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phenomenon and could
Bernard Bailyn's classic The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution ( 1967 ) notes that a similar phenomenon could be found in America during the time preceding the American Revolution.
For many decades, consciousness as a research topic was avoided by the majority of mainstream scientists, because of a general feeling that a phenomenon defined in subjective terms could not properly be studied using objective experimental methods.
He had also read something about computers ( a relatively recent phenomenon ), and from his experience as a radar technician he knew that information could be analyzed and displayed on a screen.
This is a relatively recent phenomenon ; until the last few decades a sovereign was seen as the personal embodiment of the state (" L ' etat c ' est moi ", so to speak ), and therefore could not be head of himself or herself ( hence many constitutions from the 19th century and earlier make no mention of a " head of state ").
The transformation of an inflationary development into the hyperinflation has to be identified as a very complex phenomenon, which could be a further advanced research avenue of the complexity economics in conjunction with research areas like mass hysteria, bandwagon effect, social brain and mirror neurons.
However, the overall conclusion of the study was that there was no evidence that hypnosis could be used for military applications, and also that there was no clear evidence for whether ' hypnosis ' actually exists as a definable phenomenon outside of ordinary suggestion, high motivation and subject expectancy.
Strmiska asserted that contemporary Paganism could be viewed as a part of the " much larger phenomenon " of efforts to revive " traditional, indigenous, or native religions " that were occurring across the globe.
One of the earliest of these was Al-Kindi ( c. 801 – 73 ) who wrote on the merits of Aristotelian and Euclidean ideas of optics, favouring the emission theory since it could better quantify optical phenomenon.
David Turner, a retired physical chemist, suggested that ball lightning, another phenomenon, could cause inanimate objects to move erratically.
Doppler correctly predicted that the phenomenon should apply to all waves, and in particular suggested that the varying colors of stars could be attributed to their motion with respect to the Earth.
In the nineteenth century the phrase became commonplace, in common use at church bazaars called “ white elephant sales ” where donors could unload unwanted bric-a-brac, generating profit from the phenomenon that one man ’ s trash is another man ’ s treasure.
This phenomenon could only be explained via photons, and not through any semi-classical theory ( which could alternatively explain the photoelectric effect ).
That is, Newton proposed that light consisted of small particles, with which he could easily explain the phenomenon of reflection.
Social evolution as a phenomenon carries with it certain elements that could be detrimental to the population it serves.
Once they were in operation, drama could become a fixed and permanent rather than a transitory phenomenon.
In 1874, Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff and Joseph Achille Le Bel independently proposed that the phenomenon of optical activity could be explained by assuming that the chemical bonds between carbon atoms and their neighbors are directed towards the corners of a regular tetrahedron.
Long thought to be a Mesozoic phenomenon, evidence for herbivory is found almost as soon as fossils which could show it.
A study conducted by the La Trobe University School of Psychological Sciences revealed that as few as five cups of coffee a day could trigger the phenomenon.
Durkheim's use of the term anomie was about a phenomenon of industrialization — mass-regimentation that could not adapt due to its own inertia — its resistance to change, which causes disruptive cycles of collective behavior ( e. g. economics ) due to the necessity of a prolonged buildup of sufficient force or momentum to overcome the inertia.
The specific term " singularity " as a description for a phenomenon of technological acceleration causing an eventual unpredictable outcome in society was coined by mathematician and physicist Stanislaw Ulam as early as 1958, when he wrote of a conversation with John von Neumann concerning the " ever accelerating progress of technology and changes in the mode of human life, which gives the appearance of approaching some essential singularity in the history of the race beyond which human affairs, as we know them, could not continue.
While investigating this phenomenon, researchers discovered that static electricity could cause low-pressure air to glow.
De la Cierva was troubled by the stall phenomenon and vowed to develop an aircraft that could fly safely at low airspeeds.
Plants could be said to exhibit a form of equilibrioception, in that when rotated from their normal attitude the stems grow in the direction that is upward ( away from gravity ) while their roots grow downward ( in the direction of gravity ) this phenomenon is known as Gravitropism and it has been shown that for instance Poplar stems can detect reorientation and inclination.
Any bridge with lateral frequency modes of less than 1. 3 Hz, and sufficiently low mass, could witness the same phenomenon with sufficient pedestrian loading.

phenomenon and unless
DiffServ uses the 6-bit Differentiated Services Field ( DS field ) in the IP header The TCP congestion avoidance algorithms are subject to a phenomenon called TCP global synchronization unless special approaches ( such as Random early detection ) are taken when dropping TCP packets.
This is related to the Gibbs phenomenon, where fourier series for functions that vary rapidly in space are not good approximations unless a very large number of terms in the series are retained.
This phenomenon is often observed in wind tunnel testing of aircraft, and is especially important when parachute systems are involved, because unless the parachute lines extend the canopy beyond the reverse flow region, the chute can fail to inflate and thus collapse.
The " law " has it that because such deaths are a rare phenomenon and difficult to explain by natural causes, we might say that " One is a tragedy, two is suspicious and three is murder unless there is proof to the contrary.
The levitated top's stabilizing rotation undergoes natural, gradual slowing, so that the levitation phenomenon fails within four minutes unless external power is supplied to sustain rotation.
Carcinoma in situ is, by definition, a localized phenomenon, with no potential for metastasis unless it progresses into a " true " cancer.
The phenomenon of wear and tear is a good demonstration of the Second Law of Thermodynamics in action-roughly speaking, objects will get messier and more worn down over time ( they are said to have higher entropy ), unless energy from the outside world is used to fix them.
Some of the recent pictures taken by IDS shows a lot of land from the island has been eroded away and is continuing to do so, unless otherwise some steps need to be taken in order to prevent this harmful phenomenon.
Conversely, the discovery of such a phenomenon cannot support a patent unless there is some other inventive concept in its application.

phenomenon and rapidly
" They noted that " the law of transformation of quantity into quality ", " holds that a new quality emerges in a leap as the slow accumulation of quantitative changes, long resisted by a stable system, finally forces it rapidly from one state into another ," a phenomenon described in some disciplines as a paradigm shift.
This phenomenon is the source of several common expressions in the English language including " to mushroom " or " mushrooming " ( expanding rapidly in size or scope ) and " to pop up like a mushroom " ( to appear unexpectedly and quickly ).
Red tide is a common name for a phenomenon also known as an algal bloom ( large concentrations of aquatic microorganisms ), an event in which estuarine, marine, or fresh water algae accumulate rapidly in the water column and results in discoloration of the surface water.
This phenomenon was first discovered in animal studies by Arnsten and colleagues, who have shown that stress-induced catecholamine release in PFC rapidly decreases PFC neuronal firing and impairs working memory performance through feedforward, intracellular signaling pathways.
Urbanisation is not merely a modern phenomenon, but a rapid and historic transformation of human social roots on a global scale, whereby predominantly village culture is being rapidly replaced by predominantly urban culture.
A recent phenomenon, known as the RR Reversal, has also been well documented in recent years-where a rapidly increasing stock experiences an inexplicable and sudden pullback to the magnitude of 10-40 % within a month.
The Leidenfrost effect is a phenomenon in which a liquid, in near contact with a mass significantly hotter than the liquid's boiling point, produces an insulating vapor layer which keeps that liquid from boiling rapidly.
The Gibbs phenomenon is also closely related to the principle that the decay of the Fourier coefficients of a function at infinity is controlled by the smoothness of that function ; very smooth functions will have very rapidly decaying Fourier coefficients ( resulting in the rapid convergence of the Fourier series ), whereas discontinuous functions will have very slowly decaying Fourier coefficients ( causing the Fourier series to converge very slowly ).
However, Maunder wrote that the phenomenon moved rapidly from horizon to horizon, which would rule out a noctilucent cloud or upper tangent arc.
In sociology, a tipping point is the event of a previously rare phenomenon becoming rapidly and dramatically more common.
When paired presentations were reintroduced after extinction, Purkinje cell CRs reappeared rapidly, mirroring the " savings " phenomenon demonstrated at the behavioral level.
This phenomenon can be explained by two theories: Loudness grows more rapidly for these listeners than normal listeners with changes in level.
In 1883, following from Maxwell's equations, FitzGerald suggested a device for producing rapidly oscillating electric currents to generate electromagnetic waves, a phenomenon which was first shown to exist experimentally by the German physicist Heinrich Hertz in 1888.
The more rapidly the energy decreases and the current dies out along the circuit, the more local is the phenomenon.
However, in some countries of Southeast Asia and Africa with a high population density the problem of overcrowding of different vehicles, including trains, grew rapidly, so train surfing in these countries became widespread phenomenon.
The tide runs rapidly on the Hugli, and produces a remarkable example of the fluvial phenomenon known as a " tidal bore.
The hundredth monkey effect is a supposed phenomenon in which a learned behavior spreads rapidly from one group of monkeys to all related monkeys once a critical number of initiates is reached.
The sketch, a parody of an internet phenomenon popularized by Noah Kalina and Jonathan Keller, rapidly gained popularity on YouTube, where it has been viewed over three million times.
This region has been hit by the unique phenomenon of mine fires which started in 1916 and is rapidly destroying the only source of prime coking coal in the country.
The term has coined " Yugosphere " by The Economist as the phenomenon rapidly went from creating a regional train service ( Cargo 10 ) to the proposition of forging the main airlines ( JAT, Croatia, Adria ).
As a phenomenon that can chronicle a move towards civilization yet rapidly diminish with modernity, industrialization, or outside influence, the nature of folk art is specific to its particular culture.
In an effort to maximize the good news, Warner Communications decided to spin off Nickelodeon and the rapidly growing phenomenon MTV as a public company ( MTV Networks ).
* The blue field entoptic phenomenon has the appearance of tiny bright dots moving rapidly along squiggly lines in the visual field.

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