By pulling visitors away from the natural coral to the new, adjacent «parks,» there is
less human pressure at the original, fragile sites.
Not exact matches
The reactors — six - foot - tall metal and glass boxes that glow seafoam green when at work — mimic what happens to carbon after millennia of
pressure, but faster, with
less human labor and a carbon - neutral footprint.
To act unfreely, i.e., out of mere habit or control or
pressure, is to generate a
less than fully
human experience.
Thoughts on woo: The oo sound is the loudest sound possibility, generally, for
humans, due to the resonance developed by mouth formation, and
less muscle use in mouth and throat to form, therefore, also the easiest to scream (along with long «O» but this doesn't allow for maximum efficiency of transdiaphragmatic
pressure conversion to sound projection).
All these forces still exert
pressure, but currently on orders of magnitude
less than
human impact.
Once opened up, formerly intact forests become increasingly susceptible to natural
pressures such as disease, fires, and erosion; they become
less resilient to
human - made climate change, and they become more accessible to
human use, driving a spiral of decline.
Humans are unusual, though, in that we have more or
less stabilized ourselves at what would normally be a transitional, problematic stage — «more or
less» because, while technology lets us minimize many of the old evolutionary selection
pressures, it also introduces new ones; for instance, we are right now breeding ourselves to be tolerant of chemical pollutants.
The dogs also seem more relaxed when I use the
human clippers, I think because it exerts
less pressure.
Zero population growth reduces demand
pressure,
less pollution,
less resource use,
less human conflict, and when there are so many positives and no strong argument that the world needs 12 billion people, it is «case closed» as far as I'm concerned.
So, probably the best thing to do when planning for the future is to be aware of the more or
less capricious nature of our nation's climate and keep in mind that
humans are supplying an ever - growing warming
pressure on top of that.
In sum, three trends --(1)
pressure to spend
less, (2) improvements in process and technology, and (3) growing recognition of the limits of
human accuracy — will converge and lead to more «predictive coding».