Curing in a sentence as a noun

Yes, curing death would raise other problems. Bring them on.

That should put the claim of "curing cancer" into perspective.

I'm not curing cancer, but at the end of the day I do feel accomplished and refreshed and loved by coworkers and friends in my tiny little world. Well.

But maybe let's drop the pretense that we're curing cancer unless, you know, we're curing cancer." Reasonable and astute point."

Once we solve how to scale up this hard work successfully, we can start looking at curing these incredibly rare diseases.

But I don't delude myself into thinking I am curing cancer, and I don't think I ever could. But damn anyone else who thinks I should spend my time doing something to meet their own standards.

Reading the article, you'd think he's curing cancer and **** and cleaning up the environment all at once. Take this, for example: "But startups are different.

Stop it with the sexting and start with the curing!" An expression of outrage and disgust with no follow-up -- someone else should work for the good of the world, I'm just a regular person trying to feed my family.

Instagram didn't have many employees, so only a few people were diverted from curing cancer to sending cat pictures.

They are almost always in mice or something and I or someone else with a similar background always feels compelled to weigh in and remind folks that it's a long way from curing lab rats to curing people. This however, is the real deal.

"fixing government, curing cancer, improving medicine, rebooting our space program, fixing education, etc." I think a big part of it is less pay.

This is because combating aging requires curing almost every known disease at its source. Any progress made in this front will have massive benefits to healthcare worldwide.

But maybe let's drop the pretense that we're curing cancer unless, you know, we're curing cancer." The commentator has no problem with efficiency gains or capitalism.

Asteroid mining and other BS "We're curing death" press releases aside, Google is dependent on adwords so they need to keep turning knobs to force sites to advertise. Their PE is 25+ so they need to show huge increase quarter to quarter to keep the scheme going.

We keep thinking we have a lock on curing cancer, but it continues to be very elusive. As I understand it, using automation to "debug" individual cancers is scalable.

Only a few people were diverted from curing cancer to sending cat pictures Pre-acquisition, sure. But how many people will see the instagram acquisition and decide to give up on curing cancer to help people send cat pictures instead?

I cannot remember where I read it, but Musk's view is that curing polio, cancer, etc are all nobel and important, but there is only one way to guarantee human's long-term survival: Exploring space. Not that I [dis]agree, but I think this point needs consideration.

So I would say that we can and should strive toward putting humans in orbit and on Mars and it is just as noble a thing to do as curing disease or feeding the hungry. Because it represents what humanity is all about, pushing frontiers, exploration, knowledge, adventure.

When people complain about entrepreneurs building social networks instead of curing cancer, they need to understand that this is a big part of the reason. The internet attracts so much innovation in large part because it's very open to innovation.

It has nothing to do with curing cancer, economical equality or anything else. He's something that's worth X and pays back many X. I can understand why this comes as a shock to some; it may be difficult to accept that another person doing his 9-5 job can bring so much value to a company.

Otherwise curing Malaria can result later in all the problems that accompany a lack of resources: bigger famines, increased civil strife and warfare.

Making money doesn't mean that a business can't also be connecting people, or organizing the world's information, or curing cancer, or any other fulfilling goal.

Genetic engineering, curing diseases, artificial intelligence, you name it. This may go so far as to essentially stratify society.

It also comes from having a very high fiber-to-epoxy ratio in the final product, which is usually achieved by squeezing out all the extra epoxy using vacuum while curing. The length of the fibers, and the minimal amount of epoxy, is what makes CF strong.

I am also dead-tired of promotional videos that in vague terms and promises make it sound like we're curing cancer. The number of tools intended to "enhance conversation" are a dime a dozen, but fair or not, I think there is something to be said for traction and widespread use, even though it may seem like a chicken-and-egg problem.

We have known about the composition of Roman Concrete for a long time, the main difference is we trade long term strength for a shorter curing time. For an excellent dissection of this recent round of "secrets technology of the ancients that our modern science only now is beginning to understand" check out this reddit thread, it has quite a few engineering students and professionals chiming in and I learned quite a bit from it.

Curing definitions

noun

the process of becoming hard or solid by cooling or drying or crystallization; "the hardening of concrete"; "he tested the set of the glue"

See also: hardening solidifying solidification