The result is usually scientific and technological stagnation except in the short term. |
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After years of stagnation, the economy seems to be on the move, albeit very, very slowly. |
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Tilden postulated that improper diet led to stagnation of food in the colon, which then putrefied and formed toxins. |
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With the mainstay fishing industry facing stagnation, companies are diversifying. |
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The primary cause of all this danger is the Arab world's endemic despotism, corruption, poverty, and economic stagnation. |
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The result is tyranny, thought police, and stagnation, no intellectual and moral progress. |
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Although taxonomic stability may be a desideratum, in reality taxonomic stability is a manifestation of scientific stagnation. |
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This in its turn will lead to a decrease in the rate of economic growth, stagnation and shrinking of markets. |
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Only in 2000 has a new day dawned for the Osaka branch, as the Kansai economy emerges from stagnation. |
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He had been appointed to the ruling Politburo as recently as 1978 towards the end of the era of stagnation under Brezhnev. |
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One cannot overlook the conceptual congruity between the concepts of damp stagnation and peripheral tissue resistance, due to obesity. |
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Using a light touch, the therapist helps to clear areas of congestion and stagnation. |
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Fever, heat, and stagnation may damage the fluids, which congeal and thicken and do not flow. |
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Otherwise, the complacency of the praise songs and the denial of real contesting positions will mean slow stagnation. |
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Invariably, however, technology reaches a point of diminishing returns, inaugurating a period of stagnation and crisis. |
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Liver qi stagnation will give rise to stuffiness and fullness of the chest, unhappy feelings, hypochondriasis, or even mental depression. |
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The very idea of a permanent civil service is a recipe for inertia and stagnation. |
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The synthetic hormones have side effects, especially liver qi stagnation and blood stagnation. |
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It is now clearer than ever, after the 23 months of stagnation that followed his speech, that the Prime Minister overplayed his hand. |
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Despite their high-sounding rhetoric, however, initial reforms were halting, and throughout the 1990s Ukraine endured severe stagnation. |
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It indicates a deficiency of blood and essence, qi stagnation, and blood stasis. |
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Or to put it the other way, stasis and stagnation are signposts along the path towards cessation and death. |
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During the French Revolution there was obviously a period of stagnation in the formation of collections. |
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Socioeconomic problems and stagnation prevented the society from fulfilling its plans. |
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This suggests that Japan's stagnation will continue absent a drastic shock to the system. |
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Periods of lively musical activity were interspersed with periods of stagnation. |
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Constipation and fullness of the lower abdomen are due to the stagnation of dampness disturbing the large intestine. |
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This leads to a sharp decline in the level of economic activity, and the economy enters a period of stagnation. |
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Barley sprout is used in treating food stagnation and strengthening the stomach. |
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Political stability and international insularity also led to socio-political stagnation in certain areas. |
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After World War II Berlin was divided into separate parts and Shanghai, although restored to China, went through a period of stagnation. |
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That we are here proves that a solid, akinetic skull doesn't necessarily doom a taxon to morphological stagnation. |
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On the contrary, the world economy as a whole is marked by slow growth and outright stagnation. |
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Does this account for the stagnation in Marxism doctrine which has been noticeable for a good many years? |
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Officials at City Hall are convinced that after decades of stagnation, the city's moribund downtown core is on the verge of a breakthrough. |
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Conflict is often necessary and useful to an organization, although destructive conflict can breed mistrust and stagnation. |
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If carried far enough, the process of redistribution results in economic stagnation and economic retrogression. |
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Since stagnation is the antithesis of growth, it is also the antithesis of life. |
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Growth and change are naturally risky, but stagnation is a recipe for failure. |
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The apprehensions of the Health Department are valid if we go for indiscriminate digging in places where there are chances for water stagnation. |
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According to Samuelson, Japan pioneered the new stagnation and the parallels are disturbing. |
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He likens the current shake-out to the period of stagnation in the 1980s when US companies were forced to sit down and make choices. |
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With scarcity and stagnation cast aside, the economy could finally throw off the shackles of a crude good-for-good bartering system. |
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The stock market's recent bearish reversal in mid-June reflects the new reality of, at best a weak recovery in 2010, and at worst, stagnation or a double dip. |
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We'll have zombie banks and resulting stagnation like the Japanese. |
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But for the integrity and the respect of the innocent billions, earning their daily bread under the confines of economic stagnation, that deserve a shelter of peace. |
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Others face career uncertainty and stagnation as promotion rates continue to drop for both enlisted and officers. |
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My hope is for the two to fail short term in their unity quest for stagnation. |
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First, they need to give much more serious attention to the stagnation of blue collar wages. |
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Acupuncture needles are inserted in distal points in the arms and legs along these meridians, harmonizing the flow of energy and releasing the stagnation. |
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Only the mobilization of resources could take the country from a position of stagnation and relative decline vis-a-vis the major industrial countries of the West and East. |
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First, the secular, often state-capitalist, modernizing projects of the elites in the region became stalled in corruption, tyranny and cultural stagnation. |
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The rising cost of health insurance is the proximate cause of middle-class income stagnation. |
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Raw and cold food may injure the spleen and tend to contribute to the stagnation of fluid circulation and the increase in the production of phlegm. |
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He is a famous painter whose success has brought creative stagnation. |
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In his hands, spatial autonomy becomes equivalent to cultural stagnation. |
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It also reveals Yo La Tengo's understanding of stasis without stagnation. |
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In addition the pressure of the tumor probably affected the nerves of his left eye, and the stagnation of qi and blood in his brain caused his hemiplegic symptoms. |
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Of course, the outflow of capital to foreign countries, stagnation of investment, and the steady decline of the stock market will become more serious. |
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The stability of the past, at times bordering on immobilism and stagnation, has been replaced by mobility and change, by economic revival and political uncertainty. |
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Despite the rebound, worries persist about the zone's inflexible labour market while economic stagnation in Germany is still a dark cloud hanging over the entire region. |
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A dark gray complexion indicates prolonged stagnation of blood such as a consumptive disease with blood deficiency accompanied by menoplania or amenia. |
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Decades of economic stagnation and the fact that most resources are funneled through the state restrict people's opportunities to achieve social and economic mobility. |
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The past five years have seen political stagnation with the government and opposition deadlocked, and the rotting away of the foundation of democracy has begun. |
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The continuing stagnation of the economy is giving rise to more bad debts. |
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The sharp-chinned, goateed 55-year-old is too impatient with black stagnation to mince words, though he softens his more provocative statements with a disarming chuckle. |
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But they also are aware that large tax increases at this time of economic stagnation and rising unemployment would depress economic activity even further. |
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At the same time, there was commercial stagnation and trade depression throughout Europe. |
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Because of international trade interdependencies this led to European economic stagnation and delayed European recovery for several years. |
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And it is the party of middle-class stagnation and slippage. |
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And the Tory Cameron's leadership of a Conservative-Liberal coalition has seen loss and stagnation for all but the higher salariat. |
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Issues with command economics, oil price decreases and large military expenditures gradually brought the Soviet economy to stagnation. |
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The lack of free trade was considered by many as a principal cause of the depression causing stagnation and inflation. |
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The mathematical science of logic likewise had revolutionary breakthroughs after a similarly long period of stagnation. |
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The gradualism of the reforms and stagnation of democratization are not helpful. |
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The decline has slowed to near stagnation in recent years because of reduced death rates, increased birth rates and increased immigration. |
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The vasodilatation of vessels, in its turn, leads to stagnation of blood in the hemorrhoid nodes and their inflammation. |
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He repeatedly said that eccentricity was preferable to uniformity and stagnation. |
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Particular areas of concern were the BDO's apparent stagnation in terms of creating new televised events and gaining new sponsors. |
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The interwar years were marked by economic stagnation in rural and urban areas, and high unemployment. |
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He says this stagnation forced the population to borrow to meet the cost of living. |
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It followed the collapse or stagnation of the wartime industries and continuing rise in population. |
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Factors known to encourage the growth of harmful bacteria inside cooling systems include the stagnation of the water. |
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In the 1950s, the BBC SO, in common with the rest of the BBC's musical organisation, suffered from stagnation. |
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The general concern about industrial stagnation inspired an overhaul of the patent system. |
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After the success of the 1896 Games, the Olympics entered a period of stagnation that threatened their survival. |
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This negative trend created a lack of support for Welsh poverty reduction efforts, and can explain much of the stagnation present in the rate. |
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Radicalization was the result of intellectual stagnation of the society. |
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After Emperor Wu, the empire slipped into gradual stagnation and decline. |
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As an incrementalist, he sees progress where others would see stagnation. |
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After independence, Lima became the capital of the Republic of Peru but economic stagnation and political turmoil brought urban development to a halt. |
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The Plague of Justinian and the Arab conquests would represent a substantial reversal of fortunes contributing to a period of stagnation and decline. |
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With the economic demands created by the stagnation of the Ottoman Empire, the force diminished and included only mercenaries such as the seimeni. |
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The causes of income stagnation are varied and lack the political simplicity of calls to bring down the deficit or avert another Wall Street meltdown. |
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Cultural nationalism of this type tends to overwhelm progressive, secular nationalism, and the result can be stagnation, and traditionalizing of women's role. |
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Anoxic states are created by water stagnation, density stratification, influx of organic matter, thermoclines, and bacterial metabolism of sulfide. |
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Just outside the termination shock is the heliosheath, where the solar wind continues to slow, reaching a stagnation region where solar wind speed drops to zero. |
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Qatar is currently the world's largest LNG exporter, but risks stagnation, as the country shows no plans for capacity additions in the near future. |
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Compared to the previous 5 years of exponential increases in patent application, this stagnation correlates to the similar drop in GDP during the same time period. |
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Kassite conquerors terminated the Babylonian era at the turn of the second millennium BC and introduced a bronze age characterised by relative cultural stagnation. |
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The presence of Kent diamicts in the upper parts of the kames may imply local readvance during a prolonged period of stagnation of Kent ice on the Allegheny Plateau. |
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Radicalization was the result of intellectual stagnation of the society which was being promoted by decision makers in tandem with the religious orthodoxy. |
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This trend was checked in the Late Middle Ages by a series of calamities, notably the Black Death but also including numerous wars and economic stagnation. |
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