Recent
examples of this phenomenon include:
Examples of this phenomenon include the so - called exploits of terrorists, destroying hundreds of people for the sake of some idea.
Not exact matches
For
example, books reviewed in the first months
of 1910
included Herbert Croly's The Promise
of American Life; Education in the Far East, by Charles F. Thwing; a philosophical study titled Religion and the Modern Mind, by Frank Carleton Doan; Jane Addams's The Spirit
of Youth and the City Streets; The Immigrant Tide, by Edward Steiner; Medical Inspectors
of Schools (a Russel Sage Foundation study); A. Modern City (a scientific study
of that
phenomenon), by William Kirk; The Leading Facts
of American History, by D. H. Montgomery; and Jack London's collection
of short stories, Lost Face.
Examples of this iatrogenic
phenomenon in education
include certain aspects
of policies and practices like achievement - level tracking, the assignment
of homework, the standards movement, and compulsory education.
Additionally, they are discovering these various solar effects on climate here on earth, as well as on other planets in our solar system, and how they effect behavior, «regionally» and planet wide, in similar ways — for
example there has been a long - term trend (+30 years)
of increasing surface
phenomena on Mars,
including surface temps and albedo and the humongous sand storms, etc that occur.
Other classic
examples of the same
phenomenon include the platinum - catalysed oxidation
of CO under the influence
of different gas pressures.
He gives a couple
of examples purporting to illustrate this «double think»
phenomenon,
including this gem:
The original meaning should also be construed in broad enough terms to accommodate new
phenomena that accord with the ordinary meaning
of the text (for
example, interpreting the phrase «freedom
of the press and other media
of communication» in section 2 (b)
of the Charter to
include internet publications, which did not exist at the time
of the enactment).
As an
example, work within predominately White samples illustrates that familial factors
including family control and overprotection may be significant positive predictors
of impostor
phenomenon (e.g., Sonnak and Towell 2001; Want and Kleitman 2006).