Word: vitalizing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...kind of fans who come back and maybe bring a friend. Perhaps what the owners and players had in mind when they destroyed the game last year was a form of wildlife management, in which they burned down the forest so that it would come back stronger and more vital...
...representatives are supposed to know better, and they seem to be dangerously unaware of the vital role that science plays in maintaining the economic well-being of an industrialized nation. In a global society that is becoming increasingly technological in nature, nations with a head start on scientific innovation will see money flow into their economics from the coffers of those nations which lag behind. Anyone who has taken "Ec 10" will know that new technology is the primary way by which an economy can increase its output given a limited amount of resources. Perhaps the most obvious example...
According to Hahnemann, the vigorous shaking transferred the "spiritlike" essence of the medicine to the solvent. And each successive shaking "potentized" the solution even further. Hahnemann believed that the extremely dilute solution, when taken by a patient, would jump-start the body's dormant "vital force" to combat illness. Hahnemann's Law of Infinitesimals--his belief that the more a remedy is diluted, the stronger its effect--is homeopathy's second major tenet...
Pasquale proceeds to say that he had hoped that Congress would step in and help set up "the structure of these vital services." Why? Congressmen know nothing about the intricacies of the communications market, and I trust the business judgement of Big Business over that of Congress. Who knows better than Big Business about the creation of communication lines? Congress...
Given the unruly maneuvering that has broken out among telecommunications firms seeking to provide this service, and the vast importance of such a communicative infrastructure to our nation's future, you might think the federal government should be involved in planning the structure of these vital services. However, most of Congress disagrees. Addled by poorly researched deregulatory polemics such as Philip K. Howard's The Politics of Common Sense, members of congress have moved for "reforms" in telecommunications that decimate government's role in regulating this vital field...