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phenomenon and is
The field, then, is ripe for new Southerners to step to the fore and write of this twentieth-century phenomenon, the Southern Yankeefication: the new urban economy, the city-dweller, the pains of transition, the labor problems ; ;
This bold self-assertion, after decades of humble subservience, is indeed a twentieth-century phenomenon, an abrupt change in the Southern way of existence.
One, a reservation on the point I have just made, is the phenomenon of pseudo-thinking, pseudo-feeling, and pseudo-willing, which Fromm discussed in The Escape From Freedom.
Because of the means of publication -- science-fiction magazines and cheap paperbacks -- and because dystopian science fiction is still appearing in quantity the full range and extent of this phenomenon can hardly be known, though one fact is evident: the science-fiction imagination has been immensely fertile in its extrapolations.
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.
I would, however, like to suggest that, wrong though I may be, the tendency to see dilemmas rather than solutions is one of which I have been a victim ever since I can remember, and therefore not merely a senile phenomenon.
This is a phenomenon familiar to all radio listeners, resulting from reflection of skywave signals at night from the ionized layer in the upper atmosphere known as the ionosphere.
Zodiacal light and the gegenschein give some evidence for such a dust blanket, a phenomenon also to be expected if the dust before capture is in circular orbits about the sun, as indicated by the trend of the smaller visible meteors.
The Maturity Chart for each sex demonstrates clearly that Onset is a phenomenon of infancy and early childhood whereas Completion is a phenomenon of the later portion of adolescence.
that is, we may discuss the phenomenon in terms of its departures from the binomial model.
Autosuggestibility, the reaction of the subject in such a way as to conform to his own expectations of the outcome ( i.e., that the arm-rise is a reaction to the pressure exerted in the voluntary contraction, because of his knowledge that `` to every reaction there is an equal and opposite reaction '' ) also seems inadequate as an explanation for the following reasons: ( 1 ) the subjects' apparently genuine experience of surprise when their arms rose, and ( 2 ) manifestations of the phenomenon despite anticipations of something else happening ( e.g., of becoming dizzy and maybe falling, an expectation spontaneously volunteered by one of the subjects ).
this is a question which I have no wish to take up -- condensation is a phenomenon in which one finds not a condensed expression of various feelings and ideas which are, at an unconscious level, well sorted out, but rather a condensed expression of feelings and ideas which, even in the unconscious, have yet to become well differentiated from one another.
The paper has a certain value as a comparatively easy introduction to this approach, particularly since it treats a fairly simple and straightforward phenomenon where it is possible to compare it with a more traditional ( though not structural ) statement.
Sprouting is a naturally occurring phenomenon in stored potatoes, onions, carrots, beets, and similar root vegetables.
At low thicknesses a cutting ( or shearing ) phenomenon is often encountered.
Every dream, and this is true of a mental image of any type even though it may be readily interpreted into its equivalent of wakeful thought, is a psychic phenomenon for which no explanation is available.
The concept of unity, in which positive and negative are attributes of the same force, in which good and evil are relative, ever-changing, and always joined to the same phenomenon -- such a concept is still reserved to the physical sciences and to the few who have grasped the history of ideas.

phenomenon and origin
Now, with virtually every writer, not only was the European origin of public law acknowledged as a historical phenomenon, but the rules thus established by the advanced civilizations of Europe were to be imposed on others.
Etiologies are narratives that explain the origin of a custom, ritual, geographical feature, name, or other phenomenon.
The Tropical zodiac ( of Mesopotamian origin ) is divided by the intersections of the ecliptic and equator, which shifts in relation to the backdrop of fixed stars at a rate of 1 ° every 72 years, creating the phenomenon known as precession of the equinoxes.
Source and victim are usually electronic hardware devices, though the source may be a natural phenomenon such as a lightning strike, electrostatic discharge ( ESD ) or, in one famous case, the Big Bang at the origin of the Universe.
* Taos Hum, a phenomenon involving a persistent and invasive low-frequency noise of a humming character and unknown origin
In an 1856 book, adventurer Charles Lanman wrote of the springs: Another possible origin for the name Wakulla, not as widely accepted, is that it means " mist " or " misting ", perhaps in reference to the Wakulla Volcano, a 19th century phenomenon in which a column of smoke could be seen emerging from the swamp for miles.
The origin of these depressions in the wheat crop of local farmer Jim Llewellyn is unknown, and the phenomenon was covered by new stations as well as newspapers.
Following the vogue of 19th-century research, he wanted to comprehend totemism in a broad perspective, and in his study The Worship of Animals and Plants ( 1869, 1870 ) he did not seek to explain the specific origin of the totemistic phenomenon but sought to indicate that all of the human race had in ancient times gone through a totemistic stage.
The New York Times indicated J. J. Kilroy as the origin in 1946, based on the results of a contest conducted by the Amalgamated Transit Union to establish the origin of the phenomenon.
The origin of new divergent boundaries at triple junctions is sometimes thought to be associated with the phenomenon known as hotspots.
This phenomenon is not the same as the origin of rainbow colours ( caused by the refraction of internally reflected light ), but rather are the same as the phenomenon causing the colours in an oil slick on a wet road.
This origin is ultimately reliant on the Higgs mechanism, but, so far understood as a " just so " feature of Higgs couplings, not a spontaneously broken symmetry phenomenon.
Researchers from Project EMBLA speculated the possibility that atmospheric plasma had been the origin of the phenomenon.
Answering to the question of how there came to be formed in the Church of France a body of doctrines and practices which tended to isolate it, and to give it a character somewhat exceptional in the Catholic body, Gallicans have held that the reason of this phenomenon is to be found in the very origin and history of Gallicanism.
This is so called because the typical example of this phenomenon is the branch point of the complex logarithm at the origin.
An invariant explanation of the branch phenomenon is developed in Riemann surface theory ( of which it is historically the origin ), and more generally in the ramification and monodromy theory of algebraic functions and differential equations.
* The Hum-an apparently widespread phenomenon involving a low-frequency hum of unknown origin, inaudible to most people
The origin of the team came about when Superman was investigating a strange phenomenon causing the citizens of Metropolis to begin acting like their primate ancestors.
Thus, the origin of research on the theory of flow came about when Csikszentmihalyi tried to understand this phenomenon experienced by these artists.
There, the origin of intimate publics in the mass cultural phenomenon of “ women ’ s culture ,” which crosses over the everyday institutions of intimacy, mass society, and, more distantly and ambivalently, politics, is pursued through readings especially of remade movies, such as Show Boat, Imitation of Life, and Uncle Tom ’ s Cabin.
Such attempts to trace the origin of clans to a famous individual have interest as a sociological phenomenon rather than for its historical accuracy.
It is therefore argued that increasingly accurate measurements and modelling of the motions of the outer planets and their satellites undermine the possibility that the Pioneer anomaly is a phenomenon of gravitational origin.

phenomenon and Lord
( This time phenomenon is retold in Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings when the Fellowship pass into both Rivendell and Lothlórien, where time seems almost to stand still.
Although it is possible that all of the Time Lords killed were at the end of their regeneration cycles ( somewhat more likely with a retiring President: potentially his reaching the end of his regeneration cycle was the very reason for his retirement ), it is also possible that regeneration, regardless of how many regenerations the individual Time Lord has already undergone, is a conditional and non-inevitable phenomenon.
Other names for the phenomenon are " falling over ", " falling under the Spirit's power ", " falling before the Lord ", " slain under the power " or " resting in the Spirit ".
Whether voluntary or involuntary, " falling before the Lord " as a human response to the manifestation of the Holy Spirit is seen by many charismatics as a phenomenon that is in harmony with the Scriptures.
Tolkien's The Lord Of The Rings, just prior to its paperback publication in America and subsequent cultural phenomenon:
Earlier in the year the elder Tonson was in town, and Pope, writing to Lord Oxford, said that if he would come to see him he would show him a phenomenon worth seeing, " old Jacob Tonson, who is the perfect image and likeness of Bayle's Dictionary ; so full of matter, secret history, and wit and spirit, at almost fourscore.
A popular rumour that was in circulation as early as the 1840s claimed Lord Waterford was the main suspect behind the " Spring Heeled Jack " phenomenon.
This celestial phenomenon is also mentioned in Joel 2: 31, which foretells the same precise order of events mentioned in Revelation: The moon turns blood red and the sun turns dark before the great day of the Lord.
This phenomenon was first identified in the so-called " tears of wine " by physicist James Thomson ( Lord Kelvin's brother ) in 1855.

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