Sentence examples for more general theory from inspiring English sources

Exact(46)

Other kinds of space may be attached, thus entering the more general theory of fibre bundles.

Both of these theories, however, contain certain problems that may be resolved by subsuming them under a more general theory.

The pragmatic philosophy of Charles Sanders Peirce was part of a more general theory of thought and of signs.

But when we learn how life evolved on other planets, evolution could turn out to be a special case of some more general theory.

These, in turn, protect their cells from stress-related damage.Xenohormesis is a variation of a more general theory, hormesis, which interests Suresh Rattan of Aarhus University in Denmark.

Schrödinger's equation, the most convenient form of a more general theory called quantum mechanics to which the German physicists Werner Heisenberg and Max Born also contributed, was brilliantly successful.

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Similar(14)

More general theories of the origin of social movements, such as those of Smelser, Turner, and Killian, suggest that social change may result in strains or conflicts in one or more crucial aspects of the social order.

This treatment of nonmonotonicity is similar to the earlier modal semantic theories of conditionals the similarities are particularly evident using the more general theories of conditional semantics, such as the one presented in Chellas 1975.

This judgment represents a particular instance of more general theories that attribute to males the strongest and most important qualities of mind, in comparison to which females are but paler counterparts.

The situation changed radically with Grothendieck's (1957) landmark paper entitled "Sur quelques points d'algèbre homologique", in which the author employed categories intrinsically to define and construct more general theories which he (Grothendieck 1957) then applied to specific fields, e.g., to algebraic geometry.

Both of these arguments can be cast in the light of more general theories of 'environmental criminology' (Brantingham and Brantingham1981); an approach which focuses explicitly on the criminal act itself, and the circumstances which give rise to it, rather than the characteristics of the offender.

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