Not exact matches
Seems to indicate a pretty chaotic early solar system AND they are floating all over the place and are an extreme threat to
human survival.
It could not then easily be foreseen that within two short decades
human progress, in fact our very physical health or
survival, would
seem to depend more than ever on a return to laws set by the ever - living God.
This
seems to go against the
human instinct for
survival and comfort.
First, with reference to the topic of the last section, it
seems that Whitehead is doubtful that so sharp a line can be drawn between animals and
humans that there is real warrant for affirming total extinction of all animals and
survival of all
humans.
While I also tend to agree with your stance on the second, it
seems to me much less clear - cut; hunting has been an integral part of
human survival over the last 100,000 + years and continues to be important today for many traditional societies.
But this part of Whitehead's cosmology, which
seems relatively straightforward, has unleashed a firestorm of controversy in the technical literature, centering around that most delicate and personal of all issues for us
humans, our own personal
survival.
The animal behaviors that
seem peculiar to us
humans actually make a lot of sense for
survival.
Brucella, which causes the sometimes fatal disease brucellosis in
humans and farm animals,
seems to depend on blue wavelengths of light — like those found in the sun's rays — for its
survival.
I'm talking of course about vitamin B12, or does no one else
seem to see that if you have to supplement your diet with a visit to GNC, your diet is obviously NOT SUITABLE FOR
HUMAN SURVIVAL???
What
seems like a half - mad, half - obsessive outdoor odyssey sweeps you into a haunting tale of
human survival.
Mary (Williams) seeks a bigger world beyond the fenced off village of survivors, and the
survival of the
human race
seems dependent upon her success in leading a ragtag group through the dark depths of The Forest of Hands and Teeth.
The diagnosis
seemed so unlikely, but because Leptospirosis is a potentially fatal infection which can also affect
humans, it was important to treat her as though she was infected in order to give her the best chance of
survival and to protect hospital staff and her own family.
It
seems that
human survival now depends on a struggle between the two tails of the intelligence bell curve.