Here, the Orgone Beam converts pure levorotation into dextrorotation, or vice versa, until bipolarity is achieved. |
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The over-arching framework of bipolarity seemed to render other struggles and rivalries nothing more than local manifestations of the Cold War. |
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In addition, they may induce hypomanic or manic symptoms in vulnerable persons, unmasking bipolarity. |
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In fact, terrorism has today become a counter pole to this order, imposing what is increasingly appearing to be a new bipolarity. |
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The end of bipolarity after 1989 led to the generalization of the western economic and social paradigm all over the world. |
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His only supporters are the old media, determined to elect him despite his bipolarity. |
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The end of the Cold War and bipolarity did not bring about the reconciliation that might have been expected. |
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Initially, at least, the preponderant view was that any alternative to bipolarity was likely to be some variation on multipolarity, with all of its depressing implications. |
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One final trend requiring mention, related to the elimination of political bipolarity, is the decline in state sponsorship. |
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The post-war world, the world of economic euphoria and of bipolarity, has disappeared. |
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Today's international security environment is more complicated and complex than the antagonism that characterized the period of bipolarity. |
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She was very accepting of Benjamin, and she was instrumental in educating all those working with Benjamin about bipolarity. |
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The problem is still that of huge asymmetry, that inordinate bipolarity which engenders conflict and aggression. |
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Neither was there any reason to believe that the end of bipolarity would necessarily mean the end of nukes. |
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At its height, your own management career had the bipolarity of Cher on one side and Joan Rivers on the other. |
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Since the end of bipolarity and the mergence of a unipolar international system, I personally believe that nonalignment should be what characterises American foreign policy. |
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The next session on bipolarity paired Latvia and Belgium. |
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The atmosphere in the Council's various comitologies are at times tense, and many observers have evoked a certain East-West bipolarity in the debates. |
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Prepubertal and early adolescent bipolarity differentiate from ADHD by manic symptoms, grandiose delusions, ultrarapid or ultradian cycling. |
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Waltz's Theory of International Politics, was written in part to dispel these flighty views and show that bipolarity still endured. |
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There can be no denying that the geostrategic landscape of today is significantly different from the Cold War bipolarity it supplanted. |
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In this discussion, I use the ideas of bipolarity, bilateralness, and correlativity to derive from a common source. |
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Under bipolarity of any type, Ukrainian input into a collective security agreement of any kind was doomed to be minimized. |
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It adapted itself to a changed environment after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of bipolarity and thus successfully filled the security vacuum created in Central and Eastern Europe. |
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Problems associated with bipolarity exist in tripolar settings: when ethnicity is politicized, differences may impact the system, constraining the formation of crossethnic alliances. |
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His greatest pleasure comes from appearing the poster boy for bipolarity as he ping-pongs between melancholy brooding and the antic disposition of a madman. |
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With echoes of Kenneth Waltz writing in a very different context, Drezner contends that bipolarity appears as the most stable form for a global regulatory regime. |
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