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Game-theory models have shed light on the evolution of things like human cooperation and the deadly relationship of parasites and their hosts.
The Eastern governor laughed dismissively, but, when the young man left and he had had time to think about it, he decided that this was the natural evolution of things, and that fists were the way to go.
"We should expect a sub 3min 50sec time to win in Rio with the normal evolution of things, depending on the track and the climate," he told the Guardian.
A particularly powerful type of selection that Darwin emphasized was sexual selection, as when females choose showy mates and male suitors violently combat one another, which can lead to the evolution of things like peacock tails or massive deer antlers.
People have gone to great lengths to educate themselves about food and seeking out smart, stimulating pairings is "the natural evolution of things" says Tony Esnault, the former chef at Alain Ducasse at Manhattans Essex House.
Traditional thinking mode in Chinese culture chronically emphasizes the whole observation and thinking, namely holistic view, pays attention to observe and think problems based on the development, evolution of things, and analyzes problem as time(s) changes, namely the dynamic view.
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Tusi then goes on to explain how hereditary variability was an important factor for biological evolution of living things: Tusi discusses how organisms are able to adapt to their environments: Tusi recognized three types of living things: plants, animals, and humans.
In fact, almost a quarter of adults believe that a "supreme being guided the evolution of living things for the purpose of creating humans and other life in the form it exists today".
Over the last year, to give you an idea of the riches for the taking, I've spent a penny each on Roth's The Anatomy Lesson and Deception, Renata Adler's Pitch Dark in hardcover, a first-edition copy of Room Temperature by Nicholson Baker, and one of Henry Petroski's The Evolution of Useful Things – among others.
By John Updike The New Yorker, October 4, 1999 P. 106 BOOKS lead about "The Book on the Bookshelf" (Knopf; $26) by Henry Petroski... Mentions his earlier "The Pencil" and "The Evolution of Useful Things"... His newest excursion into the commonplace, "The Book on the Bookshelf" (Knopf; $26), arrives at rather thin and overworked terrain.
The light follows and preys upon them, breaking them apart, splintering them into shards or reducing them to shadows as the technology creates its own heedless world, in which the evolution of organic things seems to have only a marginal place.
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