Proceso es un semanario de opinión y análisis político y social mexicano de ideología centro izquierdista, fundado el 6 de noviembre de 1976 por Julio Scherer García, Miguel Ángel Granados Chapa, Vicente Leñero y Armando Ponce, entre otros.[1]Además de la política local, Proceso también incluye artículos de crítica, deporte, arte, cultura y otros temas.
[1] Proceso (2016). «Historia de lo que somos». Consultado el 10 de febrero de 2016.
INICIATIVA CON PROYECTO DE DECRETO DE DECRETO POR EL QUE REFORMA Y ADICIONA DIVERSAS DISPOSICIONES DE LA LEY GENERAL DE SALUD, A CARGO DE LA DIPUTADA BLANCA MARGARITA CUATA DOMÍNGUEZ, DEL GRUPO PARLAMENTARIO DE MORENA. Lo anterior, ya que de una búsqueda en la página de Cofepris , así como de su marco jurídico, en el apartado denominado: 8. Farmacopea Herbolaria , el mismo se encuentra bloqueado y en su caso no proporciona la información consistente en las bases científicas para llegar a la conclusión de la prohibición del uso y comercialización de 200 plantas, lo que afecta a la cadena productiva involucrada en la herbolaria de nuestro país, causando pérdidas millonarias a los integrantes de las mismas.
La Comisión Federal para la Protección contra Riesgos Sanitarios (Cofepris, por su acrónimo)[1] es una dependencia federal (un órgano desconcentrado) del gobierno de México, de la Secretaría de Salud.
[1]«». . Archivado desde el original el 8 de marzo de 2016. Consultado el 18 de febrero de 2016.
DescriptionPottery incantation bowl: flat-based bowl with simple rim and convex wall; wheel-thrown. Inscribed in spiral from the centre outwards; meaningless text.Cultures/periodsLate-Post SasanianProduction date6thC-8thC
Stanley Patrick Johnson (born 18 August 1940) is a British author[3] and former Conservative Party politician who served as Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for Wight and Hampshire East from 1979 to 1984. A former employee of the World Bank and the European Commission, he has written books on environmental and population issues. His six children include Prime Minister Boris Johnson; former MP and minister Jo Johnson; and journalist Rachel Johnson.
[3]“Family of influence behind Boris Johnson”. UK Daily Telegraph. 3 May 2008. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
barburg virus novel 1982
El padre de Boris Johnson, acusado de tocamientos inapropiados a varias mujeres Stanley Johnson, padre del primer ministro británico, ha sido acusado por una diputada conservadora y una periodista política de alto nivel 16 de noviembre de 2021 14:44 h Stanley Johnson, padre del primer ministro de Reino Unido, Boris Johnson, ha sido acusado de realizar tocamientos indebidos a una antigua alto cargo del Gobierno y a una destacada periodista política, según han informado medios británicos.
‘It’s terrifying but it’s a COINCIDENCE’: Leading cardiologist says footballers should not panic after five high-profile collapses – but insists all players need to be checked throughout their 20s and 30s By Charlie Walker For Mailonline09:00 26 Nov 2021, updated 09:11 26 Nov 2021
El coloso de Rodas era una gran estatua del dios sol griegoHelios, realizada por el escultor Cares de Lindos en la isla de Rodas (Grecia) en 280 a. C. y destruida por un terremoto en 226 a. C. Es considerada una de las Siete maravillas del mundo antiguo.[1]
Todo lo que se conoce sobre esta estatua se debe a las noticias que dejaron los escritores antiguos Plinio el Viejo, Polibio[2] y Estrabón, y a las crónicas bizantinas de Constantino VII Porfirogéneta, Miguel el Sirio y Filón.
La estatua (hecha con placas de bronce sobre un armazón de hierro) representaba al dios griego del sol, Helios.
Plinio el Viejo la describe así:Pero de todos el más admirado fue el Coloso del Sol, en Rodas, hecho por Cares de Lindos, alumno del Lisipo antes mencionado. Esta estatua medía 70 codos (32,41 metros) de altura.[3] Después de 66 años un terremoto la postró, pero incluso yacente es un milagro. Pocos pueden abarcar el pulgar con los brazos, sus dedos eran más grandes que la mayoría de las estatuas que tenían marfil. El vacío de sus miembros rotos se asemeja a grandes cavernas. En el interior se ven magnas rocas, con cuyo peso habían estabilizado su constitución. Doce años tardaron en terminarla y costó 300 talentos, que se consiguieron de las máquinas de guerra abandonadas por el rey Demetrio en el asedio de Rodas.Plinio el Viejo, Historia natural (34.18.3)[4]
Otras fuentes le atribuían una altura de 80 codos. Es posible que la diferencia se debiera a si se le sumaba o no la altura de la base. Dependiendo de la longitud que se atribuya al codo, se estima que podría haber medido entre 30 y 39 m.[5]
- «Colossus, Rhodius, inter 7 Mundi miracula numeratus, et Soli dicatus, totos 56 annos solum stetit, et terremotus concidit», Novum Lexicon Historicum et Criticum, pág. 60.
- ↑ Polibio, Historias (V.88.1).
- ↑ El codo griego (πεχυα) medía 46,3 cm.
- ↑ Libro 34 de la Historia natural de Plinio el Viejo:
Ante omnes autem in admiratione fuit Solis colossus Rhodi, quem fecerat Chares Lindius, Lysippi supra dicti discipulus. LXX cubitorum altitudinis fuit hoc simulacrum, post LXVI annum terrae motu prostratum, sed iacens quoque miraculo est. pauci pollicem eius amplectuntur, maiores sunt digiti quam pleraeque statuae. Vasti specus hiant defractis membris; spectantur intus magnae molis saxa, quorum pondere stabiliverat eum constituens. Duodecim annis tradunt effectum CCC talentis, quae contigerant ex apparatu regis Demetrii relicto morae taedio obsessa Rhodo. - ↑ a b c Rosa María Mariño Sánchez-Elvira, El Coloso de Rodas, pp.114-116, en Maravillas del mundo antiguo, Madrid (2008).
READ jews pornography funding wormhole
REVIEW
What’s wifi doing to us? Experiment finds that shrubs die when placed next to wireless routers By Ellie Zolfagharifard and Ben Spencer for the Daily Mail13:21 16 Dec 2013, updated 08:00 17 Dec 2013 Plants and people have been shown to absorb radio signals Wi-Fi emits. Scientists divided over whether this is enough to cause damage to tissue. Some experts believe the negative effects observed in the latest study could be due to heat emitted by the Wi-Fi routers
Popular Science (en inglés, ciencia popular o divulgación científica) es una revista mensual estadounidense fundada en 1872 y especializada en noticias de ciencia y tecnología dirigidas al público no especializado. Se considera que es la revista de divulgación científica pionera en el mundo. Ha ganado dos premios ASME, por su excelencia periodística: en 2003 (para la Excelencia General) y en 2004 (a la Mejor Revista de la Sección). Es la quinta revista mensual más antigua publicada ininterrumpidamente desde su creación.[1]
[1] Popular Science (23 de julio). «The History of Popular Science» (digital) (en inglés). Consultado el 12 de mayo de 2008.
REVIEW Federal Reserve and the Jesuits were responsible for funding the United States, Germany, and Russia in the war
La bestia de Gévaudan (en francés, La Bête du Gévaudan, pronunciado /la bɛt dy ʒevodɑ̃/; en occitano, La Bèstia de Gavaudan) es el nombre histórico atribuido a un críptidodevorador de hombres, semejante a un lobo, perro o perro lobo, que asoló la región de Gévaudan, localizada en el actual departamento francés de Lozère, región de Occitania, en el sur de Francia, entre 1764 y 1767.[3] Los ataques, que cubrieron un área que se extiende desde 90×80 km (56×50 millas), se dicen que habían sido cometidos por uno o varios animales que tenían formidables dientes e inmensas colas, según testigos contemporáneos.
[3]«The Fear of Wolves: A Review of Wolf Attacks on Humans» (PDF). Norsk Institutt for Naturforskning. Archivado desde el original el 9 de diciembre de 2008. Consultado el 26 de junio de 2008.
The idea that matter is made up of discrete units is a very old idea, appearing in many ancient cultures such as Greece and India. The word “atom” (Greek: ἄτομος; atomos), meaning “uncuttable”, was coined by the Pre-Socratic Greek philosophersLeucippus and his pupil Democritus (c.460–c.370 BC).[1][2][3][4] Democritus taught that atoms were infinite in number, uncreated, and eternal, and that the qualities of an object result from the kind of atoms that compose it.[2][3][4] Democritus’s atomism was refined and elaborated by the later Greek philosopher Epicurus (341–270 BC), and by the Roman Epicurean poet Lucretius (c.99–c.55 BC).[3][4]
- Pullman, Bernard (1998). The Atom in the History of Human Thought. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 31–33. ISBN 978-0-19-515040-7.
- ^ a b Kenny, Anthony (2004). Ancient Philosophy. A New History of Western Philosophy. 1. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 26–28. ISBN 0-19-875273-3.
- ^ a b c d e f g Pyle, Andrew (2010). “Atoms and Atomism”. In Grafton, Anthony; Most, Glenn W.; Settis, Salvatore (eds.). The Classical Tradition. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. pp. 103–104. ISBN 978-0-674-03572-0.
- ^ a b c d Cohen, Henri; Lefebvre, Claire, eds. (2017). Handbook of Categorization in Cognitive Science (Second ed.). Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier. p. 427. ISBN 978-0-08-101107-2.
Long before any knowledge of electricity existed, people were aware of shocks from electric fish. Ancient Egyptian texts dating from 2750 BCE referred to these fish as the “Thunderer of the Nile“, and described them as the “protectors” of all other fish. Electric fish were again reported millennia later by ancient Greek, Roman and Arabic naturalists and physicians.[1] Several ancient writers, such as Pliny the Elder and Scribonius Largus, attested to the numbing effect of electric shocks delivered by electric catfish and electric rays, and knew that such shocks could travel along conducting objects.[2] Patients suffering from ailments such as gout or headache were directed to touch electric fish in the hope that the powerful jolt might cure them.[3]
REVIEW Possibly the earliest and nearest approach to the discovery of the identity of lightning, and electricity from any other source, is to be attributed to the Arabs, who before the 15th century had the Arabic word for lightning ra‘ad (رعد) applied to the electric ray.[4]
- Moller, Peter; Kramer, Bernd (December 1991), “Review: Electric Fish”, BioScience, American Institute of Biological Sciences, 41 (11): 794–96 [794], doi:10.2307/1311732, JSTOR 1311732
- ^ Bullock, Theodore H. (2005), Electroreception, Springer, pp. 5–7, ISBN 0-387-23192-7
- ^ Morris, Simon C. (2003), Life’s Solution: Inevitable Humans in a Lonely Universe, Cambridge University Press, pp. 182–85, ISBN 0-521-82704-3
- ^ The Encyclopedia Americana; a library of universal knowledge (1918), New York: Encyclopedia Americana Corp
Ancient cultures around the Mediterranean knew that certain objects, such as rods of amber, could be rubbed with cat’s fur to attract light objects like feathers. Thales of Miletus, an ancient Greek philosopher, writing at around 600 BCE, described a form of static electricity, noting that rubbing fur on various substances, such as amber, would cause a particular attraction between the two. He noted that the amber buttons could attract light objects such as hair and that if they rubbed the amber for long enough they could even get a spark to jump.
At around 450 BCE Democritus, a later Greek philosopher, developed an atomic theory that was similar to modern atomic theory. His mentor, Leucippus, is credited with this same theory. The hypothesis of Leucippus and Democritus held everything to be composed of atoms. But these atoms, called “atomos”, were indivisible, and indestructible. He presciently stated that between atoms lies empty space, and that atoms are constantly in motion.
An object found in Iraq in 1938, dated to about 250 BCE and called the Baghdad Battery, resembles a galvanic cell and is claimed by some to have been used for electroplating in Mesopotamia
A galvanic cell or voltaic cell, named after the scientists Luigi Galvani and Alessandro Volta, respectively, is an electrochemical cell in which an electric current is generated from spontaneous reactions. A common apparatus generally consists of two different metals, each immersed in separate beakers containing their respective metal ions in solution that are connected by a salt bridge (or separated by a porous membrane).[1]
[1] McMurry, John; Fay, Robert C.; Robinson, Jill K. (2015). Chemistry (7th ed.). Boston: Pearson. p. 762. ISBN978-0-321-94317-0. OCLC889577526.
READ chimera centaur
The purpose of the antenna is to intercept radio waves from the desired television stations and convert them to tiny radio frequency alternating currents which are applied to the television’s tuner, which extracts the television signal.
Radio waves have the longest wavelengths in the electromagnetic spectrum. Naturally occurring radio waves are emitted by lightning and astronomical objects, and are part of the blackbody radiation emitted by all warm objects. Electricity in nature: lightning, electric fish, solar storms. Lightning and thunder happen simultaneously, but lightning travels near the speed light
Despite WHO advice that current vaccines probably won’t work against Omicron, WHO recommends more vaccination, with vaccinating priority for “older adults, health care workers and those with underlying conditions putting them at risk of severe disease and death.”
…
WHO admits the current vaccines won’t likely work well against Omicron, but seem to be wanting to use the threat of this variant to push vaccines into populations/countries that aren’t vaccinated. Such as African nations?
Will the Vaccines Stop Omicron? Scientists Are Racing to Find Out. A “Frankenstein mix” of mutations raises concerns, but the variant may remain vulnerable to current vaccines. If not, revisions will be necessary. By Apoorva MandavilliNov. 28, 2021 They won’t know the results for two weeks, at the earliest. But the mutations that Omicron carries suggest that the vaccines most likely will be less effective, to some unknown degree, than they were against any previous variant.
Yet another example of journalistic bias and fearporn. These are unproven assumptions being made by a journalist. The origin of this virus remains unknown. The type and penetration of vaccines at the origin is unknown. Factcheck – FALSE AND MISLEADING. ??
‘You’ve got to prepare for the worst’: World responds to new variant’s arrival By Dan Diamond, Joel Achenbach, Chico Harlan and Lesley Wroughton November 27, 2021 at 6:45 p.m. EST Global policy experts said that the emergence of omicron in southern Africa, where vaccination rates lag behind Western nations, underscores the need to inoculate people in all regions and curb the risk of new outbreaks and variants.
READ ambar electron ezequiel 1 hashmal something like glowing amber
Light has no mass so it also has no energy according to Einstein, but how can sunlight warm the earth without energy? Category: Physics Published: April 1, 2014 Light indeed carries energy and accomplishes this without having any mass. The Einstein equation that you are probably referring to is E = mc2. This equation is actually a special case of the more general equation: E2 = p2c2 + m2c4 In the above equation, E is the total energy of the particle, p is the momentum of the particle (which is related to its motion), c is the speed of light, and m is the mass of the particle. This equation can be derived from the relativistic definitions of the energy and momentum of a particle. The above equation tells us that the total energy of a particle is a combination of its mass energy and its momentum energy (which is not necessarily related to its mass). When a particle is at rest (p = 0), this general equation reduces down to the familiar E = mc2. In contrast, for a particle with no mass (m = 0), the general equation reduces down to E = pc. Since photons (particles of light) have no mass, they must obey E = pc and therefore get all of their energy from their momentum.
West Texas A&M University (WTAMU or WT) is a public university in Canyon, Texas. It is the northernmost of the Texas A&M University System and accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). It was established on September 20, 1910, as West Texas State Normal College as one of the seven state-funded teachers’ colleges in Texas.
Sharing is caring
Share
+1
Tweet
Share
Share