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stems and from
In fact, insofar as science generates any fear, it stems not so much from scientific prowess and gadgets but from the fact that new unanswered questions arise, which, until they are understood, create uncertainty.
he is questioning, also, every epistemology which stems from Hume's presupposition that experience is merely sense data in abstraction from causal efficacy, and that causal efficacy is something intellectually imputed to the world, not directly perceived.
Perhaps the public's present attitude toward business stems from the fact that the `` rugged capitalist entrepreneur '' no more exists in America.
Rather than from a first-hand study of Jewish people, his delineation of Shylock stems from a collection of Italian stories, Il Pecorone, published in 1558, although written almost two centuries earlier.
Much of its strength stems from the comfortable knowledge that every `` volunteer '' Democratic organization of any consequence belongs to the Aj.
One of the problems associated with the expressway stems from the basic idea.
The financial problem, where it exists, usually stems from the adoption of a budget for the transitional or adjustment period.
The increase stems largely from the growing complexity of and higher degree of maintenance required for newer weapons and equipment.
For example, probably very few people know that the word `` visrhanik '' that is bantered about so much today stems from the verb `` bouanahsha '': to salivate.
In attempting to improve specificity of staining, the fluorescein-labeled antisera used in both direct and indirect methods were treated in one of several ways: ( 1 ) They were passed through Dowex-2-chloride twice and treated with acetone insoluble powders ( Coons, 1958 ) prepared from mouse liver or from healthy sweet clover stems or crown gall tissue produced by Agrobacterium tumefaciens ( E. F. Smith & Townsend ) on sweet clover stems.
( 2 ) The conjugates as well as the intermediate sera were absorbed for 30 minutes with 20 - 50 mg of proteins extracted from healthy sweet clover stems.
The specificity of staining with Af was established as follows: Af specifically stained tumor sections but not sections of healthy sweet clover stems or of crown gall tumor tissue from sweet clover.
There are more stems per item in Athabascan, which expresses the fact that the Athabascan languages have undergone somewhat more change in diverging from proto-Athabascan than the Yokuts languages from proto-Yokuts.
The vulnerability of Protestantism to social differences stems from the peculiar role of the new religious style in middle-class life, where the congregation is a vehicle of social and economic group identity and must conform, therefore, to the principle of economic integration.
He sucked in his breath and kept quiet while Killpath laid down the sheet again, wound the gold-wire stems of his glasses around his ears and then, eying the report as it lay before him on the desk, intoned, `` Acting Lieutenant Gunnar Matson one failed to see that the station keeper was properly relieved two absented himself throughout the entire watch without checking on the station's activities or the whereabouts of his section sergeants three permitted members of the Homicide Detail of the Inspector's Bureau to arrogate for their own convenience a patrolman who was thereby prevented from carrying on his proper assignment four failed to notify the station commander Acting Captain O. T. Killpath of a homicide occurring in the district five frequented extralegal establishments known as after-hours spots for purposes of an unofficial and purportedly social nature and six '' -- he leaned back and peeled off his glasses `` -- failed to co-operate with the Acting Captain by returning promptly when so ordered.
His sense of urgency in this matter stems from the fact that court cases and juvenile arrests have more than doubled since 1948, each year showing an increase in offenders.
By way of explanation we ourselves are prone to imagine that this achievement stems from the same American Catholic zeal and generosity which brought the parochial school system into existence.
The public atmosphere that has been generated which makes acceptance of this law a possibility stems from the disrepute into which the labor movement has fallen as a result of Mr. McClellan's hearings into corruption in labor-management relations and, later, into the jurisdictional squabbles that plagued industrial relations at the missile sites.

stems and behavior
Besides her audio-visual software art, the fame and notoriety of ' Netochka Nezvanova ' stems from the complex and intricate online behavior she displayed through her various identities on countless mailing lists and websites, by which she mesmerized and vexed internet users and the operators of her software products alike.
The importance of gauge theories for physics stems from their tremendous success in providing a unified framework to describe the quantum-mechanical behavior of electromagnetism, the weak force and the strong force.
The importance of the Brillouin zone stems from the Bloch wave description of waves in a periodic medium, in which it is found that the solutions can be completely characterized by their behavior in a single Brillouin zone.
Another negative suggestion is that the behavior stems from a desire for attention, sometimes described with a new usage of the older term " bisexual chic ".
NVC theory supposes all human behavior stems from attempts to meet universal human needs and that these needs are never in conflict.
Orks ' brutish behavior and choice to always use a direct approach in combat stems from their lack of a fear of death.
" Thor's identity is comically hinted at throughout the reception ( the god eats an entire ox on his own ), with Loki providing weak explanations that the giants somehow accept for the odd behavior ( he claims that the bride's immense hunger stems from her not having eaten for the last seven days for her excitement ).

stems and load
The difference stems from load commands that Mac OS X's linker ( dyld ) can not understand on previous Mac OS X versions.
The major advantage of this circuit arrangement stems from the placement of the upper field-effect transistor ( FET ) as the load of the input ( lower ) FET's output terminal ( drain ).

stems and cells
The major classes of cells differentiate from undifferentiated meristematic cells ( analogous to the stem cells of animals ) to form the tissue structures of roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and reproductive structures.
Plant epidermal cells are specialised parenchyma cells covering the external surfaces of leaves, stems and roots.
The epidermis, which is a layer of cells that cover the plant body, including the stems, leaves, flowers and fruits, that protects the plant from the outside world.
Older phellem cells are dead, as is the case with woody stems.
As the stems grow a layer of cells form under the epidermis, called the cork cambium, these cells produce cork cells that turn into cork.
They stimulate cambium, a subtype of meristem cells, to divide and in stems cause secondary xylem to differentiate.
A lenticel is an airy aggregation of cells within the bark of the stems and roots of gymnosperms and the non-monocot flowering plants, and rarely on the leaf-stem ( rachis ).
However, the concern with using a diode stems from parasitic currents to neighboring cells, as well as a higher voltage requirement, resulting in higher power consumption.
Many look and feel like leather and usually have air-filled bladders or spongy cells inside the stems that help the water support them.

stems and .
The twirled, stylized design of winding stems and floral forms strongly suggests the embroidered patterns used so extensively for upholstery during the Jacobean period in England.
In the direct method, Af, not further treated, stained certain tissues of healthy sweet clover stems nonspecifically and WTV tumor sections were similarly stained by comparable Af.
The many linguistic techniques for reducing the amount of dictionary information that have been proposed all organize the dictionary's contents around prefixes, stems, suffixes, etc..
The differentiation, however, is not very much greater, as shown by the fact that Athabascan shows 3.46 stems per meaning slot as against 2.75 for Yokuts, with a slightly greater number of languages represented in our sample: 24 as against 21.
For Yokuts, I tabulated these 71 items in five columns, according as they were expressed by 1, 2, 3, 4, and more than 4 stems.
and Af stems.
Thomas also presents a simple equation for deriving an index of persistence, which weights not only the number of stems ( ' roots ' ) per meaning, but their relative frequency.
or under ' Four Stems ', I set off by asterisks cases where the combined N of stems Af was Af.

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