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Rising Inpatient Demands for Inherited Metabolic Disorders: Impact on Pediatric Capacity
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A, EarlyView.
Maria Paula Silva +7 more
wiley +1 more source
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Trends in Genetics, 2013
In two recent TiG articles, Gerald Crabtree argues that there is an ongoing, and inevitable, decline in the average intellect of the human species [1,2]. Crabtree attributes this purported decline to various different phenomena, although chief among them is the suggestion that the genes underpinning human intellect are uniquely susceptible to ...
Kalinka, A., Kelava, I., Lewitus, E.
openaire +3 more sources
In two recent TiG articles, Gerald Crabtree argues that there is an ongoing, and inevitable, decline in the average intellect of the human species [1,2]. Crabtree attributes this purported decline to various different phenomena, although chief among them is the suggestion that the genes underpinning human intellect are uniquely susceptible to ...
Kalinka, A., Kelava, I., Lewitus, E.
openaire +3 more sources
2001
Abstract The natural theology we have been investigating has undertaken to show that there must be a necessarily unique and absolutely simple being that constitutes the ultimate explanation of everything. The accounts that Aquinas has provided of certain important metaphysical attributes seem to anticipate the attribution of mind to God.
openaire +1 more source
Abstract The natural theology we have been investigating has undertaken to show that there must be a necessarily unique and absolutely simple being that constitutes the ultimate explanation of everything. The accounts that Aquinas has provided of certain important metaphysical attributes seem to anticipate the attribution of mind to God.
openaire +1 more source
2001
AbstractAquinas devotes the entire third (last part) of Book II to considering only one kind of created things: intellects, or more precisely, only such kinds of created things as are essentially intellective in themselves. In only one of his arguments for why created things include intellective substances, does he make the point that created intellect
openaire +1 more source
AbstractAquinas devotes the entire third (last part) of Book II to considering only one kind of created things: intellects, or more precisely, only such kinds of created things as are essentially intellective in themselves. In only one of his arguments for why created things include intellective substances, does he make the point that created intellect
openaire +1 more source

