Sentences with phrase «in its nature by»

Derrick, And I submit that we are reflected in nature by the simple fact that we are here.
To state a disbelief in true randomness in nature by saying «God deosn't play dice» is just a metaphor and one that caused a whole lot more trouble than it was ever worth.
Neither the sponge nor the ball is changed in its nature by what happens to it.
This can suggest that there may, after all, be something common to the human mind and the entities found in nature by physical science.
So this melancholy of poetical longing is grounded in a deep misunderstanding, because the lonely wanderer is everywhere surrounded in nature by that which does not understand him, even though it always seems as if an understanding must be arrived at.
Science is leading more and more in that direction as witness, for example, the recognition of self - organization as a principle in nature by Prigogine and Stengers (1984).
I want to once again remind readers that self - defense — including defense against tyrannical government — is more than a right guaranteed in the Second Amendment to our Constitution; it is a duty assigned us in Nature by our Creator.
A 2016 essay in Nature by a U.K. biographer noted that her novelist father was friends with electrochemist Humphry Davy and with William Nicholson, a co-discoverer of electrolysis, the technique of triggering chemical reactions using electricity.
But the underlying cryptographic technology, a growing chain of time - stamped records or «blocks» that is shared between many computers, forming a «blockchain,» could also be used to help save the environment, according to a commentary published today in Nature by Guillaume Chapron, an ecologist at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Riddarhyttan.
But one, originally published in Nature by British psychologist Richard Lynn, found that «fully 77 percent of the Japanese have IQs above Western European and U.S. averages.»
«With this tool we have reached the same conclusions as those presented in Nature by researchers working on the modENCODE, but the enormous difference is that instead of seeing the information in hundreds of graphs and figures like in modENCODE, we have achieved a single map,» explains Azorín.
The team makes it clear that it thinks its approach is superior to one reported last month in Nature by scientists at Advanced Cell Technology (ACT) in California — deriving an ES cell line from a single cell taken from a morula (ScienceNOW 23 August).
TAL effectors are produced in nature by certain bacteria that infect plants and are able to bind to specific sequences in the plant DNA, thereby neutralizing the plant's defense mechanisms.
Honey bees carry out fundamentally vital roles in nature by providing essential ecosystem functions, including global pollination of crops and native plants.
The artist's famous drips and swirls create fractal patterns, similar to those formed in nature by trees, clouds and coastlines
The oxygen - rich supernova dust grain has a different composition than one reported earlier this year in Nature by cosmochemist Larry Nittler of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C. «That's exciting,» says Nittler.
The phenomenon occurs in nature by a variety of mechanisms, but all increase a gene's ability to permeate a population quickly and thoroughly, even if it doesn't carry any survival advantage.
Studies published in Nature by Mark Kahn and fellow researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, the Universities of Chicago, Utah, New Mexico, and California - San Francisco, and international collaborators in Australia, China, the Netherlands, Germany, and Sweden, were featured in a May 10 New York Times Health column by Gina Kolata.
Last year saw publications in Nature Genetics by Miotto and colleagues about multiple strains of artemisinin - resistant parasites in Cambodia, and in Nature by Dr. Frédéric Ariey and colleagues from Institut Pasteur identifying a molecular marker of artemisinin resistance.
«A recent report published in Nature by Descours et al. prompted great interest, as it claimed to have identified CD32 as one such marker that is selectively expressed on the majority of persistently infected CD4 T cells.
The Swedish Biodiversity Program aims to target biodiversity of bacteria, viruses, archaea and eukaryotes and combinations thereof to promote large research projects aiming to uncover and understand genomic variability in nature by use of massively parallel sequencing and microbial single cell analysis.
This therefore means that anything that can be found easily in nature by using these forms of obtaining food is included in the plan.
When combined with pressure and elevation, this «pumping» action of ice can be an extremely effective rehabilitation tool (and you can observe this in nature by simply jumping into a cold lake for about 20 minutes and watching your skin slowly turn red as reactive vasodilation occurs).
The light of the North graces this young muse in a fashion exclusive shot in the nature by Ida - Marie Fiskaa with styling by Agnes Buch.
Outdoors, molds play a part in nature by breaking down dead organic matter such as fallen leaves and dead trees, but indoors, mold growth should be avoided.
They're terribly industrious, and this instinct serves them well in nature by allowing them to survive alone and hidden from predators for long periods, and to give birth to healthy new hamster life with confidence that they'll be able to nourish their young.
Immerse yourself in nature by staying in Diana's beautiful home in Errington, located between forest, river, and beach!
The five main shades of white are represented in nature by the August moon, the conch shell, clouds when the rain is spent, the white surf of the sea and the fragrant white of Jasmine flowers.
Find yourself in nature by immersing yourself in landscape that has remained virtually untouched for centuries.
Immerse your family in nature by staying in one of our four Family Canvas Cabins on the banks of Rock Creek.
Challenging the idea of what is cherished in nature by celebrating the beauty of the overlooked and the imperfect, the exhibition, titled Spring Microcosm, ran from March 6 to April 6, and featured exquisitely rendered colored pencil on paper drawings of broken branches, peeling sycamore bark, bug - eaten leaves and flower buds.
Learn more about the roots and goals of Hypothesis in «Annotating the scholarly web,» a recent article in Nature by Jeffrey M. Perkel.
Recently, an elaborate data analysis published in Nature by Shakun et al., 2012 (pdf) has provided strong support for these model predictions.
(Here's the seminal 1974 Nature paper on these consequential chemical reactions in Nature by Mario J. Molina and Rowland.)
Furthermore, a new analysis published in Nature by Kerry Emanuel («Increasing destructiveness of tropical cyclones over the past 30 years») points to a high correlation between the power of the TCs and the sea surface temperature (SST).
It is a low - level environmental intervention that enhances a mechanism already active in nature by increasing the foam fraction of the ocean surface.
So how is it possible then, as two new papers in Nature by Min et al. and Pall et al. (discussed here) have done, to attribute extreme precipitation and extreme UK floods to climate change?
The global decline in amphibian numbers — 2 % since the 1950's, according to a study in Nature by Houlahan et al. (2000) should be a metaphor of the miner's canary — after all, amphibians are perhaps the best vertebrate indicators of environmental quality.
The global decline in amphibian numbers — 2 % since the 1950â $ ™ s, according to a study in Nature by Houlahan et al. (2000) should be a metaphor of the minerâ $ ™ s canary — after all, amphibians are perhaps the best vertebrate indicators of environmental quality.
Further complicating assumptions of growth is a very interesting analysis published today in Nature by two well regarded US energy experts, Richard Heinberg and David Fridley.
The latter part is more original stuff, as I (i) make the case for how China's clean energy push is in fact consistent with its overall economic reform, e.g. Scientific Development, reduction of excess industrial capacity, natural resource price reform, western development, boosting domestic consumption, and Going Out strategy; (ii) describe China's activities in innovation and R&D and its desire to create, not just produce, energy technologies of the 21st century; (iii) address criticisms that China's «indigenous innovation» policies are protectionist in nature by pointing out the myopia of such observations from a US (or EU for that matter) policymakers point of view; (iv) provide thoughts about what the proper U.S. policy response should be.
This week in the journal Nature, Csatho writes a «News and Views» analysis that comments on the latest research in this area: A new study in Nature by Kristian K. Kjeldsen, Niels J. Korsgaard, Kurt H. Kjær and colleagues, who used aerial photographs, remote - sensing observations and geological evidence to estimate the Greenland Ice Sheet's mass loss during three time periods since the start of the 20th century: 1900 - 83, 1983 to 2003 and 2003 - 10.
You may have missed the recent article in Nature by Geoffrey Boulton who chaired the Royal Society committee on openness.
«Mike's Nature trick» refers to a technique (aka «trick of the trade») used in a paper published in Nature by lead author Michael Mann (Mann 1998).
Global warming alarmism has always been a matter of choosing the least significant contributor to global warming — for reasons that the natural sciences can never not explain — and then creating mystical properties not observed in nature by applying magical magnification formula.
Studies in Nature by Stephan Lewandowsky of the Cabot Institute University of Bristol, and this one in the journal Climate Change by Bala Rajaratnam of Stanford University, all say the same thing.
«Instead of using traditional marketing messages about green products (which are typically perceived as feminine), we changed the messages to be more masculine in nature by changing the phrasing, colors, etc..
With the publication in Science of papers by Romps et al and Laliberte et al (discussed here), and the paper in Nature by Feldman et al (discussed now at WUWT), I expect that we'll soon see a large change in that prevalence.
The case in question relates to some results published this week in Nature by Joanna Haigh and colleagues.
A 2005 paper published in Nature by the ClimatePrediction.Net team * revealed their ratio of kept vs. total, at any rate.
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