast.

The other is the sense attached to the word by Benedict Spinoza and by Henri Bergson, in which it refers to supposedly concrete knowledge of the world as an interconnected whole, as contrasted with the piecemeal, "abstract" knowledge obtained by science and observation.

Although there is considerable scientific and public interest in terra preta, there is still much debate and little concrete knowledge of the specific processes and contexts of its formation.

From this perspective, natural philosophy represented either a mere preparatory stage on the way to the more perfect and concrete knowledge of medicine, or, alternatively, medicine was subordinate to natural philosophy (others, like the philosopher Jacopo Zabarella (1533 1589), preferred to distinguish natural philosophy from medicine because these two disciplines did not share subject and method).

As direct beneficiaries of the technologies, patients have concrete knowledge of the impact and effects of treatments and technologies on their condition and on other areas of their lives [ 1].

If you know what you need to get done in the long run than make sure you remind yourself of those and having a concrete knowledge of what they are can help motivate you.

Similar(54)

However, there is a lack of concrete knowledge on how browsing can efficiently meet this goal.

Michelle L. Wilson, director of concrete knowledge for the Portland Cement Association, a trade group, described a hydrating cement particle this way: "It's not a piece of popcorn, it's not popping from the inside out.

Year after year, academics and critics continue to fill the void of concrete knowledge about his life with new interpretations of the sketchy historical record, new perspectives on the plays, new theories about the life.

Baumgarten borrowed the Greek term for sensory perception (aisthēsis) in order to denote a realm of concrete knowledge (the realm, as he saw it, of poetry), in which a content is communicated in sensory form.

At a certain point [though], he felt the burden of not being able to continue this method of direct, concrete knowledge -- that is, physical contact with local communities as Pope John Paul II had done before him and as Pope Francis is doing now.

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