Sentences with phrase «classical description»

At about the same time, Levitt and Warshal, a pair of PhD students at the Weizmann Institute in Israel, developed a program based on classical descriptions of chemical structure.
Classical descriptions of spreading have a number of inconsistencies: For example, they require an infinite force to get a puddle to start spreading.
Estrangement is implied in Paul's classical description of the human predicament of «man against himself» because of his conflicting desires.
Bohr's view takes the classical description of matter, but no one believes that the classical description is the explanation.
The classical description of the Father begetting the Son before all worlds can also describe the way in which God, in the Whiteheadian conceptuality, creates himself by envisaging all the pure forms as constituting the metaphysical order God and the world exemplify.
Planck even said it was a «purely formal assumption», needed solely to tidy up embarrassing inconsistencies in the classical description of how objects...
In some respects, the quantum mechanical description is quite similar to the classical description of interfering waves.
This allowed identification of a girl who had retained GTF2I but didn't fit the classical description of the disorder.
I then focused my research on finding which areas of the brain degenerated first in AD, and how, and I finally could show that small inner brain structures overlooked in the classical descriptions of AD proved to be the most vulnerable and early affected regions.
«Mass Density Fluctuations in Quantum and Classical Descriptions of Liquid Water.»
«We realized we had a number of patients coming in with a phenomenon that didn't necessarily meet the classical description of insomnia, but that was still keeping them up at night,» Dr. Abbott tells Health.
«Indeed, pools of wine, woods of flesh,» Chen said, echoing a classical description about the decaying Shang dynasty palace, as he stepped into a steaming hot pool.
When we are attacked, the two responses the emotional brain offers us are fight and flight (these are the famous alternatives described by the great American physiologist, Walter B. Cannon, in a classical description in 1929).
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