• The presence of these in the Qur'an is proof enough that the Qur'an did not come from the mind of any human but must have been revealed from God whose knowledge is perfect and who therefore, knew what scientists will discover in the 20th century. (ezsoftech.com)
  • The historiography for miscarriage before the 20th century is rather thin. (bigbluewave.ca)
  • The shortest summary of the past 100 years I've ever heard: "the 20th century had its ups and downs. (kottke.org)
  • For most of the 20th century, however, the Entoprocta have been treated as a distinct phylum that may not even be closely related to the ectoprocts (with the ectoprocts being referred to as either Ectoprocta or Bryozoa). (eol.org)
  • The New York Scientific Library book mentions how, during the 20th century, mathematician Albert Einstein expanded on Babylonian mathematical mythology by deriving his 1917 theory of relativity and his theory of participatory observer creation. (iapeelle.com)
  • The history of keno in casinos dates back to the early 20th century. (wac2020.org)
  • During the latter part of the 20th century, major outbreaks continued to occur in Asia and Africa. (medscape.com)
  • In 1967, the World Health Organization (WHO), in an unprecedented effort, targeted smallpox for eradication from the planet by the end of the 20th century. (medscape.com)
  • During most of the 18th and 19th centuries, entoprocts and ectoprocts were included together in the phylum Bryozoa. (eol.org)
  • In the 18th and 19th centuries, sideshow carnivals known as misemono were a popular form of entertainment for the sophisticated residents of Edo (present-day Tokyo). (pinktentacle.com)
  • During the 18th and 19th Centuries, scientists such as Kant, Orsted, Humboldt and Schelling, involved in the discovery of electromagnetic forces, attempted to discover an ethical Godlike spiritual (holographic) purpose, in order to develop a spiritual technology to make the electric motor a child's toy by comparison. (altervision.org)
  • Knowledge in this field could not progress significantly until the microscope was discovered in the 17th century. (ezsoftech.com)
  • The early modern anatomist from the 16th and 17th century had to create order in the thousands of new phenomena, objects, organs and structures that they (literally) dis-covered with their new approach of dissecting human bodies and of structural analysis. (embryo.nl)
  • George III purchases the Paper Museum of Cassiano Dal Pozzo, a 17th- century patron of arts and sciences. (esp.org)
  • The word was first used in the 17th century, and it is derived from the Italian expression quaranta giorni , which means "40 days. (listverse.com)
  • It is interesting that the roots of the 17th-century mechanistic world view can be found in ancient mystical religion. (satyacenter.com)
  • In the 17th century, this evolved into a view that nature was governed by timeless ideas, proportions, principles, or laws that existed within the mind of God. (satyacenter.com)
  • The second view of changelessness which emerged in the 17th century stemmed from the atomistic tradition of materialism, which addressed an issue which, even then, was already deep-rooted in Greek thought: namely, the concept of a changeless reality. (satyacenter.com)
  • and sacrificing to lasciviousness the parental affection…either destroy the embryo in the womb, or cast if off when born. (kkknationaloffice.com)
  • After decrying the sexual exploitation of women, she condemned those who would "either destroy the embryo in the womb, or cast it off when born. (kkknationaloffice.com)
  • He recalled that an embryo already perceives many sounds in the womb and has an 'intimate attention to the sound of the mother's voice. (ifamnews.com)
  • Laurales: Other families: The members of Calycanthaceae differ from most of the other families in Laurales in having seeds with a large embryo and little if any endosperm at maturity. (britannica.com)
  • The fetus was preserved in a jar in a liquid but I don't know they used in the 18th century. (bigbluewave.ca)
  • In that (so to speak) seminal novel, as a hundred literary scholars have explored during the past century, Sterne plays metafictionally way outside the box with the conceit of his protagonist as a fetus and baby. (blogspot.com)
  • Until 1960's the role of alcohol as a teratogen and its effects on the cellular growth of the embryo and the fetus were not determined on scientific grounds. (medlineacademics.com)
  • Similarly, records of Japan's first national industrial exhibition in 1877 indicate a Yamagata prefecture hospital doctor named Motoyoshi Hasegawa showed off an elaborate set of fetus models illustrating seven different stages of growth, from embryo to birth. (pinktentacle.com)
  • In an effort to develop such soldiers, scientists experimented on embryos, but this failed to produce the results they were hoping for. (themaydayproject.org)
  • Apr 25, 2023 · Romanticism , attitude or intellectual orientation that characterized many works of literature, painting, music , architecture, criticism, and historiography in Western civilization over a period from the late 18th to the mid-19th century . (feuerwehr-hueffenhardt.de)
  • For embryo transfer, the mare's uterus is flushed with a sterile fluid and embryos are recovered and then either transported directly into a recipient mare or can be frozen for later implantation. (vin.com)
  • In the gene-editing experiment, published online today in Nature 1, the embryos were not destined for implantation. (noligraph.de)
  • As a result, humans have responded for centuries to the threat of morbidity and mortality from epidemics through coordinated disease-control strategies. (listverse.com)
  • Epidemics in Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries were associated with a 25%-30% mortality rate. (medscape.com)
  • This wax doll with human hair from the 18th Century is a genuine artifact at the Bridges Art Movement Cabinet of Curiosity show. (cbc.ca)
  • Alison Norlen brought a doll from the 18th Century made entirely of wax with human hair. (cbc.ca)
  • Most of the collection of music scores and music books at the BNE from the 16th century to the present day are processed and consulted in the Department of Music. (bne.es)
  • This is the same process by which bone regenerates (heals) after a fracture (break) occurs and is nearly identical to the process by which bone forms normally in an embryo. (ifopa.org)
  • This in turn energises the first bone created in the embryo, the sphenoid bone, which then guides the electromagnetic functioning of conscious thought within the human metabolism. (altervision.org)
  • The Science-Art research Centre of Australia is about to publish its book The 21st Century Renaissance, in collaboration with the Florentine New Measurement of Humanity Project. (altervision.org)
  • The saying is famous as Hadith-e-Mufazzal and the part that we have quoted is regarding the development of the human embryo. (ezsoftech.com)
  • How could these facts have been known to any human being living in the 7th century? (ezsoftech.com)
  • He noted, for instance, that while Aristotle made some contributions to the study of embryology, he also promoted "the incorrect idea that the human embryo developed from a formless mass that resulted from the union of semen with menstrual blood. (ezsoftech.com)
  • Data from two 18th- and 19th-century farming communities supports the theory that child care assistance from grandmothers has contributed to the evolution of extended human longevity. (sciencenews.org)
  • Simon Edward Fisher studied the genes that control speech and language in England and the Netherlands in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. (asu.edu)
  • North Atlantic populations were extirpated (perhaps by whaling ) on the European coast before 500 CE , and on the American and African coast around the late 17th to early 18th centuries. (wikipedia.org)
  • Sporadic outbreaks were also reported in the American colonies during the late 18th century. (medscape.com)
  • During the late 18th century, Lady Mary Wortley Montague, the wife of a British ambassador to China, observed this custom and discussed this practice in European social circles. (medscape.com)
  • decisión, además, en la que late una clara componente discriminatoria , puesto que el aborto se produce exclusiva mente por la discapacidad del feto. (bvsalud.org)
  • After it was possible to examine cells under the microscope, it was reasoned in the 18th century that development resulted from growth and differentiation of embryonic cells. (ezsoftech.com)
  • Keith Henry Stockman Campbell studied embryo growth and cell differentiation during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries in the UK. (asu.edu)
  • I will follow up the blogpost on the 18th century poem on abortion with the 18th century poem on miscarriage. (bigbluewave.ca)
  • The Catholic Church's opposition to abortion, dating back to the Didache in the first or second century , and repeatedly pronounced in the past 60 years in the face of efforts to legalize the procedure, is well known. (ncronline.org)
  • Artificial insemination, or AI, has been performed in horses since the end of the 18th century but embryo transfer in horses has lagged behind other species, especially cattle. (vin.com)
  • JS Gauthier, the artist-in-residence at the synchrotron, brought a series of 3D printed sculptures that start with a half-formed chicken embryo and evolve into one of the world's oldest sculptures, the Venus of Willendorf. (cbc.ca)
  • Sir John Bertrand Gurdon further developed nuclear transplantation, the technique used to clone organisms and to create stem cells, while working in Britain in the second half of the twentieth century. (asu.edu)
  • Superovulation has been shown to produce on average almost two embryos from these mares whereas mares without superovulation produce about one half of an embryo per mare. (vin.com)
  • The music assets continued to grow with significant acquisitions in the second half of the 18th century, particularly orchestra scores and chamber music from Paris and London (Haydn, Pleyel, Cambini, Stamitz, Boccherini, etc. (bne.es)
  • He has sometimes been confused with a contemporary of the same name who lived in Acadia and with a French botanist of the second half of the 18th century. (biographi.ca)
  • In view of the above, after Dr. Moore had the opportunity to study certain statements in the Qur'an and statements of the Prophet (on whom be peace) in the Hadith literature, he remarked, "I was amazed at the scientific accuracy of these statements which were made in the 7th century A.D. (ezsoftech.com)
  • Giving names and definitions is from all scientific disciplines: although very often nowadays adaptations and corrections have to be made to his taxonomy and nomenclature modern biologists still base their nomenclature on the work of Carl Linnaeus in the 18th century. (embryo.nl)
  • The music collection at the Royal Public Library (1711), the embryo of today's Biblioteca Nacional de España, was made up of works belonging to Charles II and queen mother Mariana de Austria, with the addition of musical prints and manuscripts brought by Philip V from France (including some medieval codices) and other works from noble libraries seized during the War of Spanish Succession. (bne.es)
  • Consequently, mares used in embryo transfer are four times more likely to produce an embryo than if they are not superovulated. (vin.com)
  • But how is it possible for a person brought up in a nomad environment of the 7th century Arabia, to mention things unheard of at that time. (ezsoftech.com)
  • During the 19th century, the collection grew at a spectacular rate, particularly following the enactment of the disentailment decrees, which brought many music books to the Library from convents and monasteries that had been eliminated. (bne.es)
  • The game of domino originated in ancient Greece, but it didn't become popular until the mid-18th century, when French prisoners of war brought it to England. (themaydayproject.org)
  • Recording and contextualizing the science of embryos, development, and reproduction. (asu.edu)
  • In a profoundly loving picture, the 18th-century French artist Chardin shows a woman taking the top off a boiled egg. (theschooloflife.com)
  • The earliest documented cases date back to the 17th and 18th centuries. (ifopa.org)
  • Efforts to prevent the spread of smallpox via inoculation were described as far back as the 6th century BC, when the Chinese inhaled powder derived from smallpox scabs to protect people from developing smallpox. (medscape.com)
  • Literature from the 18th and 19th century provides multiple pieces of evidence that people may have had some awareness that drinking during pregnancy may be detrimental to a baby's health. (medlineacademics.com)
  • During the 3rd Century BC the Platonic tradition of Greek philosophy's fusing of ethics into the Nous resulted in the Greek Science for Ethical Ends and the Science of Universal Love. (altervision.org)
  • Embryonic stem cells can then be harvested from the cloned embryo and used to create new cells and organs for the original organism. (kottke.org)
  • In a nutshell, as my punning Subject Line hints, there is a whole network of textual winks and hints in Emma which deliberately create a subliminal portrait of the heroine Emma Woodhouse as an EMBRYO! (blogspot.com)
  • The narrator asks his wife: whom would you have rather be, this miscarried embryo, or this dead queen? (bigbluewave.ca)
  • By Rebecca Schmid The story of Billy Budd, a Herman Melville story which became the basis for Britten's now classic opera, revolves around a seaman whose allure is so strong that John Claggart, the Master-at-arms on an 18th century war ship, conspires to eradicate his presence. (musicalamerica.com)
  • Under these legislative initiatives, copies of books and music scores by authors, publishers and printers must be delivered to the BNE, and this, for over two centuries, had led to a massive influx of tens of thousands of musical documents. (bne.es)
  • That is where most of the medieval codices with music are kept, such as the Códice de Azagra (9th -10th centuries), the libro de Conductus y motetes, a jewel of primitive polyphony, or the Toledo Codex of Cantigas de Santa María by Alfonso X The Wise. (bne.es)
  • The Book of Leviticus, which was probably written in the sixth century BC, described a procedure for preventing an epidemic under the Mosaic dispensation. (listverse.com)
  • Katharina Dorothea Dalton was a physician in England in the twentieth century who defined premenstrual syndrome (PMS) as a cluster of symptoms suspected to begin one to two weeks before menstruation and disappear upon the onset of a new menstrual cycle. (asu.edu)