Sentences with phrase «stems from the culture»

The theology Driscoll, and sadly, many others embrace stems from a culture far removed from ours in time.
For many lawyers, the problem of adoption stems from a culture that nurtures the image of the «ingenious lawyer who triumphs by intellect rather than by procedural discipline.»
If anything, this shows that if the new field of evolutionary psychology does want to be taken seriously from the science community, they have to address the fact that there still is no way to tell if their findings stem from culture or evolution.

Not exact matches

As much as recent efforts to encourage women in STEM education and STEM jobs have helped move the needle a bit, the culture of science has often made life for women scientists harder than it already is — excluding them from clubby publishing and peer review networks and sometimes outright snubbing their achievements.
An innovation culture may stem from the founder but to scale it has to be sustained by the organization.
At Elite SEM, our team is so confident in our culture that we have a brand promise stemming from it.
These bananas are sterile and dependent on propagation via cloning, either by using suckers and cuttings taken from the underground stem or through modern tissue culture.
Animal cells are cultured from stem cells and incubated in a «bioreactor» into tissue that can be «harvested» and formed into familiar foods like meatballs, patties, and fish sticks.
The ire the tech giants are engendering from regulators stems in part from a culture clash, agrees Entchev, the lawyer.
SAN FRANCISCO — In Uber's continuing attempt to repair its reputation over a series of scandals stemming from its bad - boy culture, its co-founder Travis Kalanick said he would take a leave of absence as chief executive.
Many hurdles stem from bank culture.
The energy of the Founder's Mentality culture stems from a fundamental sense of mission and an urgency that many large organizations lack.
The remaining ecumenical contribution is what we ought to call «Lutheran culture,» one filled with blessed pieties, a love of Jesus Christ and Sacred Scripture, a sense of being a company of saints that is often lost in Roman Catholic parishes, and other collateral graces stemming from the passions of the Reformation.
This inability of Islamic thought to respond to modern scientific culture seems to stem from two fundamental problems.
Thank the Greeks for Democracy and for the majority of Western Civilization because our culture and system of government stems from their Classical period.
They boil down to a general analysis of homegrown terrorism as stemming from isolation from Western culture and ideals.
His peace stand stemmed from his conception of the church, and to him the church was a distinctive amalgam of religion and culture, best exemplified in America.
These concerns are also prevalent in Lewis's and Tolkien's analyses of «men without chests» and the creation of a disenchanted world devoid of poetic myths that stem from and preserve folk culture.
Folk culture stems from the people of a particular region and the familial and religious bonds that form the central threads of that region.
In both cases individual members may exercise some dominance over others, in particular by altering the patterns guiding further growth and development, but the social coordination stems from basic patterns embodied in the genetic makeup of the plant cells and in the laws and traditions of human culture.
He sees them as stemming from a Western culture that has chosen to «live as though God did not exist,» exporting its ideas even as it has turned from Christianity to decadence and «intellectual cynicism.»
And it could do so because accepting secondarity stemmed from the deepest layer, or, to change metaphors, the peak of its culture, i.e., its religion.
Even if one of the traditional religious communities dominates the culture, it is now likely to be in competition with values stemming from the European Enlightenment — what I called scientific humanism.
The popularity of his work — it was quickly translated and published in many languages — stemmed from his ability to describe the social and political consequences of various Protestant «outlooks» or «principles,» consequences he judged the true source of the destructive influence of an ascendant modern and secular culture.
In today's view, culture gives the cosmos its shape and linked significance.14 We no longer believe that our perceptions stem from something innate.
Castella Vice President Chris Valsamos states that the company's interest in sustainability stems from its sense of social responsibility and is propelled by its internal culture across departments.
In 2010, researchers from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center published a study in the journal Clinical Cancer Research showing that sulforaphane had the ability to kill breast cancer stem cells in mice and in lab cultures, and it also prevented the growth of new tumor cells.
It all stems from the fact the culture of New Mexico's iconic vegetable is in decline.
Questions arising from cultured meats» «naturalness» that stem from its production process is the main barrier to consumer acceptance of this alternative protein, a report concludes.
Lechuza's origin stems from the Valle's verdancy soil and culture.
Part of this culture of laziness stems from the ability of Americans TO do this.
This stems from a sexualization of breastfeeding and our culture's fear of seeing even a hint of nipple, and groups like La Leche League have worked hard to counter that view.
It might also stem from a pet form of Juanita, giving it roots in Latin culture.
Rainbows have so much history and mythology attached, stemming from many different cultures that I can't help but be intrigued by the name.
While scientists have previously had success in 3D printing a range of human stem cell cultures developed from bone marrow or skin cells, a team from Scotland's Heriot - Watt University claims to be the first to print the more delicate, yet more flexible, human embryonic stem cells (hESCs).
The next step, Silber says, will be harvesting stem cells from around a «spermless» man's testicles, introducing them into cultures where the cells multiply, and then reimplanting those cells in the man's testicles, which then nurture them into fully mature sperm - producers.
The research team, co-led by Penn State's Dongwon Lee, associate professor of IST, and Nishanth Sastry, senior lecturer of King's College, theorized that these different personas stem from a desire to fit within the distinctive culture or etiquette of each site.
The company isolates, cultures and processes adult stem cells from a patient's bone marrow or synovial fluid.
The cells used to build the organs could be cultured from stem cells taken from fat or bone - marrow tissue, he says: «We could engineer a blood vessel from your own cells.»
As a graduate student at Princeton University, Moshe Pritsker tried in vain to grow a culture of embryonic stem cells from instructions laid out in the methods section of a journal article.
Then they winnowed the list down to the three factors most likely to explain gendered patterns in the six STEM fields — a lack of pre-college experience, gender gaps in belief in one's abilities and a masculine culture that discourages women from participating.
Zheng, together with Leah Boyer, then a researcher in Gage's lab and now director of Salk's Stem Cell Core, generated diseased neurons by taking skin cells from patients with Leigh syndrome, reprogramming them into stem cells in culture and then coaxing them to develop into brain cells in a dStem Cell Core, generated diseased neurons by taking skin cells from patients with Leigh syndrome, reprogramming them into stem cells in culture and then coaxing them to develop into brain cells in a dstem cells in culture and then coaxing them to develop into brain cells in a dish.
«Until now, it was not clear whether adults» sophisticated relational processing stemmed from experience with language and human culture.
(Although Clevers's organoids originate from adult stem cells, isolating those cells isn't necessary; culturing a tissue fragment with the right nutrients is enough.)
Finally, they demonstrated that zebrafish OPCs differentiate into mature oligodendrocytes when cultured together with human motor neurons, differentiated from induced pluripotent stem cells.
Prior research with cultured tissue had shown that a mix of chemicals could change bone marrow stem cells from mice to those resembling brain cells, but when a team led by neurologist Lorraine Iacovitti of Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia tried the same brew on human cells, the number altered was modest.
De Luca's team used a patch of skin a little bigger than a U.S. postage stamp from an unblistered part of the boy's groin to culture epidermal cells, which include stem cells that periodically regenerate the skin.
In practice, however, lung cells — especially from older, ill patients — won't grow well enough in culture, but will have to be produced from stem cells or induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, she says.
But the magnitudes of environmental impacts stem not just from our numbers but also from behaviors we learn from our parents and cultures.
The UW On - Ramps workshops aimed to broaden the universe of women from which universities can hire — and ultimately to change the culture of STEM departments and make them more welcoming to underrepresented groups — by helping highly qualified women with nonacademic career trajectories navigate the transition to academic employment.
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