The metaphor that likens the brain to a computer is misleading and in another discussion somewhere, sometime, I will tell you why that is. |
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He likens the story to a fairy-tale, illuminating the biggest questions in life. |
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He calls it a blip and likens it to a reformed alcoholic relapsing into a 24-hour binge. |
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He likens these organisms to Russian dolls, with the original bacteria nestled deep within other organisms. |
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He likens the current shake-out to the period of stagnation in the 1980s when US companies were forced to sit down and make choices. |
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Mann likens this process to the method acting style of movie stars such as Robert de Niro, who go to great lengths to get into character. |
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He has never been much of a fan of downhill skiing, an experience he likens to attending a football match. |
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Joy likens the house to a geode, the coarseness of the rough steel exterior contrasting with the refinement of the interior. |
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Jockey E. J. Perrodin likens a turf race to a chess match, with moves and countermoves being executed by riders in the race to the wire. |
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He likens the task of making sense of organizational life to figuring out the rules, processes, and outcomes of a rather unordinary soccer game. |
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Microsoft group marketing manager Nick McGrath likens the spend to the amount used in launching a new car. |
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God likens this to the marriage relationship where two people become one flesh. |
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The doctrine likens a woman to an evil that tempts Adam to eat the apple in the Garden of Eden, which God has forbidden them even to touch. |
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It likens it to now common reproductive technologies such as in vitro fertilization and artificial insemination. |
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He likens himself to the Puritan divines he studied in graduate school, whose religious scruples were part of their confession of faith. |
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A one-year vaper and former smoker, he likens e-cigarettes to any other ritualistic relaxant. |
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Development economist Bill Easterly likens this refrain to Moore's Law, which predicts computing power will double every 18 months. |
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The other basic version of formalism likens the practice of mathematics to a game played with linguistic characters. |
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Kerr tells his audiences that the explosion blew him about 30 yards from where he was standing, and likens the impact to being hit by a truck. |
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Dr. Morris likens circumcision to vaccination by comparing the risk to others caused by refusing either intervention. |
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Along with their other accessories, the warriors' elaborate dress suggests that they brought both wealth and pageantry to combat, which Donnan likens to medieval jousts. |
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His wife likens the odor to burned toast, but he says it smells like a campfire. |
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He likens his ideal trajectory to Sir Simon Rattle's achievements at the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra over 18 years at the end of the last century. |
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The unrestrained art of performance is far more fulfilling for him than stop-start filming for television, which he amusingly likens to coitus interruptus. |
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He likens public education to a tradeable commodity, subject to the same free-market competition rules as soybeans, bobblehead dolls and softwood lumber. |
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In a process she likens to printmaking or etching, Moreau pours the mixture directly onto the metal surface and spreads the pools of paint with a brush. |
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Mr Fukuyama likens this reciprocal gift-giving to the kind of patrimonial politics seen in 18th-century France. |
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He likens it to a marriage, spiked with petulant tiffs, where affection has cooled into mutual respect and where the partners are increasingly living apart together. |
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Vincent likens grime to the punk scene in 1977, and is made up at the reaction their cover has received. |
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In praising the mystical strain in postmodernism, with its emphasis on the elusiveness of truth and presence, she likens it to the apophatic theology of the Pseudo-Dionysius. |
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Ewatski likens the traditional response to crime and enforcement to that of emergency wards in hospitals. |
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It questions how we treat elderly people and likens life to a social experiment. |
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Dr Gwinn, however, likens this mess to a novel that has had all its pages torn out and reassembled in a different order. |
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She likens it to a metaphor for achieving life objectives through goal-setting, preparation, and focus. |
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The paper likens the monitoring system to the approach applied in setting climate change goals. |
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Louise Binder, Chair of CTAC and host of today's press conference, likens the government's failure to Seven Deadly Sins. |
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Khedkar likens the communities' core problem of landlessness to the trunk of the tree. |
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He likens himself to the rumrunner Joe Kennedy and the plans he has for East Harlem to Lyndon Johnson's Great Society. |
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And he specifically likens Piranesi's vast, hollow, exitless prisons to the bombed-out American cities in which he has spent so many years. |
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Itsuko Hasegawa, one of Japan's most widely respected architects, likens making architecture to the act of creating a poem or a musical composition. |
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Keller likens the innovatory skill of the Quartet to that of Walton's Viola Concerto. |
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For his fifth episode, Mr Bender likens the progressive social reforms of the 1890s onwards to changes Europeans also made to temper the free market. The breadth of view is exhilarating, and the reading daunting in scope. |
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He sobs, he whines, he moans, he screams, he throws up, he says he will break out in hives, he has panic attacks, he likens his woes to Job's, and he snaps out of it all on a dime. |
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For now, Mr. Abolt likens the garden to a hair transplant. |
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The Office hymn for this feast, 'Vexilla regis' likens the Cross to a processional standard, and so it is that we look to the Cross as we move forward in life, journeying towards the Promised Land of heaven. |
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Up against lavishly financed Russian media, cash-strapped, fractious Europe will always struggle: one American official likens the battle to using a teaspoon to shovel out of a snowstorm. |
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Gustavo de la Rosa, a Chihuahua State human rights investigator, likens current social programs aimed at the city's youth to a caramel coating on a putrid candy apple. |
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She likens such a writer to an abused wife who has so internalized her batterer's responses that she calibrates every word and action to anticipate and mollify him. |
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Kelly Ray Mathews, the master plasterer working with us, likens a plaster mix to a healthy community, with each ingredient working for the greater good of the wall. |
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He likens directing to being a football coach. |
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Katt Parkins likens it to an Etch-a-Sketch. |
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Darryl Matthews is Nufarm's Commercial Manager and he likens the move to the beginnings of Westjet and the impact that it had on the airline industry. |
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The index likens the way your skin feels to the temperature on a calm day. |
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Brothers and sisters, in today's reading passage 1 John 2:12-14, it likens the measures of faith with the little children, children, young men, and fathers. |
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Therefore if we look at each club as flowers, your participation this weekend likens us to a most magnificent bouquet with a variety of pleasant evocative smells and stunning beauty. |
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Maj Barteaux likens it to climbing Mount Everest. |
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And Carrick likens it to a beach ball and feels it is threatening to turn the World Cup into a lottery. |
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And much of their social life revolved around mahjong, an ancient Chinese set-matching game that Ginnie likens to gin rummy, but with domino-shaped tiles rather than cards. |
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Perry Chapman likens the activities depicted in these paintings to mid-twentieth-century television situation comedies including Leave it to Beaver and All in the Family. |
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