ผู้เขียน หัวข้อ: qcdg The Makers of聽Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom聽Solve Some of the Film s Big Mysteries  (อ่าน 300 ครั้ง)

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qcdg The Makers of聽Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom聽Solve Some of the Film s Big Mysteries
« เมื่อ: มกราคม 18, 2025, 08:51:39 pm »
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 with different views of everything from culture to economics to the limits  stanley cupe of physics, and in many respects, presuming no limitations at all. In that imagining  to paraphrase Max Gladstone , it implies a critique, a perspective on our present reality. All art is in conversation with its world. Fantasy is no exception and so it shouldnt be a surprise that secondary world fantasy increasingly has something to say about our current economic model s  and the power structures they prop up. Two recent ish  works that have a whole heck of a lot to say in this arena are N.K. Jemisin botella stanley s The Broken Earth Series and Robert Jackson Bennets The Founders Trilogy. I want to focus on the opening novels in both series: The Fifth Season and Foundryside, respectively, because both tackle the nightmare that is late-stage  end-stage   capitalism in unique ways from different directions.     In The Fifth Season, the world is torn asunder by cataclysmic  stanley cup climate change, the weather patterns so broken that they occasionally produce an impossibly long, harsh winter called the fifth season. Rocked by unpredictable seismic activity and climate, society turns to the mages in their world, called orogenes, to save them. Hated and feared for their magic鈥攐rogenes can control energy and through their powers, control  to a degree  the broken world around them鈥攖hey are seen as a means to an end. We see firsthand how orogenes are used as little more than instruments of the will of the upper castes and the rest of  Awkj Scientists Can Now Establish Your Gender From a Fingerprint
 Increasingly, scientists have been interested in studying the differences between biological age and chronological age in order to better understand why some people age better than others. Such resear stanley us ch can help shed light on things that actually work to help us live longer, better lives. And a new study from the University of Southern California and Yale University, published in the journal Demography,聽suggests that Americans might already be doing something right.     Today, we live longer lives than ever, and researchers wondered whether changes i stanley flasche n biological age over time鈥攔ather than medical advances alone鈥攁re a factor in that. What they found suggests that Americans may indeed be aging more slowly than they were two decades ago. To arrive at that finding, researchers looked at two data sets from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, one collected between 1988 and stanley mug  1994, and the other between 2007 and 2010. Using indicators like metabolism function, inflammation, and organ function, along with measures like levels of hemoglobin and total cholesterol, they calculated biological age for people in each data set, and compared it to chronological age. In the more recent group, biological age was generally lower for the same age groups. The difference between the two time periods was biggest in older adults. Some of that slowing of the aging process, they concluded, was the result of changes in behaviors, such as a trend away from smoking. While not a definitive