Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Consumerism" ¶ 17
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

many and critical
What makes the current phenomenon unique is that so many science-fiction writers have reversed a trend and turned to writing works critical of the impact of science and technology on human life.
He was acknowledged for his critical role in the stability of the euro despite the economic crises that prevailed in many economic powers.
For example, if a program needs 20 hours using a single processor core, and a particular portion of 1 hour cannot be parallelized, while the remaining promising portion of 19 hours ( 95 %) can be parallelized, then regardless of how many processors we devote to a parallelized execution of this program, the minimum execution time cannot be less than that critical 1 hour.
According to some scholars, he was more interested in spirituality than in critical text study, which was a specialty of many scholars at JTS.
Due to recorded predictions of the destruction of the temple, the Gospel of Mark is believed by many critical scholars to have been composed around or shortly after the fall of Jerusalem due to prophecies assumed to be ex post facto regarding the destruction of the temple, and both traditional and critical scholarly consensus maintains that it was the first written of the four canonical gospels.
The hypothalamus regulates sleep and wake cycles, eating and drinking, hormone release, and many other critical biological functions.
Please see bibliography for some of the many critical evaluations of her opus of children ’ s literature, including Modernist interpretations of Humphrey Carpenter and Katherine Chandler.
" Because the discipline covers many areas, which may or may not include critical applications, it is debatable whether licensing is required for the profession as a whole.
Ignored by many in " critical realist " circles, however, is that Kant's immediate impetus for writing his " Critique of Pure Reason " was to address problems raised by David Hume's skeptical empiricism which, in attacking metaphysics, employed reason and logic to argue against the knowability of the world and common notions of causation.
* For many embedded applications, interrupt latency will be more critical than in some general-purpose processors.
Like many critical applications, critical psychology has expanded beyond Marxist and feminist roots to benefit from other critical approaches.
PostgreSQL is often used for global mission critical applications ( the. org and. info domain name registries use it as their primary data store, as do many large companies and financial institutions ).
There has been very little critical examination of these works, and many are still treasured by churches as authentic.
The movie was released in 1974, and went on to receive tremendous critical acclaim, with many deeming it superior to its predecessor.
Punk bands and independent labels often sent records to the zines for review and many of the people who started the zines became critical connections for punk bands on tour.
In World War I, the Foreign Legion fought in many critical battles on the Western Front, including Artois, Champagne, Somme, Aisne, and Verdun ( in 1917 ), and also suffered heavy casualties during 1918.
Thus, most security researchers set maximum times ( such as 14 days or 30 days ) before fully revealing a vulnerability to the public, since otherwise many vendors would never fix even critical vulnerabilities in their products.
There, it was first clearly shown that mean field theory approaches failed to predict the correct behavior at the critical point ( which was found to fall under a universality class that includes many other systems, such as liquid-gas transitions ), and had to be replaced by renormalization group theory.
Most modern critical scholarship concludes that Luke used the Gospel of Mark for his chronology and a hypothetical sayings source Q document for many of Jesus ' teachings.
However many critical scholars consider the " we " passages spurious or inserted and place the date c 80-90,
However, as time went by, Gardner became critical of many of the Rosicrucian Order's practices ; Sullivan's followers claimed that he was immortal, having formerly been the famous historical figures Pythagoras, Cornelius Agrippa and Francis Bacon.
Although Wagner became fiercely critical of Brahms as the latter grew in stature and popularity, he was enthusiastically receptive of the early Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel ; Brahms himself, according to many sources ( Swafford, 1999 ), deeply admired Wagner's music, confining his ambivalence only to the dramaturgical precepts of Wagner's theory.

many and contexts
Once many significant phrases are found in theory or in recurrent practice to provide for prosodic necessity, they are not to be defended for their semantic properties in isolated contexts.
However, in contexts where " amoeboid " is defined more loosely, there are many amoeboid species that are in the Excavata clade.
Art clearly does have spiritual goals in many contexts, but what exactly is the difference between religious art and religion per se?
Like many ancient Egyptian deities, Anubis assumes different roles in various contexts.
In many signal processing contexts, bandwidth is a valuable and limited resource.
The same number however occurs in many other mathematical contexts, where it is denoted by ( often read as " n choose k "); notably it occurs as coefficient in the binomial formula, hence its name binomial coefficient.
Also, while elementary particles showed predictable properties in many experiments, they became highly unpredictable in certain contexts, for example, if one attempted to measure their individual trajectories through a simple physical apparatus.
In food science and in many informal contexts, the term carbohydrate often means any food that is particularly rich in the complex carbohydrate starch ( such as cereals, bread, and pasta ) or simple carbohydrates, such as sugar ( found in candy, jams, and desserts ).
It has been regarded in many different contexts throughout history, but especially as a metaphysical constant of the world.
The term caste has been used in many other contexts.
In American contexts, the word " Camelot " is sometimes used to refer admiringly to the presidency of John F. Kennedy, as his term was said to have potential and promise for the future, and many were inspired by Kennedy's speeches, vision, and policies.
In many gaming contexts, especially tabletop RPGs, the count and number of sides of dice to be rolled at any given time is reduced to a common set of notations ; typically these involve the letter " d " for dice.
* In many contexts " quotienting ," and hence the appropriate equivalence relations often called congruences, are important.
In many contexts, the word encryption may also implicitly refer to the reverse process, decryption e. g. “ software for encryption ” can typically also perform decryption.
In many econometric contexts,
In fact, like so many film effects that distort the representation of reality, anamorphosis was first used exclusively in comic contexts.
These movements or styles tend to classify the artists by their relationship to their social and economic contexts, since, in most countries, graffiti art remains illegal in many forms except when using non-permanent paint.
More than literal adaptations, the plays address violence, death, crime and fear in contemporary contexts, while revisiting many trope of the original Grand Guignol corpus, often with humor.
" while the latter may be more important and more meaningful in many contexts.
This division of coding theory into compression and transmission is justified by the information transmission theorems, or source – channel separation theorems that justify the use of bits as the universal currency for information in many contexts.
The region is not an official administrative unit, but has been traditionally used as the regional division of Japan in a number of contexts: for example, maps and geography textbooks divide Japan into the eight regions, weather reports usually give the weather by region, and many businesses and institutions use their home region as part of their name ( Kinki Nippon Railway, Chūgoku Bank, Tohoku University, etc .).
If a learning object is reusable in many contexts, it isn ’ t particularly useful in any.
As with the Roman names of many European countries, Lusitania was and is often used as an alternative name for Portugal, especially in formal and literary or poetic contexts.
The anti-nativist view has many strands, but a frequent theme is that language emerges from usage in social contexts, using learning mechanisms that are a part of a general cognitive learning apparatus ( which is what is innate ).
Indirection: in many contexts, can be used, and effectively substitutes the contents of VBL into another MUMPS statement.

0.111 seconds.