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1 ies that delimit a "safe operating space for humanity".
2  that delimitate a "safe operating space for humanity".
3 ge are two of the greatest challenges facing humanity.
4 g clean and carbon neutral energy for all of humanity.
5 valuable products has long been exploited by humanity.
6 e remembered for his great intellect and his humanity.
7 hysical study with enormous implications for humanity.
8 timing of the most recent common ancestor of humanity.
9 inable quality of life is a central goal for humanity.
10 heretofore unrecognized effect of climate on humanity.
11  places an enormous burden on the welfare of humanity.
12 hallenge the innate and adaptive immunity of humanity.
13 rious consequences for both biodiversity and humanity.
14 ed progress toward better methods of feeding humanity.
15 e is the single biggest health threat facing humanity.
16 ntimicrobial resistance as a great threat to humanity.
17 ne of the major public health threats facing humanity.
18 ise ecosystems and the services they provide humanity.
19 ogical state, with alarming consequences for humanity.
20 ses significant challenges to the planet and humanity.
21 tical for achieving a sustainable future for humanity.
22 nd, with certain plants, profoundly impacted humanity.
23 ease the health and resilience of nature and humanity.
24 arkable health gains, and restoring hope and humanity.
25 resources that provide essential services to humanity.
26 ge denial, antiscience views are threatening humanity.
27  one of the most common infections affecting humanity.
28  across all animal life and in comparison to humanity.
29 ty so that the atlas is beneficial to all of humanity.
30 provision of essential ecosystem services to humanity.
31 making with the goal of improving health for humanity.
32 hich anticipates to add a great challenge to humanity.
33 ng the most essential ecosystem services for humanity.
34 ood security and brought lasting benefits to humanity.
35 competitive energy, is a great challenge for humanity.
36 of AI posing long-term existential risks for humanity.
37 itude expansion in stable materials known to humanity.
38 lculating and yet least rational elements of humanity.
39 is a necessity for the increasing demands of humanity.
40  and has developed into a staple for half of humanity.
41 security, and all the associated benefits to humanity.
42 climate change on the global environment and humanity.
43  threshold in the construction of our common humanity.
44 nternational AIDS Society, Health Empowering Humanity.
45 e climate change is a pressing challenge for humanity.
46  global health concern to both ecosystem and humanity.
47 the sustainability of services beneficial to humanity.
48 ir ability to provide ecosystem services for humanity.
49 s and services that biodiversity provides to humanity.
50 technology shapes how we view the origins of humanity.
51  the globe would have far reaching impact on humanity.
52 ting the services that ecosystems provide to humanity.
53                 Diet is a major issue facing humanity.
54 damental ramifications for the biosphere and humanity.
55 clear warheads pose an existential threat to humanity.
56 ed by SARS-CoV-2, pose an imminent threat to humanity.
57 ing called upon to address issues within the humanities.
58 enomena spanning the social sciences and the humanities.
59 tudying aesthetics and those in the arts and humanities.
60 fferences among students in the sciences vs. humanities.
61 grate the STEM disciplines with the arts and humanities.
62 ation to the traditional social sciences and humanities.
63 ological psychiatry, psychology, and medical humanities.
64 hysical, biological, and social sciences and humanities.
65  best develop AI to maximize its benefits to humanity?
66 iodiversity loss is a major challenge facing humanity(1), as the consequences of biological annihilat
67 ystems and the many benefits they provide to humanity(1).
68 a synthetic form is a long-standing goal for humanity(1).
69 reas the top reasons cited included to serve humanity (74%), and increased opportunities to gain clin
70 f the most appropriate solutions should help humanity adapt to novel circumstances and seek opportuni
71                                              Humanity already possesses the fundamental scientific, t
72 life represents a doable Grand Challenge for humanity, an ethical obligation and a smart economic obj
73 edicine build on 30 years of work in medical humanities and bioethics to rigorously understand human
74 ental science was higher than that among the humanities and mathematics ones.
75                      brings together medical humanities and sciences experts to analyze how historica
76 chaeology is bridging the divide between the humanities and sciences to answer questions about ancien
77                                      Second, humanities and social science scholars have researched h
78                                 It shows how humanities and social science scholars have tended to ad
79 ive has become increasingly important in the humanities and social sciences and there is a growing us
80                                              Humanities and social sciences help advance "cultures of
81 ational Key R&D Program of China, Project of Humanities and Social Sciences of the Ministry of Educat
82                                 And finally, humanities and social sciences scholars can play a major
83                                      Second, humanities and social sciences scholars should be more w
84 r many decades the exclusive province of the humanities and social sciences, where anthropologists, h
85 acterial infections remain a major threat to humanity and are a leading cause of death and disability
86  mental map drawn in sharp contrasts between humanity and barbarity, knowledge and ignorance, and goo
87 opardizing the many benefits they provide to humanity and biodiversity, including climate regulation
88 ry has been linked to increased benefits for humanity and can be captured by phylogenetic diversity (
89 national) Hepatitis Research Foundation, and Humanity and Health Medical Group.
90 t (million tonnes), roughly equal to that of humanity and its domesticated mammals at that time.
91 recent and potentially catastrophic for both humanity and the biosphere.
92  species would offer substantial benefits to humanity and the environment.
93 an essential concept to ensure the future of humanity and the integrity of the resources and ecosyste
94 e burden of malaria has for too long plagued humanity and the prospect of eradicating malaria is an o
95                    Beliefs about the fate of humanity and the soul after death may structure behaviou
96 ss the common problems facing 21(st) century humanity and to build constructive international partner
97                         Cities house most of humanity and will continue to grow, particularly in low-
98 ces and engineering; and social sciences and humanities) and 817 meso-level fields.
99   If strides are to be made in the sciences, humanities, and arts, we must arrive at a far more detai
100 eement is highest in the social sciences and humanities, and lowest in mathematics and computer scien
101 s and engineering, social sciences, arts and humanities, and patents, suggesting that the process of
102 e issues historically addressed by the arts, humanities, and social sciences.
103 osophy, psychology, the social sciences, the humanities, and studies of disorders of mind.
104 nts improved short-term anxiety, depression, humanity, and transcendence while increasing burden.
105               The more we embrace our common humanity-and science as a unifier-the better we will und
106                      Otherwise, we find that humanity appears to be a 1-in-100 outlier.
107                               Links with the Humanities are to be welcomed, but they cannot be exempt
108 against one another, the sciences, arts, and humanities are-as Albert Einstein once wrote-"branches o
109 ined in recent decades, the implications for humanity are difficult to quantify because they depend o
110 ghts of Nature, provides a pathway to center humanity as a part of Nature and transform our relations
111 plants with other organisms and also benefit humanity as pharmaceuticals, fragrances, resins, and oth
112 l collapse and raise important questions for humanity as we move deeper into the Anthropocene.
113 a wide range of disciplines from science and humanities, as well as to the medical sector studying hu
114 eving this goal is imperative for nature and humanity, as people depend on biodiversity for important
115 ntifies and maps the water footprint (WF) of humanity at a high spatial resolution.
116 opportunities and challenges for science and humanity at large.
117 lthough it has far-reaching consequences for humanity, attention to climate change impacts on the oce
118 framework defines a safe operating space for humanity based on the intrinsic biophysical processes th
119 millennium BC, much studied from a cultural, humanities-based, perspective, but relatively little wit
120 are agents (CWAs), have remained a threat to humanity because of their continued use against civilian
121 exists to reduce the environmental impact of humanity, because environmental health affects human hea
122                            This is where the humanities become relevant - in particular, philosophy a
123                                           As humanity becomes increasingly spacefaring, high-resoluti
124 c injury to the brain is a problem as old as humanity, but advances in cognitive neuroscience and a l
125 sis is one of the greatest challenges facing humanity, but our understanding of the drivers remains l
126 icomplexan parasites have immense impacts on humanity, but their basic cellular processes are often p
127  severe demographic events in the history of humanity, but uncertainty persists about the timing and
128 on of these amazing natural systems and help humanity by completing environmental and biological task
129  The importance of angiosperms to sustaining humanity by providing a wide range of 'ecosystem service
130       Neuroscience, social sciences, and the humanities can benefit mutually from combining their dis
131 iodiversity models to assess whether-and how-humanity can reverse the declines in terrestrial biodive
132 one of the planetary boundaries within which humanity can safely operate, but is not comprehensively
133 es or will to take such actions, but whether humanity can survive if society fails to make this effor
134        Tuberculosis (TB) continues to ravage humanity, causing 2 million deaths per year.
135  most vulnerable species live, where and how humanity changes the planet, and how this drives extinct
136 iry, building trust, and allyship and shared humanity; clinicians may be able to adopt these practice
137                                           As humanity comes into contact with new microbes, there is
138 anceTuberculosis (TB), an ancient disease of humanity, continues to be a major cause of worldwide dea
139               The book convinced Galton that humanity could be improved through selective breeding.
140 ificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity." DeepMind's company vision statement notes tha
141                                              Humanity depends on biodiversity for health, well-being,
142                                     Although humanity depends on the continued, aggregate functioning
143 at establishes lifelong infection in most of humanity, despite eliciting strong and stable virus-spec
144 ait noted since antiquity, long discussed in humanities disciplines, recently operationalized by psyc
145 s infectious bacteria pose a great threat to humanity due to an increase in bacterial mortality leadi
146 some sciences and poorly represented in some humanities (e.g., in 2011, 54% of U.S. Ph.D.'s in molecu
147 dorsement of cosmopolitan values-putting all humanity equal to or ahead of conationals.
148 le has been perturbed to such an extent that humanity faces two dovetailing problems: the dwindling s
149  generates-is one of the greatest challenges humanity faces, yet the field faces drastic funding cuts
150 le soils have been an essential resource for humanity for 10,000 y, but the ecological mechanisms inv
151  place of the most recent common ancestor of humanity for a given haplotype and the analysis of regio
152 e effects that have made them the scourge of humanity for millennia.
153                             Despite plaguing humanity for thousands of years, the host factors that r
154 s is a testament to both Chris's science and humanity from his friends and colleagues.
155 ce users experience a lack of compassion and humanity from ward staff and how this could be changed.
156 ems in particular pose unique challenges for humanity, given the moral dimensions of food security an
157 years, we conclude that the probability that humanity goes extinct from natural causes in any given y
158                                 About 17% of humanity goes through an episode of major depression at
159 elerating population growth, suggesting that humanity harbours a myriad of rare, deleterious variants
160                                              Humanity has drastically altered the biophysical systems
161                  These results indicate that humanity has experienced a depletion of the gut flora si
162                                              Humanity has faced three recent outbreaks of novel betac
163                                              Humanity has just crossed a major landmark in its histor
164                                              Humanity has long battled mosquitoes and the diseases th
165                                              Humanity has long been fascinated by animals with appare
166                        In biophysical terms, humanity has never been moving faster nor further from s
167                                              Humanity has regarded itself as intellectually superior
168                               For millennia, humanity has relied on plants for its medicines, and mod
169 ms on the planet and the main food crops for humanity, have GCs flanked by specialized lateral subsid
170 nd other sarbecoviruses continue to threaten humanity, highlighting the need to characterize common m
171 icipants humanized strangers who were low in humanity if they imagined harming them for immoral behav
172 ptom management; (6) transportation; and (7) humanity in care; as well as 3 cross-cutting themes of u
173  have potential long-term survival value for humanity in global catastrophes such as sun-blocking cat
174                        These problems facing humanity in the 21st Century are extremely challenging,
175 G) is arguably the greatest challenge facing humanity in the 21st century.
176 grand challenge of the 21st century: feeding humanity in the face of climate change.
177 demic potential will be our best defense for humanity in the future.
178 some of the worst bacterial strains known to humanity, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
179 er been a time when colour did not fascinate humanity, inspiring an unceasing manufacturing of a kale
180 ergraduate students who earn a degree in the humanities is declining.
181 , and the median total time to degree in the humanities is shown to have risen 15-20% rather than the
182 osystem services provided by biodiversity to humanity is a serious threat to the stability of civiliz
183       A fundamental gap in understanding how humanity is affecting the oceans is our limited knowledg
184                                              Humanity is close to characterizing the atmospheres of r
185                                              Humanity is currently facing the challenge of two devast
186 tococcus pneumoniae exacts on the welfare of humanity is enormous.
187                                           As humanity is facing the double challenge of species extin
188 derstanding that the long-term well-being of humanity is intrinsically linked to the health of global
189 rkable ecological and demographic success of humanity is largely attributed to our capacity for cumul
190                                           If humanity is lucky, the evolution of our knowledge of the
191                       Respondents argue that humanity is obligated to reverse damage to species (natu
192 r passing the milestone of 50% urbanisation, humanity is rapidly becoming a predominantly city-dwelli
193                                              Humanity is teeming with breathtaking theodiversity--in
194                      A critical issue facing humanity is the rise in antimicrobial resistance.
195                                              Humanity is urbanizing, with vast implications on natura
196 livering the ecosystem services that support humanity, is under threat.
197 oning and the services that trees provide to humanity, it remains important to consider all aspects o
198 stress, and burden) or 2) positive (courage, humanity, justice, transcendence, temperance, and wisdom
199             Tuberculosis continues to ravage humanity, killing 2 million people yearly.
200 stance is one of the greatest threats facing humanity, making the need for new antibiotics more criti
201 of ancient environments within the cradle of humanity may reveal insights into the relationship betwe
202   Does this approach link to concerns of the humanities meaningfully?
203                                   Therefore, humanity needs to address anthropogenic population extir
204       Despite explicitly affirming the equal humanity of all racial/ethnic groups, White participants
205 he development of technologies enhancing the humanity of robots.
206 ate this paper to the extraordinary life and humanity of Rolf Huisgen, and to the undying influence o
207                     A biologist captures the humanity of scientific research in a play about the AIDS
208                                 It also puts humanity on notice that the impact of climate change wil
209 on through The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities, Oxford.
210                   National Endowment for the Humanities, Paleocardiology Foundation, The National Ban
211                       Since the beginning of humanity, people have used wild medicinal plants for the
212 t of human nutrition since the early days of humanity, providing us with essential carbohydrates, pro
213                                    Increased humanity (ratio of means = 1.11; 95% CI, 1.07-1.15), tra
214  to 5 March in Washington, DC), "Science for Humanity," reiterates its commitment to explore and make
215 ended groups (i.e., country, government, and humanity) relate to engagement in health behaviors and p
216                                      Much of humanity relies on rice (Oryza sativa) as a food source,
217 ving the necessary transition to ensure that humanity remains within a safe operating space.
218 ing to the "hard-steps" model, the origin of humanity required "successful passage through a number o
219                      The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and Canadian Institutes of H
220 hern Arizona University, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Canada Research C
221  Inform Disability Action), and the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
222 s the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities reveals a number of understated and persisten
223 we emphasize their important role in helping humanity rise to the challenges of our time.
224                         The unique extent of humanity's ability to modify its environment to markedly
225  for a growing population without increasing humanity's agricultural footprint.
226 doubts, because their place is reflective of humanity's awkwardness.
227                                   Science is humanity's best insurance against threats from nature, b
228 utually reinforcing partners is critical for humanity's bids to tackle the global crises of climate c
229 t only does further material growth not meet humanity's central goal, there is mounting evidence that
230                     COVID-19 has intensified humanity's concern about the emergence of new pandemics.
231 g sustainable global food security is one of humanity's contemporary challenges.
232 d worldwide actions to save wild species and humanity's crucial life-support systems from this existe
233         A particularly compelling measure of humanity's cumulative impact is the fraction of the plan
234                                Concern about humanity's detachment from nature has spawned a global p
235 he promise of systems vaccinology in probing humanity's diverse immune systems, and in delineating th
236 lobal climate change on different aspects of humanity's diverse life-support systems are complex and
237                  An ambitious history traces humanity's entanglements with communicable illness.
238 mocratic) but also un-nested (raised outside humanity's evolved nest) and underdeveloped participants
239 volutionary-medicine disparities and prevent Humanity's extinction.
240 d challenge before us is to sustainably meet humanity's FEW needs using scarcer resources.
241 rates, providing the source of nearly all of humanity's food.
242                                              Humanity's fossil-fuel use, if unabated, risks taking us
243  across many industries, requiring 10-15% of humanity's global energy budget.
244 parations are expensive, consuming 10-15% of humanity's global energy budget.
245                             Science is among humanity's greatest achievements, yet scientific censors
246 on of evolution, which has radically altered humanity's image of itself.
247                                              Humanity's impact on the environment is increasing, as a
248 y, and the often-devastating consequences of humanity's impact on these social insects.
249  human incursions and hence underlie many of humanity's impacts on nature, including deforestation, w
250                                              Humanity's large demographic momentum means that there a
251 this preliminary and exploratory assessment, humanity's load corresponded to 70% of the capacity of t
252 mosquitoes, flies and ticks transmit many of humanity's most devastating infectious diseases.
253 plain why Mycobacterium tuberculosis, albeit humanity's most lethal pathogen, is successful in only a
254 ting further loss of biodiversity are two of humanity's most pressing challenges.
255                           Feasting is one of humanity's most universal and unique social behaviors.
256 r sustainable scalable deployment as part of humanity's multifaceted technological stand against clim
257                              A writer probes humanity's often fraught and paradoxical relationships w
258                                              Humanity's ongoing struggle with new, re-emerging and en
259 chaeological sites, they provide evidence of humanity's past and help us understand our place in the
260  a plethora of other crucial questions about humanity's past.
261 ving continued increases in fossil fuel use, humanity's primary reliance on fossil energy for the nex
262 unrestricted progress in AI as a solution to humanity's problems.
263                                              Humanity's relationship with the Ocean needs to be trans
264            This could represent up to 13% of humanity's remaining carbon budget through 2050.
265                                              Humanity's replacement of fossil-fuel energy with renewa
266 s in tools and technologies have facilitated humanity's spread across the globe and shaped human evol
267            The COVID-19 pandemic has brought humanity's strained relationship with nature into sharp
268  a nuclear game of "chicken" that threatened humanity's survival.
269 ts.(3)(,)(4) However, an insidious aspect to humanity's valuation of nature is that high value also d
270 In an attempt to measure the extent to which humanity satisfies this requirement, we use existing dat
271                          During this period, humanity saw by far the largest organized travel restric
272 h that involves social scientists and health humanities scholars.
273 remarkable findings of previous studies: all humanity shares common ancestry in the recent past.
274 hes that were predominantly developed in the humanities, social sciences and public health to the fie
275 Narrative theory has become important in the humanities, social sciences, medicine, and psychotherapy
276 , whether by studying distant galaxies or by humanity stepping out into space.
277 hina and globally would be a leading step as humanity strives to thrive with coastal ecosystems.
278 lp combat the major global challenges facing humanity, such as climate change and resource scarcity.
279  a display of duty to country and service to humanity that is as old as our country, and the contribu
280                         Despite this toll on humanity, the factors that determine disease severity re
281   Sesame is the oldest oilseed crop known to humanity, though it contributes a small share in the glo
282                   Clinicians expressed their humanity through several intentional practices to preser
283 odiversity is one of the major inventions of humanity through the process of domestication.
284   Going into the future, scientists can help humanity to domesticate nature more wisely by quantifyin
285 he act of soliciting wishes brings clinician humanity to the fore.
286 velopment seriously threatens the ability of humanity to treat even common infections, resulting in d
287  many of the most important questions facing humanity today with regard to agriculture, medicine, bio
288 ational negotiations on many problems facing humanity today, because models of international bargaini
289 ation Index - Science and Social Science and Humanities was conducted.
290                   Connecting Science and the Humanities was the title of the symposium on Michael Pol
291 urnals in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities, we report on the effects of free access on a
292  disciplines in STEM, social science and the humanities, we show that faculty are up to 25 times more
293 later, Africa is recognized as the cradle of humanity, where the entire evolutionary history of our l
294  the coming decades, a crucial challenge for humanity will be meeting future food demands without und
295                                              Humanity will soon define a new era for nature-one that
296 torage products in cereal endosperm provides humanity with a major portion of its food, feed, and ren
297 sis remains the biggest infectious threat to humanity with one-third of the population infected and 1
298 ings highlight the power of the sciences and humanities working together to rigorously test hypothese
299 ian monsoon system affects more than half of humanity worldwide, yet the dynamical processes that gov
300  and is central to the remarkable success of humanity, yet it remains unclear why copying is profitab

 
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