Polarise in a sentence as a verb

And as if that wasn't enough, Apple used the keynote to feed the fire and polarise.

In the end this only serves to shut down real debate and polarise each bubble.

It can polarise discussions and turn them into a back and forth where each side tries to get higher scores.

The beauty of Hacker News is that it isn't filled up with irrelevant quips that tend to polarise discussions.

I'm not familiar with the AirBnB ads and I'm not entirely sure what Facebook has purposely done to polarise people for growth.

Yes, that was the point with the balkanisation bit. There's no grey area for debate as the echo-chambers polarise discussion.

Even if off-the-shelf models did, there'd ultimately be some way to uniquely identify or polarise the beams such that this wasn't a problem.

One aspect, I think plays a role is having people's attention divided, as they argue and polarise, allows the powerful actors in the globe, to take actions that fly underneath the radar.

Or you hate the Chinese fifth of the World population?USA will polarise things until a war with China becomes inevitable forcing those who want to trade freely with both parties to pick a side.

The assertion in the article that the filter "can polarise populations creating potentially harmful divisions in society" seems, well, unfounded, at least so far.

I think what we are seeing is just a kind of physics of the mind- reactions and re-reactions to unpleasant experiences we've all had, and are trying to avoid, which leads us to polarise on the static/dynamic divide.

Polarise definitions

verb

cause to vibrate in a definite pattern; "polarize light waves"

See also: polarize

verb

cause to concentrate about two conflicting or contrasting positions

See also: polarize

verb

become polarized in a conflict or contrasting situation

See also: polarize