And all questioned whether it was one thing or many, produced by heredity or environment, and shared with animals or uniquely human. |
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Any kind of civilization system has its inherent requirement of heredity and self-existence, which is irreproachable. |
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He said that while there are a few indigenous reasons like genes, heredity etc for obesity, there are more exogenous reasons for the problem. |
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The units of heredity, or genes, are DNA sequences that code for the synthesis of proteins. |
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Their biology teacher has just given them an assignment about genes and heredity, expecting them to pass a five-page term paper by Wednesday. |
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And the girl began to think of herself as a free agent, unbound by the presumptions of heredity. |
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By the age of nineteen, in 1909, Muller had already become committed to genetics and to the chromosome theory of heredity. |
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In black rats, resistance was supposed to be multifactorial, judging from its unstable heredity. |
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The argument for heredity having a relatively strong influence on this disease rests primarily in studies involving families, adoptees and twins. |
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Genes are the physical units of heredity and are located along each chromosome in the cells of the human body. |
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Meanwhile, relative influences of heredity and environment on many behaviors remain obscure. |
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Indeed, it formed the basis for the Mendelian chromosome theory of heredity and ultimately the theory of the gene. |
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But this doctrine that souls are acquired by heredity carried more physical implications than at least some Platonists could feel at ease with. |
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Peak bone density is heavily influenced by heredity, nutrition, hormonal effects, and environment. |
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If our patriotism is refracted through a system based on hierarchy and heredity, it affects the way we see our country in subtle ways. |
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The social position of each individual is fixed by heredity and not by personal qualifications and material considerations. |
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The only known contributory factors to prostate cancer are a fatty diet, and for testicular cancer, heredity. |
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Man acquires at birth, through heredity, a biological constitution which we must consider fixed and unalterable. |
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As he points out, the abnormalities we see here are not the result of heredity or some other mischance. |
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Since the 1860s Mendelian genetics has recognized that many phenotypic traits are related to functional units of heredity. |
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This early conception of the lycanthrope as a victim of heredity left the monster in a morally ambiguous position. |
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The eugenicists believed Mendelian laws governed the heredity of human physiological traits and social traits. |
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According to the Vedas, it is not heredity that determines who is a brahmin, but rather, sattvic character and noble actions. |
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The manner in which someone ages depends almost entirely on factors relating to heredity, physical and mental health, and nutrition. |
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We know that genetics and heredity plays a part for a significant number of children. |
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Mohawk may have overstated the case for Native democracy, since heredity played a major role in office-holding in many Indian societies. |
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Data mining capabilities will allow physicians to study the effects of environment, heredity and lifestyle on breast cancer. |
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No studies on the respective roles of heredity and environment on the chemotype expression were performed. |
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That's the implication from one of the largest ever studies comparing the influence of environment and heredity on cancer incidence. |
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Many other factors can lead to and exacerbate health problems, including heredity, family eating habits and a lack of exercise, he said. |
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Doctors dabble with brain surgery, and Thomas Morgan suggests the chromosome theory of heredity. |
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Acne vulgaris results from an interplay of heredity factors, hormones, and bacteria. |
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Man, in short, creates himself as a cultural being in distinction to the animal or plant, which is created by its environment or heredity. |
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It was vaguely concluded that mental illness sprang from a kind of bad seed, a character flaw owing to one's heredity. |
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Here you were purged of all the remnants of unfortunate heredity, unwholesome environment, and unspiritual planetary tendencies. |
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Laboratory analysis of them repeatedly found signs of DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, the master molecule of heredity and life. |
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It truly depends upon your heredity also whether you would suffer with the problem of stretch marks or not. |
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Anfinsen's work in the late 1960s demonstrated that understanding the chemistry of proteins was essential to understanding the function of ribonucleic acid in heredity. |
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It would make for simplicity, he once remarked apropos of infant baptism, if all Adam's posterity derived souls as well as bodies from their first parent by heredity. |
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In addition, a woman's weight before pregnancy, the quality of her collagen and heredity play a part in the process of their formation. |
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Not surprisingly, then, this is a book about heredity, about fathers and sons and their awkward relationships. |
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A purebred straight to the marrowy core of his bones, Heinz uses his regal demeanor and prized heredity to set him on a pedestal overlooking the competition. |
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Genes are polymorphic, differing in some of their DNA sequence in different individuals according to heredity. |
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These skills develop depending on each child's heredity, activity experiences and their environment. |
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But, if heredity were the only factor, these conditions would have been eradicated long ago through selective breeding. |
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It has a heredity, rooted in freedom of inquiry, but this heredity must be expressed in interaction with an ever-changing social environment. |
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And while heredity is partly to blame, our increasingly harsh environment plays a serious role in compromising skin health. |
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Genetics is the branch of biology that deals with heredity and biological variation among related organisms. |
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The change may be due to advancing age or it may be the result of heredity, an injury or a disease. |
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Under these arrangements, the king received money in return for granting tenure, heredity, and free disposal of their offices to his judges and other servants. |
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The zygotic frequencies in the case of multiple alleles are easily determined from the principle that under Mendelian heredity any group of alleles may be treated as a single allele. |
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So, thousands of years before Gregor Mendel postulated his theories on genetics and heredity, indigenous Americans were breeding corn to select for desirable traits. |
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When asked about the role of heredity in the Wyeth-Hurd family, Michael believes strongly that it plays an unquestionably vital part in producing artists. |
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According to Doctor Robert Mtonga, a health practitioner, obesity can come as a result of nutritional habits or in some cases it is due to heredity in families. |
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Moreover, Watson is among the many geneticists who see heredity as the source of most social problems and who believe the solutions are to be found in genetic research. |
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Long before we knew anything about the physical basis of heredity, factors or genes were identified in terms of their functional or phenotypic effects. |
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On the one hand, his excursions into the mechanics of heredity and population genetics provide a valuable background for his rejection of racial and eugenic theories. |
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Neither could have inherited by heredity alone, since it was not clear that a woman was allowed to succeed, and both were illegitimate under English law. |
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A man's cogitable donations, his physical heredity, his moral and mental instincts and capacities are the results of the thoughts and feelings of his previous births. |
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Looking deeper into this form of legitimacy, it is necessary to take into account the fact that it is often based on inheriting the crown and sometimes on a precise type of heredity. |
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A lot of youth are victims of encumbered ascendency, of which they bear the consequences, mysteriously, according the the law of heredity, by presenting specific symptoms. |
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The focus of attention is shifted from the fortunes of the hero himself to the nature of his family, environment, and heredity, and dealings within that family offer repeated images of human unrelatedness and disconnection. |
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Genetic mutations are easier to spot when researchers can compare the DNA of people with shared heredity, instead of looking at DNA which has become more complicated by mixing of the gene pool. |
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In other words, even when the causality sequence implies genetic factors, recent research indicates that the causality sequence is not as easy to interpret as is suggested by traditional notions regarding heredity. |
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For his first study Danforth looked into the heredity of polydactyly and used controlled and uncontrolled data from a male and female cat he had found living 85 miles apart. |
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Researchers are trying to determine what role heredity plays in this form. |
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In a broader sense, the term human genetic data, when applied to an individual, may be taken to include any information about the operation of heredity in the case of that person. |
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The culprits of acne, experts say, are heredity and hormones. |
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Although certain diseases have long been associated with heredity, we are now beginning to understand why and how this occurs and where the root of that inherited disease lies. |
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It denies to another human being, just on the basis of birth and heredity and ensuing occupation, the equal freedoms we all enjoy as human beings. |
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That requires a global, holistic approach, which takes account of such varied factors as heredity, lifestyle and education in terms of eating a balanced and varied diet, and this from as early an age as possible. |
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But the principles of heredity and evolution had to wait until the double helix, and subsequent representations of DNA, to find a visual language. Nor was the double helix an immediate cultural hit. |
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Knowing the structure of DNA has helped to explain how heredity works, and has proved crucial to an understanding of biology at the molecular level. |
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The code and the double helix have become such powerful cultural symbols in part because they offer a new twist on old ideas about the power of heredity and destiny in the blood. |
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They owed their allegiance and status to Ivan, not to heredity or local bonds. |
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Relationships of heredity and dry eye with pterygia in black African patients. |
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For example, Mendelian genetics arose and was appropriated by eugenicists to falsely link complex personal attributes to heredity. |
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While heredity had some weight, leadership status was more subdued over time, than allocated in succession ceremonies and conventions. |
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A gene is a unit of heredity and is a region of DNA that influences a particular characteristic in an organism. |
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Natural selection relies crucially on the idea of heredity, but developed before the basic concepts of genetics. |
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In the past, emperors based their right to rule mostly on heredity and so could listen to remonstrance from below without necessarily feeling that legitimacy was at stake. |
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He posited natural teleology in its place, and believed that form was achieved for a purpose, citing the regularity of heredity in species as proof. |
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