• disparate predication (logic)

    predication: …every referent (x); it is disparate if it fails to characterize some or all of the referents. The predication is formal if the subject necessarily entails (or excludes) the predicate; it is material if the entailment is contingent.

  • disparates, Los (prints by Goya y Lucientes)

    Francisco Goya: The Napoleonic invasion and period after the restoration: …Quinta del Sordo (1820–23) and Los proverbios or Los disparates, a series of etchings made at about the same time (though not published until 1864), are, on the other hand, nightmare visions in expressionist language that seem to reflect cynicism, pessimism, and despair.

  • Disparition, La (work by Perec)

    Georges Perec: Perec’s novel La Disparition (1969; A Void) was written entirely without using the letter e, as was its translation. A companion piece of sorts appeared in 1972 with the novella Les Revenentes (“The Ghosts”; published in English as The Exeter Text [1996]), in which every word has only e as…

  • Dispatch of 1854 (Indian history)

    education: Indian universities: …by Sir Charles Wood’s epoch-making Dispatch of 1854, which led to (1) the creation of a separate department for the administration of education in each province, (2) the founding of the universities of Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras in 1857, and (3) the introduction of a system of grants-in-aid. Even when…

  • Dispatch, Council for (French political body)

    France: The development of central government: The Council for Dispatches (Conseil des Dépêches), or, more loosely, the Council for the Interior, had particular responsibility for home affairs, including the activities of the intendants; the Royal Council for Finances (Conseil Royal des Finances) supervised important matters affecting financial aspects of the king’s domain…

  • Dispatches from Elsewhere (American television series)

    Sally Field: In 2020 she starred in Dispatches from Elsewhere, a series inspired by an alternate-reality game. She also appeared in the HBO series Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty (2022– ), about the famed NBA team.

  • dispensation (ecclesiastical law)

    dispensation, in Christian ecclesiastical law, the action of a competent authority in granting relief from the strict application of a law. It may be anticipatory or retrospective. Economy is the term that is normally employed in the Eastern Orthodox churches for this type of action. The church

  • dispensationalism (Protestant theology)

    Christian fundamentalism: Origins: …very different theological perspective, called dispensationalism. First taught to the Brethren in the mid-19th century, dispensationalism maintained that history is divided into distinct periods, or “dispensations,” during which God acts in different ways toward his chosen people. The present period, according to dispensationalism, was one of expectant waiting for the…

  • dispermic chimera (genetics)

    chimera: In dispermic chimeras, two eggs that have been fertilized by two sperm fuse together, producing a so-called tetragametic individual—an individual originating from four gametes, or sex cells. (Under normal circumstances, in the absence of zygote fusion, two fertilized eggs result in the production of dizygotic, or…

  • dispersal (ecology)

    animal social behaviour: Social interactions involving movement: The benefits of forming dispersal swarms, flocks, and coalitions are considered similar to the advantages of living in aggregations as both exploit the potential benefits of living in groups. Moving about in groups can provide additional advantages, such as the reduction in turbulence and energy savings accrued by geese…

  • dispersant (chemistry)

    Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Cleanup efforts: 8 million gallons of dispersants—substances that emulsified the oil, thus allowing for easier metabolism by bacteria—were pumped directly into the leak and applied aerially to the slick. Booms to corral portions of the slick were deployed, and the contained oil was then siphoned off or burned. As oil began…

  • Dispersão (poem by Sá-Carneiro)

    Portuguese literature: From monarchy to republic: His Dispersão (1914; “Dispersion”) features exuberant images, an obsession with verbal constructions and metaphors, and experimentation with graphic design and fonts. The most versatile figure of Portuguese Modernism is José de Almada Negreiros, a poet, novelist, caricaturist, dancer, and actor who provoked scandal with his Manifesto…

  • disperse dye (chemical compound)

    azo dye: …anthraquinone vat dyes and some disperse dyes are also azo compounds; the latter are not water-soluble but can be suspended in water by soap and in that state are adsorbed from the suspension by cellulose acetate fibres.

  • dispersed-source pollutant (water pollution)

    water pollution: Types and sources of water pollutants: …from either point sources or dispersed sources. A point source is a pipe or channel, such as those used for discharge from an industrial facility or a city sewerage system. A dispersed (or nonpoint) source is a very broad unconfined area from which a variety of pollutants enter the water…

  • dispersing agent (chemistry)

    Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Cleanup efforts: 8 million gallons of dispersants—substances that emulsified the oil, thus allowing for easier metabolism by bacteria—were pumped directly into the leak and applied aerially to the slick. Booms to corral portions of the slick were deployed, and the contained oil was then siphoned off or burned. As oil began…

  • dispersion (biology)

    dispersion, in biology, the dissemination, or scattering, of organisms over periods within a given area or over the Earth. The disciplines most intimately intertwined with the study of dispersion are systematics and evolution. Systematics is concerned with the relationships between organisms and

  • dispersion (physics)

    dispersion, in wave motion, any phenomenon associated with the propagation of individual waves at velocities that depend on their wavelengths. Waves of any type can be described by a dispersion relation in which the wave frequency ω is given in terms of the wavenumber k, where k = 2π/λ, where λ is

  • dispersion (ecology)

    animal social behaviour: Social interactions involving movement: The benefits of forming dispersal swarms, flocks, and coalitions are considered similar to the advantages of living in aggregations as both exploit the potential benefits of living in groups. Moving about in groups can provide additional advantages, such as the reduction in turbulence and energy savings accrued by geese…

  • dispersion force (intermolecular force)

    chemical association: …low temperatures the relatively weak London forces (i.e., forces acting between any two atoms brought close together) may also be strong enough to produce molecular association.

  • dispersion medium (chemistry)

    Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Cleanup efforts: 8 million gallons of dispersants—substances that emulsified the oil, thus allowing for easier metabolism by bacteria—were pumped directly into the leak and applied aerially to the slick. Booms to corral portions of the slick were deployed, and the contained oil was then siphoned off or burned. As oil began…

  • dispersion relation (physics)

    radiation: Dispersion: …with frequency is called a dispersion relation. For visible light the index of refraction increases slightly with frequency, a phenomenon termed normal dispersion. The degree of refraction depends on the refractive index. The increased bending of violet light over red by a glass prism is therefore the result of normal…

  • dispersive power (optics)

    optics: Dispersion: The dispersive power (w) of the material is then defined as the ratio of the difference between the “F” and “C” indices and the “D” index reduced by 1, or,

  • disphenoid (crystallography)

    form: …or 4-fold axis of symmetry; Disphenoid: four-faced closed form in which the two faces of a sphenoid alternate above two faces of another sphenoid; Prism: 3, 4, 6, 8, or 12 faces the intersection lines of which are parallel and (except for some monoclinic prisms) are parallel to a principal…

  • Dispholidus typus (snake)

    boomslang, (Dispholidus typus), venomous snake of the family Colubridae, one of the few colubrid species that is decidedly dangerous to humans. This moderately slender snake grows to about 1.8 metres (6 feet) in length and occurs in savannas throughout sub-Saharan Africa. When hunting, it lies in

  • disphotic zone (oceanography)

    marine ecosystem: Geography, oceanography, and topography: …are distinguished the euphotic and disphotic zones. The euphotic zone is the layer closer to the surface that receives enough light for photosynthesis to occur. Beneath lies the disphotic zone, which is illuminated but so poorly that rates of respiration exceed those of photosynthesis. The actual depth of these zones…

  • displacement (mechanics)

    displacement, in mechanics, distance moved by a particle or body in a specific direction. Particles and bodies are typically treated as point masses—that is, without loss of generality, bodies can be treated as though all of their mass is concentrated in a mathematical point. In the figure, A is

  • displacement (ship design)

    ship: Hydrostatics: …deadweight and lightship weight is displacement—that is, the weight that must be equaled by the weight of displaced water if the ship is to float. Of course, the volume of water displaced by a ship is a function of the size of that ship, but in turn the weight of…

  • displacement (psychology)

    Sigmund Freud: The interpretation of dreams: …second activity of the dreamwork, displacement, refers to the decentring of dream thoughts, so that the most urgent wish is often obliquely or marginally represented on the manifest level. Displacement also means the associative substitution of one signifier in the dream for another, say, the king for one’s father. The…

  • displacement activity (animal behavior)

    displacement activity, the performance by an animal of an act inappropriate for the stimulus or stimuli that evoked it. Displacement behaviour usually occurs when an animal is torn between two conflicting drives, such as fear and aggression. Displacement activities often consist of comfort

  • displacement antinode (physics)

    sound: In air columns: …there of a velocity or displacement antinode similar to the centre of the fundamental mode of a stretched string, as illustrated at the top of Figure 4. On the other hand, the air at the closed end of a tube cannot move, so that a closed end results in a…

  • displacement current (electronics)

    displacement current, in electromagnetism, a phenomenon analogous to an ordinary electric current, posited to explain magnetic fields that are produced by changing electric fields. Ordinary electric currents, called conduction currents, whether steady or varying, produce an accompanying magnetic

  • displacement hull (boat design)

    motorboat: Types.: …hulls used on motorboats are displacement hulls, which push through the water; and planing hulls, which skim across the water’s surface. The displacement hull has a V-shaped or round bottom, a relatively deep draft, a narrow width relative to its length, a sharp bow, and a narrow stern. The planing…

  • displacement law (physics)

    displacement law, in physics, any of the statements (originally formulated in 1913) that radioactive decay produces daughter atoms whose position in the periodic table of the chemical elements is shifted from that of their parents: two lower for alpha decay and one higher for negative beta decay.

  • displacement node (physics)

    sound: In air columns: …closed end results in a velocity node similar to the ends of a stretched string.

  • displacement reaction (chemical reaction)

    substitution reaction, any of a class of chemical reactions in which an atom, ion, or group of atoms or ions in a molecule is replaced by another atom, ion, or group. An example is the reaction in which the chlorine atom in the chloromethane molecule is displaced by the hydroxide ion, forming

  • displacement tonnage (shipping)

    tonnage: Displacement tonnage is used to define the size of naval ships. It refers to the weight of the volume of water displaced by a vessel in normal seagoing condition.

  • displacement, electric (physics)

    electric displacement, auxiliary electric field or electric vector that represents that aspect of an electric field associated solely with the presence of separated free electric charges, purposely excluding the contribution of any electric charges bound together in neutral atoms or molecules. If

  • display (information recording)

    information processing: Information display: For humans to perceive and understand information, it must be presented as print and image on paper; as print and image on film or on a video terminal; as sound via radio or telephony; as print, sound, and video in motion pictures, on television…

  • display behaviour (animal behavior)

    display behaviour, ritualized behaviour by which an animal provides specific information to others, usually members of its own species. Virtually all higher animals use displays to some extent. The best-known displays are visual ones—and some biologists restrict the term display to visual signals

  • Display Energy Certificate (document)

    zero-energy building: The United Kingdom’s EPC scheme: Display Energy Certificates (DECs) are also required for larger public buildings, thus enabling everyone to see how energy efficient the country’s public buildings are. The DEC has to be displayed at all times in a prominent place clearly visible to the public, and it is…

  • display ground (animal behavior)

    lek, in animal behaviour, communal area in which two or more males of a species perform courtship displays. Lek behaviour, also called arena behaviour, is found in a number of insects, birds, and mammals. Varying degrees of interaction occur between the males, from virtually none to closely

  • Display of Heraldrie, A (book by Guillim)

    heraldry: Early writers: …Armorie (1562), and John Guillim, A Display of Heraldrie (1610), not only perpetuate the nonsensical natural history of olden days but are largely responsible for erroneous beliefs about heraldic charges having definite symbolic meanings and their being granted as rewards for valorous deeds—beliefs that today are perpetuated by the vendors…

  • display pewter (decoration)

    metalwork: 16th century to modern: …known as “display pewter” (Edelzinn), and it gave a new and brilliant impetus to the trade. The first examples were made between 1560 and 1570, and the main centers of production were Nürnberg and Lyon. In the beginning the technique used was not the same in both towns. Whereas…

  • display resolution (technology)

    display resolution, number of pixels shown on a screen, expressed in the number of pixels across by the number of pixels high. For example, a 4K organic light-emitting diode (OLED) television’s display might measure 3,840 × 2,160. This indicates that the screen is 3,840 pixels wide and 2,160 pixels

  • dispondee (metre)

    rhythm: Polyphonic metre: …the spondee, ♩♩, and the dispondee, ♩♩♩♩, need an accent on the first beat to keep their identity. Notwithstanding the opposite tendencies of metrical organization and stress accent, however, some metre is obviously subject to stress, so that metre and time measure become very closely linked, as in the scherzo…

  • disposable income (economics)

    disposable income, that portion of an individual’s income over which the recipient has complete discretion. An accurate general definition of income is not easy to provide. Income includes wages and salaries, interest and dividend payments from financial assets, and rents and net profits from

  • Dispositio Achillea (German history)

    Albert III Achilles: …24, 1473, he proclaimed the Dispositio Achillea (“Disposition of Achilles”), which was to preserve Brandenburg as a united whole and keep his dynastic inheritance intact. This settlement gave the mark of Brandenburg to his eldest son and the Hohenzollerns’s then more lucrative Franconian possessions to younger sons. While not establishing…

  • disposition (mining)

    coal mining: Disposition: Disposition is the handling of the products of a preparation plant. The entire plant process includes ROM storage, raw coal storage, crusher house, screening plants, various slurries (coal-water mixtures), dewatering system, thickeners, thermal dryer, process-water systems, clean-coal storage, clean-coal load-out system, monitoring and process-control…

  • disposition (personality)

    temperament, in psychology, an aspect of personality concerned with emotional dispositions and reactions and their speed and intensity; the term often is used to refer to the prevailing mood or mood pattern of a person. The notion of temperament in this sense originated with Galen, the Greek

  • dispositional knowledge (epistemology)

    epistemology: Occasional and dispositional knowledge: In contrast, dispositional knowledge, as the term suggests, is a disposition, or a propensity, to behave in certain ways in certain conditions. Although Smith may not now be thinking of his home address, he certainly knows it in the sense that, if one were to ask him…

  • Dispossessed, The (work by Le Guin)

    Ursula K. Le Guin: In The Dispossessed (1974), she examined two neighbouring worlds that are home to antithetical societies, one capitalist, the other anarchic, both of which stifle freedom in particular ways. The destruction of indigenous peoples on a planet colonized by Earth is the focus of The Word for…

  • dispossession (law)

    eviction, the process of dispossessing a person of land, be it lawful or unlawful. Subject to any statutory provisions, it is lawful if the person evicted has a right to possession inferior to that of the person carrying out the eviction. The delivery of possession under order of the court is

  • disproportionation (chemistry)

    oxide: Nonmetal oxides: …and reduced is called a disproportionation reaction. In the following disproportionation reaction, N4+ is reduced to N2+ (in NO) and oxidized to N5+ (in HNO3). 3NO2 + H2O → 2HNO3 + NO

  • Dispur (India)

    Dispur, city, capital of Assam state, northeastern India. Following the administrative reorganization of the region in 1972, Dispur, a suburb of Guwahati, became the state

  • Disputa (painting by Raphael)

    Raphael: Last years in Rome of Raphael: …of these frescoes are the Disputa and the School of Athens. The Disputa, showing a celestial vision of God and his prophets and apostles above a gathering of representatives, past and present, of the Roman Catholic Church, equates through its iconography the triumph of the church and the triumph of…

  • Disputatio Iudaei et Christiani (work by Gilbert Crispin)

    Gilbert Crispin: His skillful writings include Disputatio Iudaei et Christiani, in which a dialogue on the Christian faith is carried out between Gilbert and his Jewish acquaintance. Other historical and doctrinal works are De Simoniacis, De Spiritu Sancto, and Disputatio Christiani cum gentilli.

  • disputation (education)

    Western philosophy: Jewish thought: …was done by lecture and disputation (a formal debate). A lecture consisted of the reading of a prescribed text followed by the teacher’s commentary on it. Masters also held disputations in which the affirmative and negative sides of a question were thoroughly argued by students and teacher before the latter…

  • Disputation of the Holy Sacrament (painting by Raphael)

    Raphael: Last years in Rome of Raphael: …of these frescoes are the Disputa and the School of Athens. The Disputa, showing a celestial vision of God and his prophets and apostles above a gathering of representatives, past and present, of the Roman Catholic Church, equates through its iconography the triumph of the church and the triumph of…

  • Disputationes (work by Bellarmine)

    St. Robert Bellarmine: …lectures published under the title Disputationes de controversiis Christianae fidei adversus huius temporis haereticos (1586–93; “Lectures Concerning the Controversies of the Christian Faith Against the Heretics of This Time”). They contained a lucid and uncompromising statement of Roman Catholic doctrine. He took part in the preparation of the Clementine edition…

  • Disputationes adversus astrologiam divinatricem (work by Pico della Mirandola)

    Nicolaus Copernicus: Early life and education: …known as Regiomontanus, 1436–76) and Disputationes adversus astrologianm divinatricenm (“Disputations against Divinatory Astrology”) by Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463–94). The first provided a summary of the foundations of Ptolemy’s astronomy, with Regiomontanus’s corrections and critical expansions of certain important planetary models that might have been suggestive to Copernicus of directions…

  • Disputationes de controveriis Christianae fidei adversus huius temporis haereticos (work by Bellarmine)

    St. Robert Bellarmine: …lectures published under the title Disputationes de controversiis Christianae fidei adversus huius temporis haereticos (1586–93; “Lectures Concerning the Controversies of the Christian Faith Against the Heretics of This Time”). They contained a lucid and uncompromising statement of Roman Catholic doctrine. He took part in the preparation of the Clementine edition…

  • Disputationes Metaphysicae (work by Suárez)

    Francisco Suárez: …study in philosophy is the Disputationes Metaphysicae (1597), which was used for more than a century as a textbook at most European universities, Catholic and Protestant alike. In this work, which treats especially the problems of human will and the concept of general versus particular phenomena, Suárez drew upon Aristotle…

  • dispute settlement (international relations)

    multilateralism: Dispute settlement: For the states to feel assured of the returns of treating their interests as indivisible, multilateral arrangements tend to incorporate some mechanism for ensuring that countries act in accordance with the expected norms. That principle of dispute settlement forms the third principle associated…

  • Disputed Passage (film by Borzage [1939])

    Frank Borzage: MGM tenure: …loaned to Paramount to make Disputed Passage (1939), about an older scientist (Akim Tamiroff) who advises his understudy (John Howard) that there can be no room for a wife (Dorothy Lamour) in the life of a true scientist. Back at MGM, Borzage was assigned to Strange Cargo (1940), a parable…

  • Disquisitio de Attractionibus Electivis (work by Bergman)

    Torbern Olof Bergman: …Disquisitio de Attractionibus Electivis (1775; A Dissertation on Elective Attractions), in which he included tables listing the elements in the order of their affinity (their ability to react and displace other elements in a compound). These tables were widely acclaimed and were included in chemical literature as late as 1808.

  • Disquisitiones Arithmeticae (book by Gauss)

    arithmetic: Fundamental theory: …proved by Gauss in his Disquisitiones Arithmeticae. It states that every composite number can be expressed as a product of prime numbers and that, save for the order in which the factors are written, this representation is unique. Gauss’s theorem follows rather directly from another theorem of Euclid to the…

  • Disraeli (film by Green [1929])

    Alfred E. Green: …immediately made an impact with Disraeli (1929), Old English (1930), and The Green Goddess (1930), three showcases for stage veteran George Arliss, who won a best actor Academy Award for Disraeli. Smart Money (1931) was a taut crime yarn starring Edward G. Robinson, with James Cagney and

  • Disraeli Gears (album by Cream)

    Eric Clapton: …having recorded such albums as Disraeli Gears (1967), Wheels of Fire (1968), and Goodbye (1969).

  • Disraeli, Benjamin (prime minister of United Kingdom)

    Benjamin Disraeli was a British statesman and novelist who was twice prime minister (1868, 1874–80) and who provided the Conservative Party with a twofold policy of Tory democracy and imperialism. Disraeli was of Italian-Jewish descent, the eldest son and second child of Isaac D’Israeli and Maria

  • Disraeli, Benjamin, earl of Beaconsfield, Viscount Hughenden of Hughenden (prime minister of United Kingdom)

    Benjamin Disraeli was a British statesman and novelist who was twice prime minister (1868, 1874–80) and who provided the Conservative Party with a twofold policy of Tory democracy and imperialism. Disraeli was of Italian-Jewish descent, the eldest son and second child of Isaac D’Israeli and Maria

  • Disrobing of Christ (painting by El Greco)

    El Greco: Middle years: …another masterpiece of extraordinary originality—the Espolio (Disrobing of Christ). In designing the composition vertically and compactly in the foreground he seems to have been motivated by the desire to show the oppression of Christ by his cruel tormentors. He chose a method of space elimination that is common to middle…

  • disruption (pathology)

    congenital disorder: Disruptions: Disruptions are a group of congenital disorders that result from environmental disturbances of the processes of blastogenesis and organogenesis. Several classes of disruption have been recognized, including those due to prenatal infections such as rubella, cytomegalovirus, and toxoplasmosis; chemicals such as mercury,

  • Disruption, The (Scottish religious history)

    Free Church of Scotland: …came to be known as the Disruption.

  • disruptive coloration (zoology)

    concealing coloration: In disruptive coloration, the identity and location of an animal may be concealed through a coloration pattern that causes visual disruption because the pattern does not coincide with the shape and outline of the animal’s body. Countershading is a form of concealing coloration in which the…

  • disruptive selection (biology)

    evolution: Diversifying selection: Two or more divergent phenotypes in an environment may be favoured simultaneously by diversifying selection. (See the right column of the figure.) No natural environment is homogeneous; rather, the environment of any plant or animal population is a mosaic consisting of more or…

  • Dissanayake, Anura Kumara (president of Sri Lanka)

    Anura Kumara Dissanayake is the ninth executive president of Sri Lanka (2024– ) and leader of the leftist People’s Liberation Front (Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna; JVP). Dissanayake’s election marks a major turning point in Sri Lankan politics. Unlike most previous presidents, he does not come from a

  • dissecting aneurysm (pathology)

    cardiovascular disease: Other diseases of the aorta and the pulmonary artery: …it may lead to a dissecting aneurysm. In a dissecting aneurysm a rupture in the intima, the innermost coat of the artery, permits blood to enter the wall of the aorta, causing separation of the layers of the wall. Obstruction to tributaries may occur, which is usually associated with severe…

  • dissection (geometry)

    number game: Geometric dissections: Geometric dissection problems involve the cutting of geometric figures into pieces that can be arranged to form other geometric figures; for example, cutting a rectangle into parts that can be put together in the form of a square and vice versa. Interest in this…

  • dissection (biology)

    Andreas Vesalius: Life: …much of his time to dissections of cadavers and insisted on doing them himself, instead of relying on untrained assistants. At first, Vesalius had no reason to question the theories of Galen, the Greek physician who had served the emperor Marcus Aurelius in Rome and whose books on anatomy were…

  • disseisin (law)

    adverse possession: …the land was known as disseisin. One who was disseised of his property could take the matter to the king’s court through a legal action known as the assize of novel disseisin. If the land held by a disseisor was claimed by an heir of the original owner in seisin,…

  • disseminated coccidioidomycosis (pathology)

    coccidioidomycosis: Disseminated coccidioidomycosis, or coccidioidal granuloma, is a progressive form of infection that can result in skin ulcers, many nodules or cavities in the lungs, widespread involvement of lymph nodes, lesions of the bones, and osteomyelitis (infection of the bone). Meningitis is usually the immediate cause…

  • disseminated gonococcal infection (pathology)

    gonorrhea: Symptoms: …sometimes enter the bloodstream, causing disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI) in virtually any organ system. In both male and female, arthritis is the most common manifestation of DGI. The process usually settles in one or two joints and may result in permanent disability in the absence of treatment. Involvement of the…

  • disseminated intravascular coagulation (pathology)

    blood disease: Disseminated intravascular coagulation: Disseminated intravascular coagulation is an acquired disorder in which platelets and blood-clotting components are consumed until a severe deficiency exists, resulting in a bleeding disorder. In addition, the fibrinolytic system—the system that dissolves clots—is also activated, leading to the destruction of fibrinogen and fibrin clots.…

  • disseminated lupus erythematosus (pathology)

    connective tissue disease: Systemic lupus erythematosus: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic inflammatory disease of unknown cause that affects, either singularly or in combination, the skin, joints, kidneys, nervous system, and membranes lining body cavities and often other organs as well. The disease has a tendency toward…

  • disseminated sclerosis (pathology)

    multiple sclerosis (MS), progressive autoimmune disease of the central nervous system characterized by destruction of the myelin sheath surrounding the nerve fibres of the brain, spinal cord, and optic nerves, as a result of which, the transmission of nerve impulses becomes impaired, particularly

  • dissemination (biology)

    dispersion, in biology, the dissemination, or scattering, of organisms over periods within a given area or over the Earth. The disciplines most intimately intertwined with the study of dispersion are systematics and evolution. Systematics is concerned with the relationships between organisms and

  • dissent (political theory)

    dissent, an unwillingness to cooperate with an established source of authority, which can be social, cultural, or governmental. In political theory, dissent has been studied mainly in relation to governmental power, inquiring into how and to what extent dissent should be promoted, tolerated, and

  • Dissent (American journal)

    Dissent, quarterly American journal of leftist international politics, economics, and culture. Founded in New York City in 1954, Dissent features criticism of conventional opinion on both the right and the left from an independent, social-democratic perspective. Dissent was founded by a small group

  • Dissent of Dominick Shapiro, The (novel by Kops)

    Bernard Kops: …included Awake for Mourning (1958), The Dissent of Dominick Shapiro (1966), and The Odyssey of Samuel Glass (2012). He also wrote the autobiographies The World Is a Wedding (1963) and Shalom Bomb (2000) as well as several radio and television plays. Barricades in West Hampstead (1988) and Love, Death and…

  • Dissenters (Protestantism)

    Nonconformist, any English Protestant who does not conform to the doctrines or practices of the established Church of England. The word Nonconformist was first used in the penal acts following the Restoration of the monarchy (1660) and the Act of Uniformity (1662) to describe the conventicles

  • Dissertatio cum Nuncio Sidereo (work by Kepler)

    Johannes Kepler: Astronomical work of Johannes Kepler: The first was his Dissertatio cum Nuncio Sidereo (1610; “Conversation with the Sidereal Messenger”), in which, among other things, he speculated that the distances of the newly discovered Jovian moons might agree with the ratios of the rhombic dodecahedron, triacontahedron, and cube. The second was a theoretical work on…

  • Dissertation of the Telugu Language (work by Ellis)

    Dravidian languages: Dravidian studies: His Dissertation of the Telugu Language was initially published as “Note to the Introduction” of British linguist A.D. Campbell’s A Grammar of the Teloogoo Language. Ellis’s monograph provided lexical and grammatical evidence to support the hypothesis that Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Tulu, Kodagu, and Malto were…

  • Dissertation on Elective Attractions, A (work by Bergman)

    Torbern Olof Bergman: …Disquisitio de Attractionibus Electivis (1775; A Dissertation on Elective Attractions), in which he included tables listing the elements in the order of their affinity (their ability to react and displace other elements in a compound). These tables were widely acclaimed and were included in chemical literature as late as 1808.

  • Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and Pain, A (work by Franklin)

    Benjamin Franklin: Youthful adventures: While in London, Franklin wrote A Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and Pain (1725), a Deistical pamphlet inspired by his having set type for William Wollaston’s moral tract, The Religion of Nature Delineated. Franklin argued in his essay that since human beings have no real freedom of choice, they…

  • Dissertation on Oriental Gardening (book by Chambers)

    garden and landscape design: Chinese: The famous Dissertation on Oriental Gardening by the English architect Sir William Chambers (1772) was a fanciful account intended to further the current revolt in England against the almost universal Brownian park garden.

  • Dissertation on the Canon and Federal Law, A (work by Adams)

    United States: The tax controversy: …Adams, however, warned in his Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Law that Parliament, armed with this view of its powers, would try to tax the colonies again; and this happened in 1767 when Charles Townshend became chancellor of the Exchequer in a ministry formed by Pitt, now earl of…

  • Dissertation on the Letters of Phalaris (work by Bentley)

    classical scholarship: The 18th century: the age of Bentley: …evidence above all in his Dissertation upon the Epistles of Phalaris (expanded edition, 1699), the first important work of classical scholarship written in a modern language. His editions of Horace (1711), Terence (1726), and Manilius (1739) were all of masterly quality. He did remarkable work in collecting fragments of Menander…

  • Dissertation upon Parties, A (work by Bolingbroke)

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