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Despite this "open and shut intelligence example," the British commander made independent and fatal misjudgments.
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Now military intelligence, for example, cannot staff its offices without constant help from the reserves.
U.S. intelligence, for example, does not seem to know where Osama bin Laden is.
But they have been frustrated by Mr. Saleh's suggestions that someone other than Arab Afghans -- Israeli intelligence, for example -- might have been involved.
When it comes to intelligence, for example, her research has found that only 25percentt of the differences between twins — virtual, fraternal or identical — can be accounted for by their environment, 75percentt by genetics.
The hope is that good market intelligence, for example discussions with clued-up investors, can help officials to become more savvy.Yet imagine data nirvana: a colossal, constantly updating spreadsheet of the trading and lending exposures, cross-border activity, interconnectedness and funding risks of all regulated and unregulated institutions.
Traditional patrolling pays dividends in gathering intelligence, for example—which may not count directly towards official targets but has value.Beefing up CSOs' powers, as some propose, could spoil this: the more they can do, the more they risk being dragged away from their beats.
Individuals with genes for low intelligence, for example, should be taught differently from the lucky carriers of "smart" genes: "Nor will all the extra tutoring in the world ever grant naturally slow learners a chance to get to the head of the class.... Children will get left behind if we continue to insist that each one has the same potential for learning".
On a continued foreign military presence in Afghanistan following the elections and the departure of President Obama from office, Sedney said: "In order to train and to mentor the Afghan security forces in areas like intelligence for example, you still need a force of around 15,000-plus of foreign forces.
Discovery of the genes that may underlie intelligence, for example, would open "a whole Pandora's box of possibilities, where someone like myself is no more qualified than someone with a minimal understanding of genetics to make ethical and moral choices," Dr. Weinberg said.
As an introduction to the cognitive struggle between the brain's "executive" rational centers and its more intuitive regions, "How We Decide" succeeds with great panache, though readers of other popular books on this subject (Antonio Damasio's "Descartes' Error" and Daniel Goleman's "Emotional Intelligence," for example) will be familiar with a number of the classic experiments Lehrer describes.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com