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At the same time, another generalized [M]Generation Y in the United States refers to[/M] children, [M]adolescents[/M], and young people [M]who have reached the age of 15 to 25 around 2010.[/M]
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
At the same time, another generalized [M]Generation Y in the United States refers to children[/M], adolescents, and young people [M]who have reached the age of 15 to 25 around 2010.[/M]
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
At the same time, another generalized [M]Generation Y in the United States refers to[/M] children, adolescents, and [M]young people who have reached the age of 15 to 25 around 2010.[/M]
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
At the same time, another generalized [M]Generation Y in the United States refers to[/M] children, adolescents, and [M]young people[/M] who have reached the age of 15 to 25 around 2010.
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
At the same time, another generalized [M]Generation Y in the United States refers to[/M] children, [M]adolescents[/M], and young people who have reached the age of 15 to 25 around 2010.
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
At the same time, another generalized [M]Generation Y in the United States refers to children[/M], adolescents, and young people who have reached the age of 15 to 25 around 2010.
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
Among the topics and research on generations in the United States, the most discussed generation is probably the X generation, and [M]because of the habits of mathematical algebra[/M], the [M]Y generation is[/M] the next generation [M]after[/M] the [M]X generation.[/M]
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
Among the topics and research on generations in the United States, the most discussed generation is probably the X generation, and because of the habits of mathematical algebra, the [M]Y generation is[/M] the next generation [M]after[/M] the [M]X generation.[/M]
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
Among the topics and research on generations in the United States, the [M]most discussed generation is probably[/M] the [M]X generation[/M], and because of the habits of mathematical algebra, the Y generation is the next generation after the X generation.
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
Among the topics and [M]research on generations in the United States[/M], the most discussed generation is probably the X generation, and because of the habits of mathematical algebra, the Y generation is the next generation after the X generation.
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
In the scope of the Y generation, there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation characteristics of this period, including: the Internet generation; or the N generation (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation ([M]Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II[/M]).
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
In the scope of the Y generation, there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation characteristics of this period, including: the Internet generation; or the N generation (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and [M]the Echo generation (Echo Boomers[/M], the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
In the scope of the Y generation, there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation characteristics of this period, including: the Internet generation; or [M]the N generation (The Net Generation)[/M], the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation (Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
In the scope of [M]the Y generation[/M], there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation [M]characteristics of this period[/M], including: the Internet generation; or the N generation (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation (Echo Boomers, [M]the next generation of baby boomers after World War II[/M]).
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
In the scope of [M]the Y generation[/M], there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation [M]characteristics of this period[/M], including: the Internet generation; or the N generation (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation ([M]Echo Boomers[/M], the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
|
n
|
In the scope of [M]the Y generation[/M], there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation [M]characteristics of this period[/M], including: the Internet generation; or the N generation (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and [M]the Echo generation[/M] (Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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In the scope of [M]the Y generation[/M], there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation [M]characteristics of this period[/M], including: the Internet generation; or the N generation (The Net Generation), [M]the Millennials[/M] (Millennials) and the Echo generation (Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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In the scope of [M]the Y generation[/M], there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation [M]characteristics of this period[/M], including: the Internet generation; or the N generation ([M]The Net Generation[/M]), the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation (Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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In the scope of [M]the Y generation[/M], there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation [M]characteristics of this period[/M], including: the Internet generation; or [M]the N generation[/M] (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation (Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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In the scope of [M]the Y generation[/M], there are sometimes several synonymous words that also describe the generation [M]characteristics of this period[/M], including: [M]the Internet generation[/M]; or the N generation (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation (Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]In the scope of the Y generation[/M], [M]there are sometimes several synonymous words that[/M] also [M]describe the generation characteristics of this period[/M], including: the Internet generation; or the N generation (The Net Generation), the Millennials (Millennials) and the Echo generation (Echo Boomers, the next generation of baby boomers after World War II).
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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However, [M]there is[/M] still [M]controversy over which period is the definition of Generation Y.[/M]
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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The term [M]Y generation is[/M] also recognized by Americans as [M]the last generation in the 20th century[/M].
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]The term Y generation is[/M] also [M]recognized by Americans as the last generation in the 20th century[/M].
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Because of the rapid changes in the[/M] world, environment, technology, politics, and [M]economy in the 20th century, it has attracted attention.[/M]
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Because of the rapid changes in the[/M] world, environment, technology, [M]politics[/M], and economy [M]in the 20th century, it has attracted attention.[/M]
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Because of the rapid changes in the[/M] world, environment, [M]technology[/M], politics, and economy [M]in the 20th century, it has attracted attention.[/M]
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Because of the rapid changes in the[/M] world, [M]environment[/M], technology, politics, and economy [M]in the 20th century, it has attracted attention.[/M]
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Because of the rapid changes in the world[/M], environment, technology, politics, and economy [M]in the 20th century[/M], [M]it has attracted attention[/M].
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Generation Y[/M] (Generation Y), also known as Millennials, generally refers to people born in the 1980s and 1990s, and [M]is derived from the name that American culture is used to calling a specific generation[/M].
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Generation Y[/M] (Generation Y), also known as Millennials, generally [M]refers to people born in the 1980s and 1990s[/M], and is derived from the name that American culture is used to calling a specific generation.
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Generation Y[/M] (Generation Y), [M]also known as Millennials[/M], generally refers to people born in the 1980s and 1990s, and is derived from the name that American culture is used to calling a specific generation.
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]The so-called generation[/M] refers to a group of people born in a certain period of time, they [M]have[/M] representative characteristics, and [M]the[/M] foundation and [M]influence of discussion[/M].
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]The so-called generation[/M] refers to a group of people born in a certain period of time, they [M]have[/M] representative characteristics, and [M]the foundation[/M] and influence [M]of discussion[/M].
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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n
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[M]The so-called generation[/M] refers to a group of people born in a certain period of time, they [M]have representative characteristics[/M], and the foundation and influence of discussion.
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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n
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[M]The so-called generation refers to a group of people born in a certain period of time[/M], they have representative characteristics, and the foundation and influence of discussion.
|
Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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For example, [M]global reports on the labor force of this generation often target people born between 1981 and 1996[/M].
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Generation Y, also called millennials, internet generation, or millennials (from English: Millennials) is a concept in sociology that refers to the courtship of those born after the beginning of the 1980s until, approximately, the end of the century. More specifically, the Pew Research Center research institute classifies those born between 1981 and 1996 as Generation Y, while author Neil Howe defines them as those born between 1982 and 2004.
This generation developed at a time of great technological advances and economic prosperity, and material ease, and effectively, in a highly urbanized environment, immediately after the establishment of the domain of virtuality as a system of social and media interaction, and in part, at the level of work relationships. If Generation X was conceived in the transition to the new technological world, Generation Y was the first truly born in this medium, even if incipient.
It is important to note that there is no generation Y in the countryside, if the nature of family and city income is related to a history of manual labor and traditional, rural, or traditional manufacturing.
There is a significant difference between the modalities of economic prosperity and levels of world material interaction, when comparing the two generations (X and Y). In the first, the amount of playful elements, toys, artifacts and appliances or any level of product in the social chain is much smaller than in the second, and on the other hand, more durable and predisposed to maintenance rather than disposal and updating (update).
The dynamics of economic maintenance and recycling were dramatically changed at the turn of the millennium, led by powers such as Japan and Asian Tigers and the USA, where the recycling and disposal economic cycle became part of the economic circuit of local production, due to environmental or financial feedback. Simultaneously, the ephemeral nature of computer programs and the logic of the software industry also strongly induced the concept of disposal and updating. Complementarily, the development of the automobile industry entered the vehicle configuration level, also for reasons of recycling and disposal that would feed the production chain from the source, in terms of reducing the thickness of the bodywork and materials due to the absorption of impacts in collisions.
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[M]Physiology has traditionally been divided into plant physiology and human and animal physiology.[/M]
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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[M]Physiology has traditionally been divided into[/M] plant physiology and human and [M]animal physiology[/M].
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
e
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[M]Physiology has traditionally been divided into[/M] plant physiology and [M]human[/M] and animal [M]physiology[/M].
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
e
|
[M]Physiology has traditionally been divided into plant physiology[/M] and human and animal physiology.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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e
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And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it[/M] seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, [M]taking into account[/M] the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as [M]the[/M] ecological and [M]social conditions of the environment[/M].
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it[/M] seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, [M]taking into account[/M] the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as [M]the ecological[/M] and social [M]conditions of the environment[/M].
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it[/M] seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, [M]taking into account the[/M] individual, ethnic, gender, [M]age characteristics of the organism[/M], as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it[/M] seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, [M]taking into account the[/M] individual, ethnic, [M]gender[/M], age [M]characteristics of the organism[/M], as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it[/M] seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, [M]taking into account the[/M] individual, [M]ethnic[/M], gender, age [M]characteristics of the organism[/M], as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it[/M] seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, [M]taking into account the individual[/M], ethnic, gender, age [M]characteristics of the organism[/M], as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it seeks to[/M] eliminate these deviations and [M]return the body to normal[/M], taking into account the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, [M]it seeks to eliminate these deviations[/M] and return the body to normal, taking into account the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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And in terms of [M]the degree of functional disorders[/M], that [M]is[/M], in terms of [M]the[/M] nature and [M]magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions[/M], it seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, taking into account the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
And in terms of [M]the degree of functional disorders[/M], that [M]is[/M], in terms of [M]the nature[/M] and magnitude [M]of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions[/M], it seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, taking into account the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]Physiology studies[/M] the main quality of [M]a living thing[/M] - its vital activity, its constituent functions and [M]properties[/M], both in relation to the whole organism and [M]in relation to its parts.[/M]
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]Physiology studies[/M] the main quality of [M]a living thing[/M] - its vital activity, its constituent functions and [M]properties[/M], both [M]in relation to the whole organism[/M] and in relation to its parts.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]Physiology studies[/M] the main quality of [M]a living thing[/M] - its vital activity, its constituent functions and [M]properties[/M], both in relation to the whole organism and in relation to its parts.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
e
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[M]Physiology studies[/M] the main quality of [M]a living thing[/M] - its vital activity, its [M]constituent functions[/M] and properties, both in relation to the whole organism and in relation to its parts.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
e
|
[M]Physiology studies[/M] the main quality of [M]a living thing[/M] - its [M]vital activity[/M], its constituent functions and properties, both in relation to the whole organism and in relation to its parts.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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[M]Physiology studies the main quality of a living thing[/M] - its vital activity, its constituent functions and properties, both in relation to the whole organism and in relation to its parts.
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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e
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[M]Physiology seeks to reveal the[/M] mechanisms of regulation, patterns of the vital activity of the [M]organism[/M] and [M]its interaction with the environment.[/M]
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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[M]Physiology seeks to reveal the[/M] mechanisms of regulation, [M]patterns of the vital activity of the organism[/M] and its interaction with the environment.
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Physiology seeks to reveal the mechanisms of regulation[/M], patterns of the vital activity [M]of the organism[/M] and its interaction with the environment.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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[M]Life activity is aimed at[/M] achieving a useful result and [M]adaptation to environmental conditions.[/M]
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Life activity is aimed at achieving a useful result[/M] and adaptation to environmental conditions.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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Physiology (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of [M]the norm of life processes[/M] and [M]painful deviations from[/M] it (see [M]pathophysiology[/M]).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Physiology[/M] (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that [M]is[/M], about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of [M]the norm of life processes[/M] and [M]painful deviations from[/M] it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Physiology[/M] (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that [M]is[/M], about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, [M]about the limits of the norm of life processes[/M] and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Physiology[/M] (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about [M]the laws of[/M] functioning and [M]regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization[/M], about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Physiology[/M] (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about [M]the laws of functioning[/M] and regulation [M]of biological systems of different levels of organization[/M], about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Physiology[/M] (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - [M]the science of[/M] the essence of living things, [M]life[/M] in norm and [M]in pathologies[/M], that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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n
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[M]Physiology[/M] (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - [M]the science of[/M] the essence of living things, [M]life in norm[/M] and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]Physiology[/M] (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - [M]the science of the essence of living things[/M], life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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e
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Physiology (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and [M]λόγος - a word[/M]) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]Physiology (from ancient Greek[/M] φύσις - nature and [M]λόγος[/M] - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
Physiology (from ancient Greek [M]φύσις - nature[/M] and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
e
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[M]Physiology (from ancient Greek φύσις[/M] - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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e
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[M]Physiology[/M] is a complex of natural science disciplines that [M]study[/M] both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and processes, organs, cells, and [M]cellular structures[/M] (private physiology).
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]Physiology[/M] is a complex of natural science disciplines that [M]study[/M] both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and processes, organs, [M]cells[/M], and cellular structures (private physiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]Physiology[/M] is a complex of natural science disciplines that [M]study[/M] both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and processes, [M]organs[/M], cells, and cellular structures (private physiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]Physiology[/M] is a complex of natural science disciplines that [M]study[/M] both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and [M]processes[/M], organs, cells, and cellular structures (private physiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]Physiology[/M] is a complex of natural science disciplines that [M]study[/M] both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and [M]individual systems[/M] and processes, organs, cells, and cellular structures (private physiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
e
|
[M]Physiology[/M] is a complex of natural science disciplines that [M]study[/M] both [M]the vital activity of the organism as a whole[/M], and individual systems and processes, organs, cells, and cellular structures (private physiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]Physiology is a complex of natural science disciplines[/M] that study both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and processes, organs, cells, and cellular structures (private physiology).
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
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c
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[M]The knowledge of the processes of[/M] metabolism, energy and [M]information is at the heart of the concept of life.[/M]
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]The knowledge of the processes of[/M] metabolism, [M]energy[/M] and information [M]is at the heart of the concept of life.[/M]
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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[M]The knowledge of the processes of metabolism[/M], energy and information [M]is at the heart of the concept of life.[/M]
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
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Physiology, together with anatomy and histology, is [M]the basic theoretical basis, thanks to which the doctor[/M] combines scattered knowledge and facts about [M]the patient[/M] into a single whole, [M]assesses his condition[/M], the level of legal capacity.
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Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
Physiology, together with anatomy and histology, is [M]the basic theoretical basis, thanks to which the doctor combines scattered[/M] knowledge and [M]facts about the patient into a single whole[/M], assesses his condition, the level of legal capacity.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
Physiology, together with anatomy and histology, is [M]the basic theoretical basis, thanks to which the doctor combines scattered knowledge[/M] and facts [M]about the patient into a single whole[/M], assesses his condition, the level of legal capacity.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]Physiology, together with anatomy and histology, is the basic theoretical basis[/M], thanks to which the doctor combines scattered knowledge and facts about the patient into a single whole, assesses his condition, the level of legal capacity.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also [M]to the[/M] nature of anthropogenic pollution - [M]the[/M] quantity and [M]quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the[/M] atmosphere, water, [M]food[/M].
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also [M]to the[/M] nature of anthropogenic pollution - [M]the[/M] quantity and [M]quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the[/M] atmosphere, [M]water[/M], food.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also [M]to the[/M] nature of anthropogenic pollution - [M]the quantity[/M] and quality [M]of harmful highly toxic substances in the[/M] atmosphere, water, [M]food[/M].
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also [M]to the[/M] nature of anthropogenic pollution - [M]the quantity[/M] and quality [M]of harmful highly toxic substances in the[/M] atmosphere, [M]water[/M], food.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also [M]to the[/M] nature of anthropogenic pollution - [M]the[/M] quantity and [M]quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere[/M], water, food.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also [M]to the[/M] nature of anthropogenic pollution - [M]the quantity[/M] and quality [M]of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere[/M], water, food.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also [M]to the nature of anthropogenic pollution[/M] - the quantity and quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere, water, food.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only [M]to the peculiarities of the influence of[/M] natural and [M]climatic production conditions of the environment[/M], but also to the nature of anthropogenic pollution - the quantity and quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere, water, food.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]When correcting impaired body functions[/M], [M]attention should be paid[/M] not only [M]to the peculiarities of the influence of natural[/M] and climatic [M]production conditions of the environment[/M], but also to the nature of anthropogenic pollution - the quantity and quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere, water, food.
|
Physiology (English: physiology/ˌfɪziˈɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek φύσις (physis), meaning: "nature, origin", and -λογία (-logia), meaning: "study of"
)
It is a sub-field of biology, where objects and their components are studied in the functional activities of chemistry or physics in living systems.
Physiology is generally divided into plant physiology and animal physiology, but the basic principles of physiology are the same for all living things on the earth. For example, many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.
Animal physiology includes human physiology and other animal physiology. Plant physiology also benefits from many achievements of this branch.
The new disciplines separated from physiology are biochemistry, biophysics and biomechanics. Medicine also benefits greatly from the fruits of physiology.
|
n
|
[M]Plant physiology[/M] also [M]benefits from many achievements of this branch.[/M]
|
Physiology (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
Physiology is a complex of natural science disciplines that study both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and processes, organs, cells, and cellular structures (private physiology). Physiology seeks to reveal the mechanisms of regulation, patterns of the vital activity of the organism and its interaction with the environment.
Physiology studies the main quality of a living thing - its vital activity, its constituent functions and properties, both in relation to the whole organism and in relation to its parts. The knowledge of the processes of metabolism, energy and information is at the heart of the concept of life. Life activity is aimed at achieving a useful result and adaptation to environmental conditions.
Physiology has traditionally been divided into plant physiology and human and animal physiology.
Physiology, together with anatomy and histology, is the basic theoretical basis, thanks to which the doctor combines scattered knowledge and facts about the patient into a single whole, assesses his condition, the level of legal capacity. And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, it seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, taking into account the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
When correcting impaired body functions, attention should be paid not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also to the nature of anthropogenic pollution - the quantity and quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere, water, food.
|
n
|
For example, [M]many of the physiological results of yeast cells can also be applied to human cells.[/M]
|
Physiology (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
Physiology is a complex of natural science disciplines that study both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and processes, organs, cells, and cellular structures (private physiology). Physiology seeks to reveal the mechanisms of regulation, patterns of the vital activity of the organism and its interaction with the environment.
Physiology studies the main quality of a living thing - its vital activity, its constituent functions and properties, both in relation to the whole organism and in relation to its parts. The knowledge of the processes of metabolism, energy and information is at the heart of the concept of life. Life activity is aimed at achieving a useful result and adaptation to environmental conditions.
Physiology has traditionally been divided into plant physiology and human and animal physiology.
Physiology, together with anatomy and histology, is the basic theoretical basis, thanks to which the doctor combines scattered knowledge and facts about the patient into a single whole, assesses his condition, the level of legal capacity. And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, it seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, taking into account the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
When correcting impaired body functions, attention should be paid not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also to the nature of anthropogenic pollution - the quantity and quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere, water, food.
|
n
|
[M]The new disciplines separated from physiology are[/M] biochemistry, biophysics and [M]biomechanics[/M].
|
Physiology (from ancient Greek φύσις - nature and λόγος - a word) - the science of the essence of living things, life in norm and in pathologies, that is, about the laws of functioning and regulation of biological systems of different levels of organization, about the limits of the norm of life processes and painful deviations from it (see pathophysiology).
Physiology is a complex of natural science disciplines that study both the vital activity of the organism as a whole, and individual systems and processes, organs, cells, and cellular structures (private physiology). Physiology seeks to reveal the mechanisms of regulation, patterns of the vital activity of the organism and its interaction with the environment.
Physiology studies the main quality of a living thing - its vital activity, its constituent functions and properties, both in relation to the whole organism and in relation to its parts. The knowledge of the processes of metabolism, energy and information is at the heart of the concept of life. Life activity is aimed at achieving a useful result and adaptation to environmental conditions.
Physiology has traditionally been divided into plant physiology and human and animal physiology.
Physiology, together with anatomy and histology, is the basic theoretical basis, thanks to which the doctor combines scattered knowledge and facts about the patient into a single whole, assesses his condition, the level of legal capacity. And in terms of the degree of functional disorders, that is, in terms of the nature and magnitude of deviations from the norm of the most important physiological functions, it seeks to eliminate these deviations and return the body to normal, taking into account the individual, ethnic, gender, age characteristics of the organism, as well as the ecological and social conditions of the environment.
When correcting impaired body functions, attention should be paid not only to the peculiarities of the influence of natural and climatic production conditions of the environment, but also to the nature of anthropogenic pollution - the quantity and quality of harmful highly toxic substances in the atmosphere, water, food.
|
n
|
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