Today, humankind has the science and technology to destroy itself or to provide prosperity to all. |
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But Wallace took a troublesomely diverging path when it came to applying the new theory of evolution to humankind. |
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Recent tragedies have been afflicted with a certain element of bizarreness, hitherto not experienced by humankind. |
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With the years, Highsmith became ever more like Tom Ripley shut away from humankind in his train compartment, ever more apart. |
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Besides these monstrous and horrifying thoughts, the uncontrolled practice of cloning also threatens the dignity of humankind. |
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Science and technology were applied to the most murderous ends known to humankind. |
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What causes stress but doing something unnatural to human nature, to humankind? |
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The ups and downs of natural processes have been exerting their effects on humankind for ages. |
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Lignin is of course essential for the life of vascular plants and is also very useful to humankind, for example in wood. |
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At their most intense, they can suggest new ideas of relationships of humankind to nature, artefact to place, technology to the biosphere. |
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In common with most visionaries he regrets that the rest of humankind has not had the stamina to keep pace with him. |
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For, if our world is to remain habitable for humankind, nothing else is important enough to divert our attention from this growing problem. |
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Nearly every calamity and malady known to humankind has a saint to look after it. |
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That, alone, raises the most terrifying prospects for the future of humankind. |
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Traditional concepts of security were woefully inadequate to meet the new challenges faced by humankind. |
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Obviously I'm a mild mannered man with an unending love for humankind, and I only ever see the best in people. |
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The blood and tears of this past week are a reminder, terror is as old as humankind. |
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Neanderthal man bore enough similarities to modern man to have once been thought to be the species humankind evolved from. |
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That is not to say that with effort and discipline humankind cannot manage some amazing achievements of thought. |
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Conscience and science must go hand in hand to prevent the destruction of humankind. |
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The seabed is explicitly called the common heritage of humankind and cannot be claimed by any one country. |
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In its seeming ambiguity yet divine reality it remains free of the influence of humankind and our lusts. |
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These finely-tuned killing machines have fascinated humankind for centuries. |
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Such pursuit is an inherent part of living in a fallen world that is subject to the sins of humankind. |
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Some people have done so much for humankind that their names write history. |
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Yet knowledgeable economists agree that these restrictions are bad for humankind. |
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Outer space is a common heritage of all humankind to be shared and appreciated with awe. |
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Trees with unsafe limbs can be pruned or pollarded at the correct time of year to extend their life and keep their benefit for humankind. |
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Now that the eating and drinking of plants had commenced, at some point humankind sought to keep these scents with them and perfume their bodies. |
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Because they will be part of that immemorial conversation of humankind about how we shall live. |
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It has always been one of the greatest pleasures and greatest consolations of humankind, found in all civilisations. |
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Ever since humankind first had the capacity to wonder, the sight of a flying animal must have been astounding. |
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The world, including nature and humankind, stands or falls with the type of moral force at work. |
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The third relationship broken by sin in the Garden of Eden was the relationship of Creation with humankind. |
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The problems are the shared responsibility of humankind and cry out for solutions that, like the problems themselves, also cross frontiers. |
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They may be the most functionally useless clothing items ever devised by humankind. |
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The result will be a series of mass extinctions and a dramatic fall in the planet's biodiversity, as well as its ability to support humankind. |
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Only that which leads to the divinizing union of God and humankind is depicted, and only through methods that facilitate this divinization. |
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Only Jesus Christ, both fully divine and fully human, can accomplish this for all of humankind. |
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The recent inscription of his epitaph upon their large granite gravestone gave him a sense of contentment and presaged a new era for humankind. |
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If only we could love one another and become as one in a race called humankind. |
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Education is the key to a future for humankind, especially for a healthier humankind with a suitable replacement rate. |
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This would release humankind from the drudgery of wage-slavery and release the latent talents of 3 billion people. |
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The history of human progress is the history of humankind taking things from nature, and transforming nature for its own benefit. |
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His books portray the animalistic, sensuous, physiological face of humankind. |
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The work here is critical to humankind and we need to applaud the people who work here rather than abuse them. |
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Cast in Biblical terms, the poem announces that humankind is unable to recognize the divine reflected in such symbols as archangels. |
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Plato realizes that the general run of humankind can think, and speak, etc., without any awareness of his realm of Forms. |
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Mithra was slain upon a cross in Persia to make atonement for humankind and take away the sins of the world. |
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It is a brave and safe new world in which technology has liberated humankind from tedium. |
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If this is true, it is a testament to the fact that advances in technology do not always represent progress for humankind. |
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It will also provide virtually unlimited energy and material resources for humankind. |
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Wilderness always trumps humankind in Alaska, despite the mini-malls and shiny skyscrapers. |
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If humankind did not have a consciousness and still lived on the base instinct of perpetuation of the species, we would simply be born, mature, mate and die. |
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The students in Jakarta and Seoul who are eager to use their knowledge to benefit humankind. |
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They are the enemies of democracy and the enemies of all humankind. |
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This bleak outlook on humankind allies him to Beckett, and it's no surprise that the godfather of the absurd should be here in one of the show's most powerful pieces. |
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The history of humankind is the history of human endeavour to at each stage deepen the democratic processes by removing hindrances to further human self-fulfilment. |
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They're worthless as commodities, but not valueless to humankind. |
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It's a day to remember that keeping one half of humankind under life-long subjugation through unwritten laws and warped thinking is a waste of talent and human resource. |
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Not since the Trojan War has the fate of the Hellenes been so central to humankind. |
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Some scholars thus called into question the Church's dogma of a single origin for all humankind, and resolved the discrepancy with a second creation. |
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After months of trying to undo the harm caused by our deception, we finally managed to promote a grudging parental acceptance of the strange new children of humankind. |
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Hippocrates is an amazing figure, both a father of scientific ethics and first articulator of the insight that frees humankind to discover the universe. |
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It should have made us all proud to be of such brotherhood of humankind. |
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Evolutionary biology enjoys a privileged position at the core of this belief system because it offers explanations about why and how humankind originated. |
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The printing of this article has restored my faith and trust in humankind. |
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The outrage of a meaningless cosmos impels all of humankind to struggle against it. |
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But the vast majority of humankind does not have such a luxury, and certainly not the hungry victims of wars, natural disasters, and economic crises. |
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Airline travel is one of the most masochistic forms of bureaucracy devised by humankind to punish us for our collective sins, whatever they may be. |
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Harrod humankind first developed religious and spiritual beliefs during the Middle Paleolithic or Upper Paleolithic. |
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Crop alteration has been practiced by humankind for thousands of years, since the beginning of civilization. |
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The Tillek said those points were the spaceships that had brought humankind and dolphinkind to Pern. |
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World War II alone killed over 60 million people, while nuclear weapons gave humankind the means to annihilate itself in a short time. |
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The continued sharing of genetic materials has maintained all of humankind as a single species. |
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The shoe-throwing incident by reporter Muntazer Al Zaidi was a shame for all Iraqi people in the face of humankind. |
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Typical of the zoophilist who favors life's lower orders over humankind, Robinson Jeffers claimed he'd sooner kill a man than a hawk. |
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Whether it springs from the fear of government or hope for the wisdom of humankind, the cyberlibertarian ideology seeks a revolution. |
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The first is a traditional scroll showing creation according to the Santals, involving cows, divine nectar and ensuing humankind. |
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The Baha'i Faith is a monotheistic religion emphasizing the spiritual unity of all humankind. |
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Glamorgan's terrain has been inhabited by humankind for over 200,000 years. |
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Morgan is a proud sponsor of PAST s Scatterlings of Africa program, a pan-African initiative that further explores humankind origins. |
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The state of the nation and the state of humankind may depend on it. |
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The existence of this distant branch creates a much more complex picture of humankind during the Late Pleistocene than previously thought. |
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For humankind, the factor of technology is a distinguishing and critical consideration, both as an enabler and an additional source of byproducts. |
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The Purusa Sukta hymn in the Rigveda, Hinduism's most ancient scripture, describes metaphorically the origin of humankind from the primordial sacrifice of the cosmic Person. |
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Economic geology is an important branch of geology which deals with different aspects of economic minerals being used by humankind to fulfill its various needs. |
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In Greek myths, dolphins were seen invariably as helpers of humankind. |
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Prior to the eighteenth century, scripture had usually been interpreted to emphasize monogenesis, in which all of humankind descended from the sons of Noah after the flood. |
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Through panentheistic sensibility, our ancestors conceived a Covenant between Creator and Creation that humankind is enjoined, spiritually and ethically, to uphold. |
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The discovery and utilization of fire, a simple energy source with many profound uses, was a turning point in the technological evolution of humankind. |
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The rapid expansion of humankind to North America and Oceania took place at the climax of the most recent ice age, when temperate regions of today were extremely inhospitable. |
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