User:Driller1983/sandbox

1. Grant of License Manning has authorized the download by you of an unrestricted number of copies of the electronic book (ebook) in any of the available formats. Manning grants you a nonexclusive, nontransferable license to use the ebook according to the terms and conditions herein. This License Agreement permits you to install the ebook on any and all your devices for your personal use only. Restrictions You shall not: (1) share, resell, rent, assign, timeshare, distribute, or transfer all or part of the ebook or any rights granted hereunder to any other person; (2) duplicate the ebook, except for a single backup or archival copy; (3) remove any proprietary notices, labels, or marks from the ebook; (4) transfer or sublicense title to the ebook to any other party. In zoology, the Principle of Coordination is one of the guiding principles of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. It states that the act of publishing a new zoological name thereby automatically and simultaneously establishes all the corresponding names in the relevant other ranks, with the same type. Currently, ZooBank accommodates the registration of four different kinds of data objects: Nomenclatural Acts: Published usages of scientific names for animals, which represent nomenclatural acts as governed by the ICZN Code of Nomenclature. Most of these acts are ‘original descriptions’ of new scientific names for animals, but other acts may include emendations, lectotypifications, and other acts as governed by the ICZN Code. Publications: Publications that contain Nomenclatural Acts, as defined above. Authors: Anyone who is an author of one or more Publications (as defined above), or who is a contributor to ZooBank content. Type Specimens: Type specimens for scientific names of animals. The registration of Type Specimens is considered provisional and is not yet fully implemented in ZooBank.

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma Yang–Mills theory Spontaneous symmetry breaking modus ponens physical object (a possible referent of a concept or word) Physicality example, "happiness" (when used as an abstraction) can refer to as many things as there are people and events or states of being which make them happy. Likewise, "architecture" refers not only to the design of safe, functional buildings, but also to elements of creation and innovation which aim at elegant solutions to construction problems, to the use of space, and to the attempt to evoke an emotional response in the builders, owners, viewers and users of the building. An abstraction can thus encapsulate each of these levels of detail with no loss of generality. But perhaps a detective or philosopher/scientist/engineer might seek to learn about something, at progressively deeper levels of detail, to solve a crime or a puzzle. But an idea can be symbolized. "A symbol is any device whereby we are enabled to make an abstraction." -- p.xi and chapter 20 of Suzanne K. Langer (1953), Feeling and Form: a theory of art developed from Philosophy in a New Key: N