The series has a reputation for an uncanny prescience when it comes to mirroring real-life events. |
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Suddenly, tracks such as If I Die Tonight cease to sound like mannered posturing and take on a peculiar prescience. |
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A rereading, however, shows that he had imagined our future with incredible prescience and was rightly appalled by the vista. |
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This book is also worth re-reading because of Card's prescience in anticipating the Internet's role in political debate. |
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Some of them have occurred exactly as predicted, and stand as proof of my prescience and insight. |
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Wilde did not have such specific prescience, but I wonder if he didn't overhear the dim roar of airborne death somewhere over the horizon. |
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Blue Leaves also attracted Stiller with its prescience about our society's obsession with fame. |
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Her prescience and her instincts go unheeded, and the damage that she causes threatens to consume her altogether. |
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The background story reveals a fascinating prescience which links directly to contemporary quests for sustainable building. |
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Rather than celebrating their prescience, the bloggers sound downright dismayed. |
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Today's world does not diminish that vision: it demonstrates its prescience. |
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One knows not to question the wisdom of the Delphic seers, those voices of prescience whose cryptic counsels were so poorly interpreted by their clientele. |
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These modern approaches which we now take for granted came from Greenwood's prescience and leadership. |
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The results of the 2004 election proved the prescience of the Canadian Election Study team's assertion. |
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And the stark prescience of the imagery must make us shiver. |
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Surely over the past few years, we have seen a few cases, also in respect of industrial changes, where a little prescience might have prevented the worst from happening. |
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Miss Lin scores points for her prescience, but not her persuasiveness. |
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Forgery or no, it is unarguable that whoever wrote the Protocols had remarkable prescience, for it mirrors exactly what has happened and is happening to-day. |
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With remarkable prescience Séamus Mallon, the Social Democratic and Labour party MP, quickly responded that Hogg's comments could put lives at risk. |
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Part political commentary, part Mrs Dale's Diary of the baby-boom generation, Doonesbury is a comic with a conscience, and with a rare prescience about the way the world is moving. |
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In 2010 over 2m did so, breaking through the thickest wall in American history with a few strokes of a pen. Yet an updated Moynihan report would also have to acknowledge the prescience of that tall white Irishman. |
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These prove his prescience, but it would have been better just to have summarised them. The bulk of the book is a necessary reminder of what Mr Gorbachev and perestroika achieved even if inadvertently. |
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The years since have amply demonstrated the prescience of this crucial vision through the dramatic development of the cruise ship industry both in Québec City and all along the St. Lawrence River. |
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His prescience was rewarded by Italy's victory and an album of meticulously handwritten compliments from each of the players, which takes pride of place today in the company archive. |
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What remains interesting about McLuhan's global village is his prescience about the ways that electronic technologies would alter how we do our daily business and how we relate to other people. |
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Displaying the prescience that would distinguish him throughout his life, he left continental Europe for England in 1938 with his wife and children. |
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To be sure, integrated investment planning represents an implementation challenge and requires leadership and commitment, wisdom and prescience, trust and teamwork, as well as effort and good communications to put in place. |
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Conclusion This is no penalty kick with Libbard and Prescience in opposition and I'm a layer. |
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