ŷ

Analysis Quotes

Quotes tagged as "analysis" Showing 61-90 of 199
Pooja Agnihotri
“Decide your objectives and make somebody responsible to implement the results for the growth of the business.”
Pooja Agnihotri, Market Research Like a Pro

Pooja Agnihotri
“Maybe in your personal life you can go on an unplanned trip and rejoice later for it being the best trip of all time but it might not prove the same for your business.”
Pooja Agnihotri, Market Research Like a Pro

Pooja Agnihotri
“It can also be analyzed that even an unplanned trip has a lot of planning hidden in it.”
Pooja Agnihotri, Market Research Like a Pro

Pooja Agnihotri
“A well-planned budget will save you from any kind of unexpected surprises.”
Pooja Agnihotri, Market Research Like a Pro

Pooja Agnihotri
“Your current marketing plan, strategy, and research objective are also going to play an important role in defining your sample size.”
Pooja Agnihotri, Market Research Like a Pro

Pooja Agnihotri
“Exploratory market research is generally preferred in the early stages of a project when you are more interested in exploring a subject.”
Pooja Agnihotri, Market Research Like a Pro

Pooja Agnihotri
“When you want to learn something in detail, you do descriptive research.”
Pooja Agnihotri, Market Research Like a Pro

“I started to see that rather than overthinking every decision, I could simply decide to make a decision—any decision. I would learn something whatever happened. Each time I did this it seemed that my ability to tap into my gut increased and my tendency to spend too long analyzing diminished.”
Ankush Jain, Sweet Sharing: Rediscovering the REAL You

Werner Herzog
“Film is not analysis, it is the agitation of the mind.”
Werner Herzog, Herzog on Herzog: Conversations with Paul Cronin

“More often than not, the most significant asset may not be on the balance sheet.”
Naved Abdali

“In reality, myth was that which took the place of analysis in former times. � It showed that there was the universe, but one knew that there was also something else. One knew that something stronger than the social existed.”
Verena Andermatt Conley, Hélène Cixous: Writing the Feminine

“Reading then is writing, in an endless movement of giving and receiving: each reading reinscribes something of a text; each reading reconstitutes the web it tries to decipher, but by adding another web. One must read in a text not only that which is visible and present but also the nontext of the text, the parentheses, the silences.”
Verena Andermatt Conley, Hélène Cixous: Writing the Feminine

“Improvement, to be found in all things.”
Alogaristw

V.S. Naipaul
“Indians have made some contribution to science in this century; but - with a few notable exceptions - their work has been done abroad. And this is more than a matter of equipment and facilities. It is a cause of concern to the Indian scientific community - which feels itself vulnerable in India - that many of those men who are so daring and original abroad should, when they are lured back to India, collapse into ordinariness and yet remain content, become people who seem unaware of their former worth, and seem to have been brilliant by accident. They have been claimed by the lesser civilization, the lesser idea of dharma and self-fulfillment. In a civilization reduced to its forms, they no longer have to strive intellectually to gain spiritual merit in their own eyes; that same merit is now to be had by religious right behaviour, correctness.

India grieved for the scientist Har Gobind Khorana, who, as an American citizen, won a Nobel Prize in medicine for the United States a few years ago. India invited him back and fêted him; but what was most important about him was ignored. 'We could do everything for Khorana,' one of India's best journalists said, 'except do him the honour of discussing his work.' The work, the labour, the assessment of labour: it was expected that somehow that would occur elsewhere, outside India.”
V.S. Naipaul, India: A Wounded Civilization

John Cowper Powys
“The more one tries to analyze oneself the more one is conscious of amazing paradoxes and inconsistencies which lurk under the simplest surface.”
John Cowper Powys, Confessions of Two Brothers

Jean Baudrillard
“A more subtle misconception is that of a hypostasis of evil as indestructible reality, a kind of primal scene, a sort of substratum of accumulated death-drive.
The radicality of evil is seen as that of a naturally inevitable force, associated always with violence, suffering and death.
Hence Sloterdijk's hypothesis that 'the reality of reality is the eternal return of violence'. To which he opposes a 'pacifism that is in keeping with our most advanced theoretical intuitions, a deep-level pacifism, based on a radical analysis of the circularity of violence, deciphering the forces that determine its eternal return'.
A radical analysis, then, to remedy the radical evil.
But can a 'radical' analysis have a finality of whatever kind?
Is it not itself part of the process of evil?”
Jean Baudrillard, The Intelligence of Evil or the Lucidity Pact

Umberto Eco
“Between the unattainable intention of the author and the arguable intention of the reader, there is the transparent intention of the text, which refutes untenable interpretations.”
Umberto Eco, Confessions of a Young Novelist

“Predicting the future is easy. It's trying to figure out what's going on now that's hard.”
FRITZ R. S. DRESSLER

Dax Bamania
“The paralysis of analysis might stop you from creating new records.”
Dax Bamania

William Empson
“As for the immediate importance of the study of ambiguity, it would be easy enough to take up an alarmist attitude, and say that the English language needs nursing by the analyst very badly indeed. Always rich and dishevelled, it is fast becoming very rich and dishevelled�”
William Empson, Seven Types of Ambiguity

“I read the books very quickly, and might have missed something,� said Bethel, “Did Hermione give Ron a handjob?�

“This is too vulgar,� said Amaryllis. “And no, she didn’t.�

“It’s implied in the text,� began Valencia.

“Is it?� asked Amaryllis in disbelief.

Valencia huffed. “Well, you have to understand that the books were written for children, but given that sexual curiosity is completely normal in the early and late teens, their close proximity with one another, their history of dating others, then yes,� said Valencia. She folded her hands. “The lack of explicit sexual activity probably has more to do with the marketing of the books and the social mores of both the author and audience.”
Alexander Wales, Worth the Candle

“...on balance, more good than bad, but it wasn’t a calm neutral, it was the good and bad smacking up against each other like two warring armies, ...”
Alexander Wales, Worth the Candle

“Building up, tearing down, and inaction.

Preconsideration, consequences.”
Garistw

Adam M. Grant
“Steve Jobs was famous for making big bets based on intuition rather than systematic analysis.”
Adam Grant, Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World

“Popular books often draw a dichotomy between intuition and analysis—“blink� versus “think”—and pick one or the other as the way to go. I am more of a thinker than a blinker, but blink-think is another false dichotomy. The choice isn’t either/or, it is how to blend them in evolving situations.”
Philip E. Tetlock, Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction

“Without a reference point, all judgment is madness. All flawed points of reference lead but to errors. Luck wants it that an error in decadence reveals its true face and the examination of its premises is then unavoidable. - On Reference Points”
Lamine Pearlheart, Awakening

Steven Magee
“When you analyze mass shootings, you generally find root cause analysis points to the government.”
Steven Magee

Steven Magee
“Root cause analysis requires an extensive examination of history.”
Steven Magee, Hypoxia, Mental Illness & Chronic Fatigue

J.R.R. Tolkien
“In Dasent's words I would say: “We must be satisfied with the soup that is set before us, and not desire to see the bones of the ox out of which it has been boiled.� Though, oddly enough, Dasent by “the soup� meant a mishmash of bogus pre-history
founded on the early surmises of Comparative Philology; and by “desire to see the bones� he meant a demand to see the workings and the proofs that led to these theories. By “the soup� I mean the story as it is served up by its author or teller, and by “the bones� its sources or material—even when (by rare luck) those can be with certainty discovered. But I do not, of
course, forbid criticism of the soup as soup.”
J.R.R. Tolkien, The Tolkien Reader

Lucy  Carter
“...we shouldn’t just memorize facts! We should ANALYZE them!”
Lucy Carter, The Reformation