And for that matter, life itself is an emergent property, arising from proteins, DNA, and other biomolecules. |
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The number of live emergent spiderlings was used as a measure of fecundity. |
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As he notes, on this construal, emergent properties will include both relational and non-relational properties. |
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But it may well be that intelligence and consciousness are emergent properties rather than located in specific centres of the brain. |
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Main emergent trees are Nothofagus nitida, Drimys winteri, and Eucryphia cordifolia. |
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In summer, nesting habitat is small wetlands with emergent vegetation in boreal forests and parklands. |
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The canopy is 30-35 m tall, with emergent Agathis atropurpurea on the upper slopes. |
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Both male and female help build a floating nest made of plant material and anchored to emergent vegetation. |
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Floating, or built up from the bottom, the nest is a dense mat of plant material anchored to emergent vegetation. |
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Lowering the water levels in spring stimulated emergent vegetation and raising levels in late summer maintained waterfowl feeding areas. |
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The rest of the parish sketches will devote themselves to anatomizing the differences between this superseded charity and this emergent reform. |
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But the emergent event presents itself as discontinuous, as a disruption without conditions. |
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In contrast, the emergent open world economy will yield prosperity, liberty, democracy, and peace for all humanity. |
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As the hyphens and slash marks indicate, these emergent literatures do not fit under a single rubric. |
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Varying water levels are especially important to birds such as grebes, coots, and diving ducks that build floating nests in emergent vegetation. |
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Forget postmodernism, the emergent church may be infecting us with a real evil. |
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Interactions such as sharing a picture book, telling a story, and talking about experiences are central to emergent literacy. |
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Although they float freely on the water surface, they are treated as emergent weeds. |
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The objectified self is an emergent within the social structures and processes of human intersubjectivity. |
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However, it is thought that the Lower Palaeozoic inliers to the southeast were emergent at the time of mineralization. |
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The emergent dream, like a neurotic symptom, is a compromise between censorship and direct expression. |
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All three types of subadventitial aortic disruption are at high risk for exsanguination and should be managed with emergent surgery. |
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It gives good control of cattails and other emergent aquatic plants as well as woody plants growing on the shorelines. |
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The film revolves around an unnamed young man's emergent lucidity within a dream. |
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The emergent event is an unexpected disruption of continuity, an inhibition of passage. |
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The sell then, becomes an ideological process, emergent in practices of dramatic performance and socially ritualized behavior. |
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During the Miocene the shelf was intermittently emergent, and the submarine canyons were extended to the shelf area through headward erosion. |
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An historical account will be valid or correct, not absolutely, but in relation to a specific emergent context. |
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Nesting areas typically have emergent vegetation to which these birds anchor their nests and open water in which they can forage. |
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Industrialism's strident emergent element nestles comfortably in a cosy neo-pastoralist structure of feeling. |
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One example of such emergent, distributed computation is the density classification task. |
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We can bootstrap emergent democracy by using the tools to develop the tools and create concrete examples of emergent democracy. |
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Then the country's emergent civil society collapsed beneath post-communist repression and the kleptocracy of regional robber barons. |
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Cement intrusion into the spinal canal may require emergent decompression for removal and protection of the neural elements. |
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Both parents help build the well-concealed nest, which is a floating platform of weeds anchored to emergent vegetation in shallow water. |
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Feather morphology is an emergent feature of these processes, plus the assembly mechanism inherent in the follicle. |
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Canvasbacks and redheads will nest over water using emergent plants, such as cattails and bulrushes. |
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In the Ebro basin, flexure of the crust was produced mainly by the Pyrenean load, but also by the emergent thrust sheet of the Aragonese Branch. |
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Intelligence is an emergent property of person-in-society, not an inborn capability or an epigenetically developed trait of individuals. |
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Ephrin B2 is the entry receptor for Nipah virus, an emergent deadly paramyxovirus. |
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There's a nearly null set of deep insight into emergent functionality that's reduced to useful practice. |
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Engulfing new plantings, the rank growth took on the appearance of an emergent urban ecosystem. |
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The article draws on both primary and secondary data to examine the media's role in an emergent democracy. |
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The Community responded to the other emergent democracies of Central and Eastern Europe with association agreements and aid. |
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These unwanted emergent environmental patterns seem intractable to pluralist politics. |
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The long toes may help screamers walk on emergent and submerged aquatic vegetation. |
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The most frequently emergent macrophytes used are reeds, bulrushes, cattails, rushes and sedges. |
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The story is created from the emergent creative process of the community as a whole. |
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Nests are made of grass, and are usually lashed to cattails, bulrushes, or other emergent vegetation close to the water. |
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Even so, I firmly believe that the consequences of handedness can provide a credible basis for our emergent freedom. |
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It is consistent with qualitative research methods that the focus of the study may be further shaped in process by the emergent findings. |
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It's quite another to deftly juggle the nuances of presidential behavior in a newly emergent democracy. |
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Newly emergent communities will employ the tools of democracy to acquire power, and having done so, will preserve democratic institutions that served them so well. |
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Since independence, an emergent class structure has become apparent in urban sectors with radical differences in wealth between the rich and poor. |
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From the solid establishment of defensible emergent cities, people moved west and kept moving west until, by the middle of the 19th century, we were a bicoastal country. |
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The emergent plants are cattails, bulrushes, and water plantains. |
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Some centers have approached symptomatic pulmonary venous occlusion with emergent surgical thrombectomy, which is associated with a high perioperative mortality. |
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As with any emergent technology where an action is involved, the brand becomes the verb. |
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In his new book, Present Shock, the media theorist Douglas Rushkoff takes a stab at describing an emergent cultural phenomenon. |
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They will find that they are prone to continuously misread and misinterpret their emergent partner, protagonist and rival. |
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The creation of these late orders of chivalry proliferated in European nations in the 19th century and was emulated by emergent aspirant nations in their spheres of influence. |
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They are emergent, multivalent signifiers in search of an open interpretation, one related to the building task, the site and the language of the particular architecture. |
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Most plant dry mass in the diet of Barrow's Goldeneyes consisted of seeds of submergent and emergent macrophytes, particularly those of pondweeds, mare's tails, and bulrushes. |
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The company has unleashed over 1,400 bloggers, hoping that their emergent hive mind will speed the next version of their operating system to release. |
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They prefer clear water in small lakes and ponds that are not overwhelmed with submergent and emergent vegetation and which do not support populations of fish. |
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The emergent self is protean, shifting, cunning, humorous, unencumbered, sometimes angry, but equally capable of accepting its own absurdity and inconsequentiality. |
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Too much pressure now could help to derail Indonesia's emergent democracy. |
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It seems a great shame that there is an almost total absence of awareness of the emergent East Asian music scene, especially that of China, in Europe and America. |
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In the case of Bush's second term, the decision of the US electorate will undoubtedly, as it already has, impact negatively on fragile and emergent democracies the world over. |
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The true reflection of the reality of development for the emergent economies is in the interests of the pressure groups within the WTO and other world bodies. |
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By comparing stages of oral language development to similar stages of writing development, parents may better understand the emergent writing process. |
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Since no single activity is responsible for undesired emergent properties of complex systems, such problems are intractable to our pluralistic political processes. |
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Thus, from the beginning, Collins is arguing that consciousness is an emergent property, i.e. a property had by the whole, but not by the parts that compose that whole. |
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Together, the male and female Western Grebe build a floating nest made of heaps of plant material anchored to emergent vegetation in a shallow area of a marsh. |
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Fish will come to the surface and appear to gulp air, and snails, crayfish, and other organisms may actually climb out on the bank or up on emergent objects. |
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But the role of the emergent rural and non-elite Creole population in transforming Belize's landscape throughout the nineteenth century is less clear. |
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Active and agile, they forage in emergent vegetation along shorelines and in wet, shallow, muddy areas, mainly by dabbling their bills at the water's surface. |
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It is here that Klapwijk introduces his particular notion of emergent evolution. |
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Scotland's emergent nationalism in the era following the conclusion of the Wars of Scottish Independence was organized using Scots as well. |
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Assy locates Arendt's emergent interest in ethics in her writing on totalitarianism and on Eichmann as a representative of totalitarianism. |
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King's Cave on the south west coast is an example of an emergent landform on such a raised beach. |
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Although it has no emergent cays or islets, some parts are very shallow and the water breaks on them. |
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Such movements see modernism as reductionist, and therefore subject to an inability to see systemic and emergent effects. |
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During interglacial times, such as at present, drowned coastlines were common, mitigated by isostatic or other emergent motion of some regions. |
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It has a reasonably well understood origin, its own current operating principles, and the entities that comprise it are entirely emergent. |
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During this period it is widely argued that emergent blacks and Asians struggled in Britain against racism and prejudice. |
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Very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys. |
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A bur hole was made to accommodate placement of an emergent ventriculotomy drain to decompress the tension pneumocephalus. |
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Today, new emergent segments in the tourist industry are oriented to travel to places where mass deaths or traumatic event have occurred. |
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Following emergent cesarean delivery of the neonate and placenta, the uterus was exteriorized and noted to be dextrorotated 180 degrees. |
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Only the hardy emergent species such as common reed and reedmace can survive in these conditions, eventually leading to poor habitat diversity. |
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Electronic monitors help to define the actions of the driver during normal and emergent operation of the EMS unit. |
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The two main types of forest are those dominated by broadleaf trees with emergent podocarps, or by southern beech in cooler climates. |
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An absence of aquatic siliceous microfossils suggest that during this period the bog was emergent. |
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In any case, the practices imputed to Shakespeare as an emergent dramatist were not in the least exceptional. |
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By the years leading up to 1500, the arts had become vital to the display of rulership, and especially to emergent ideas of princehood. |
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The workforce is becoming more emergent and less traditional, explains Hart. |
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Through a range of symbioses, microbes have collaborated with all types of life on Earth to create new, emergent forms, including human beings. |
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We suspect such models can promote better understanding of the spatial-temporal evolution of network congestion, and other emergent phenomena in communication networks. |
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However, even with today's emergent Middle and Late Miocene fossil records, the still-elusive common ancestors of great apes and humans have yet to be recovered. |
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This has artificially converted many shallow lakes into emergent marshes. |
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The key units relevant to this study were emergent alluvial point bars and forced pool, pool, chute, recirculation, run, riffle entrance, glide, backwater and riffle. |
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The effects or emergent results that a CAS can present are adaptation, nonlinearity, butterfly effect, systemic hierarchy, holism and path dependence. |
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The University required future proof high speed connectivity as part of its emergent backbone network which connects a number of campuses across the city. |
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The theory of emergent evolution has been largely developed as a corrective of mechanistic theories with their attendant psycho-physical dualisms and epiphenomenalisms. |
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He checked the power of the nobles and helped the towns to free themselves from seigniorial authority, granting privileges and liberties to the emergent bourgeoisie. |
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The sea was an important route for merchants and travellers of ancient times that allowed for trade and cultural exchange between emergent peoples of the region. |
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The use of Glaser and Strauss's grounded theory approach to analyze data involved comparing emergent categories across coders and successive semester PGIs of participants. |
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Since that time, those who have analyzed this trend have deliberated over the most apt language with which to describe this emergent health field. |
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Emergent norm theory describes a rational process of social and psychological adaptation to a truly novel circumstance. |
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Emergent flies were frozen, pinned with their respective puparia, and sent to specialists for identification. |
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Emergent plants such as cattails, pickerel weed, swamp candle and rooted floating plants such as yellow and white water-lilies and water parsnips were identified. |
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Emergent procedures provide their benefit right away and have the awesome potential to rescue a patient from the brink of death. |
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Emergent macrophytes are a major source of organic matter production in freshwater wetlands, and often represent the bulk of the plant material entering the detrital pool. |
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We considered both natural and constructed wetlands from the Aquatic Bed, Emergent, and Unconsolidated Bottom classes of the Palustrine system. |
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Emergent ranking of faithfulness explains markedness and licensing by cue. |
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