One of the first responses of a growing baby is one expession, gesture, sound, for the Known person there; and another for an Unknown Unbekannt: Unknown. The person showing may be something to fear or love, but the point is the reognition of known vs. unknown.
Wars. The known and unknown dead. The term is often seen as the unknown soldier, or if the name is known, with "Auslander." In conversation, unbekannt may become an explanation, an acknowledgement of lack of strength in that situation of asking directions. Bekannt. Known. In status and veneration, the unbekannt bows to the bekannt. Variations in use: See https://dictionary.reverso.net/german-english/unbekanntt. Here, responses to difference.
Pride of group. Visit Hungary and meet the Turul, Meet the mythical, mystical, deep-rooted guardian of the Magyars of Hungary, symbol of their origins, strength, and reach. Migrations are a global pattern, for survival, domination, resources, anything human. What of their experience moving, making way -- inside here, staying outside there. Can we learn. Is there any peaceable transport. What wise choices can the one inside make. Long-form readers, explore.
The Turul. Legendary symbol of the Magyars, Budapest, Hungary,
1. The Turul. See http://www.imninalu.net/eurasia_maps.htm. How does the American migratory pattern, and response to it by those already there, differ from the experience of the people of the Turul. When do people on the move turn to beak and claw to secure place and survive; how to enable them and us to extend all our Turul-rooted wings to move with choices, and protect, or both.
2. Culture. By ideology, culture can be permeable or impermeable, or both, fluid. See how it works in biology. Fair use rework from https://www.dummies.com/education/science/biology/how-cell-substances-transport-through-the-plasma-membrane/ With certain conditions, new people can transport through the established social setup, annd to the benefit of the whole.
3. Picture it. Simple. The fence-wall surrounding a group's domicile is a marker for where the action happens, as is a cell wall.
4. Locate a point where the efforts for inclusion and exclusions meet: A danger point. Or, perhaps, an opportunity. Is this so: that in cells, proteins from outside or outside, for example, get stuck trying to pass through to the other side. Others, say hormones or ions, can still pass through. For the ones stuck, it uses up energy.
HELPING THE MOLECULES ACROSS: ACTIVE TRANSPORT
Sometimes, the molecules are just too big to easily flow across the plasma membranes or dissolve in the water so that they can be filtered through the membrane. In these cases, the cells must put out a little energy to help get molecules in or out of the cell.
Embedded in the plasma membrane are protein molecules, some of which form channels through which other molecules can pass. Some proteins act as carriers— that is, they are “paid” in energy to let a molecule attach to itself and then transport that molecule inside the cell.
PASSIVE TRANSPORT OF MOLECULES
A membrane can allow molecules to be passively transported through it in three ways: diffusion, osmosis, and filtration.
In the human body, this action occurs in the lungs. You breathe in air, and oxygen gets into the tiniest air sacs of the lungs, the alveoli. Surrounding the tiniest air sacs of the lungs are the tiniest blood vessels — capillaries. The capillaries in the lungs, called pulmonary capillaries, contain the lowest concentration of oxygen in the body, because by the time the blood gets to the tiniest vessels, most of the oxygen has been used up by other organs and tissues.
So, the tiniest air sacs of the lungs have a higher concentration of oxygen than do the capillaries. That means that the oxygen from the alveoli of the lungs can spread across the membrane between the air sac and the capillary, getting into the bloodstream.
For example, the blood in your body contains a certain amount of salt. The normal concentration is isotonic. If suddenly there is too high a concentration of salt, the blood becomes hypertonic (too many salt molecules). This excess of salt forces water out of the blood cells in an attempt to even things out. But the effect this action has is actually that of shrinking the blood cells.
This shrinking of cells is called crenation (not cremation). If too much fluid is in the bloodstream, the blood cells have too few molecules of salt in comparison, making them hypotonic. Then, the blood cells take in water in an attempt to normalize the blood and make it isotonic. However, if the blood cells need to take in too much water to bring everything back into balance, they can swell until they burst. This bursting of cells is called hemolysis (hemo = blood; lysis = break apart).
In politics, the concept identifies a social and reactive membrane, One group can congeal behind the membrane and groupthink and assert its right to dominance. Cultural and physical differences determine who may permeate the membrane and belong. Must they be subdued first. A child's earliest experiences appear to be of bekannt, the gurgle of safety and pleasure; the unbekannt and its startle, recoil, eyes opening wider for the unfamiliar, recoil,or gurgle of comfort. The goal is survival, How to move from the first responste to welcome the known comfortable and fear of the different.
Bekannt: Known. Knowable perhaps, but where is the motivation to understand when the bekannt is not threatened. e headstone. Not an unknown, but an outsider lies here, and Schroder is his name. Some of the unknowns, the unknowables, are indeed foreigners in other lands.
Parroting inherited privilege, however, refusing with a sneering smile to let others pass through to their own goals, daring them to try to proceed as you assert right to turf, mistaking blockage as strength, is a big seed of destruction for the whole. Watch it grow. The blindly impermeable culture claimed by those who did not earn by merit, is indeed a fabric that will uravel. So, social fabric, or social membrane. Kids' choice, adults' choice, but who guides the kids.
Wars. The known and unknown dead. The term is often seen as the unknown soldier, or if the name is known, with "Auslander." In conversation, unbekannt may become an explanation, an acknowledgement of lack of strength in that situation of asking directions. Bekannt. Known. In status and veneration, the unbekannt bows to the bekannt. Variations in use: See https://dictionary.reverso.net/german-english/unbekanntt. Here, responses to difference.
Pride of group. Visit Hungary and meet the Turul, Meet the mythical, mystical, deep-rooted guardian of the Magyars of Hungary, symbol of their origins, strength, and reach. Migrations are a global pattern, for survival, domination, resources, anything human. What of their experience moving, making way -- inside here, staying outside there. Can we learn. Is there any peaceable transport. What wise choices can the one inside make. Long-form readers, explore.
1. The Turul. See http://www.imninalu.net/eurasia_maps.htm. How does the American migratory pattern, and response to it by those already there, differ from the experience of the people of the Turul. When do people on the move turn to beak and claw to secure place and survive; how to enable them and us to extend all our Turul-rooted wings to move with choices, and protect, or both.
2. Culture. By ideology, culture can be permeable or impermeable, or both, fluid. See how it works in biology. Fair use rework from https://www.dummies.com/education/science/biology/how-cell-substances-transport-through-the-plasma-membrane/ With certain conditions, new people can transport through the established social setup, annd to the benefit of the whole.
3. Picture it. Simple. The fence-wall surrounding a group's domicile is a marker for where the action happens, as is a cell wall.
It locates where an exchange can possibly take place, the exchange between the known people inside and the unknown people outside. There is pressure both ways. Some need to move from outside to in, others from inside to out. Others feel driven to keep others out, to keep their inherited privilege, or let them to work a while for them, then go home please.
The persuasive danger point: The toxic invasion. The immediate, credible threat posed by this person/
- What if the unknown nudging at the cell wall, or aiming, is a toxic intruder where entry means an unraveling. What if society is indeed merely a fabric that can tolerate no loose ends, not a fluid ongoing, responsive, proactive cell. How to know. What to do.
- Is proactivity an approach. Recognize the issues giving rise to the "other," Start with T.E. Lawrence, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/belief/2016/apr/08/lawrence-of-arabia-wouldnt-have-been-surprised-by-the-rise-of-isis
- Meanwhile, does closing borders here help? Which. Where. Etc. Moving on,
4. Locate a point where the efforts for inclusion and exclusions meet: A danger point. Or, perhaps, an opportunity. Is this so: that in cells, proteins from outside or outside, for example, get stuck trying to pass through to the other side. Others, say hormones or ions, can still pass through. For the ones stuck, it uses up energy.
Who or what gets through? The difference seems to be which are "recognized" by a recipient. Or can some get by if they attach to a "carrier molecule" with the same effect: recognition. The membrane, the cell wall, the fence, is not absolute but selectively permeable. There are imposters, of course, but focus for now on the recognition factor as enabling permeation
- Is a solution to expose, educate, teach those at the membrane to recognize the benign more broadly, and not exclude all as toxic just beause it is outside and you are inside already, thanks to forbears and earlier exploitation enabling it.
The substances within can only inbreed. And exhaustion. Transporting across the plasma membrane takes energy, energy of the whole cell is involved in an active transport. It is not neutral.
If molecules can pass through the plasma membrane without using as much energy, as with broad "recognition," perhaps? the molecules are said to use passive transport -- energy neutral. Is that it? Are the concepts there: that overexclusion wears out the cell faster than permissive inclusion.
HELPING THE MOLECULES ACROSS: ACTIVE TRANSPORT
Sometimes, the molecules are just too big to easily flow across the plasma membranes or dissolve in the water so that they can be filtered through the membrane. In these cases, the cells must put out a little energy to help get molecules in or out of the cell.
Embedded in the plasma membrane are protein molecules, some of which form channels through which other molecules can pass. Some proteins act as carriers— that is, they are “paid” in energy to let a molecule attach to itself and then transport that molecule inside the cell.
PASSIVE TRANSPORT OF MOLECULES
A membrane can allow molecules to be passively transported through it in three ways: diffusion, osmosis, and filtration.
- Diffusion: Sometimes organisms need to move molecules from an area where they are highly concentrated to an area where the molecules are less concentrated. This transport is much more easily done than moving molecules from a low concentration to a high concentration. To go from a high concentration to a low concentration, in essence the molecules need to only “spread” themselves, or diffuse, across the membrane separating the areas of concentration.
In the human body, this action occurs in the lungs. You breathe in air, and oxygen gets into the tiniest air sacs of the lungs, the alveoli. Surrounding the tiniest air sacs of the lungs are the tiniest blood vessels — capillaries. The capillaries in the lungs, called pulmonary capillaries, contain the lowest concentration of oxygen in the body, because by the time the blood gets to the tiniest vessels, most of the oxygen has been used up by other organs and tissues.
So, the tiniest air sacs of the lungs have a higher concentration of oxygen than do the capillaries. That means that the oxygen from the alveoli of the lungs can spread across the membrane between the air sac and the capillary, getting into the bloodstream.
- Osmosis: This term is used when talking about water molecules diffusing across a membrane. Basically, the diffusion of water (osmosis) works as described in the preceding bullet. However, with osmosis, the concentration of substances in the water is taken into consideration. If a solution is isotonic, that means the concentrations of the substances (solutes) and water (solvent)on both sides of the membrane are equal. If one solution is hypotonic, there is a lower concentration of substances (and more water) in it when compared to another solution. If a solution is hypertonic, there is a higher concentration of substances in it (and less water) when compared to another solution.
For example, the blood in your body contains a certain amount of salt. The normal concentration is isotonic. If suddenly there is too high a concentration of salt, the blood becomes hypertonic (too many salt molecules). This excess of salt forces water out of the blood cells in an attempt to even things out. But the effect this action has is actually that of shrinking the blood cells.
This shrinking of cells is called crenation (not cremation). If too much fluid is in the bloodstream, the blood cells have too few molecules of salt in comparison, making them hypotonic. Then, the blood cells take in water in an attempt to normalize the blood and make it isotonic. However, if the blood cells need to take in too much water to bring everything back into balance, they can swell until they burst. This bursting of cells is called hemolysis (hemo = blood; lysis = break apart).
- Filtration: The last form of passive transport is used most often in the capillaries. Capillaries are so thin (their membranes are only one cell thick) that diffusion easily takes place through them. But remember that animals have a blood pressure. The pressure at which the blood flows through the capillaries is enough force to push water and small solutes that have dissolved in the water right through the capillary membrane. So, in essence, the capillary membrane acts as filter paper, allowing fluid to surround the body’s cells and keeping large molecules from getting into the tissue fluid.
In politics, the concept identifies a social and reactive membrane, One group can congeal behind the membrane and groupthink and assert its right to dominance. Cultural and physical differences determine who may permeate the membrane and belong. Must they be subdued first. A child's earliest experiences appear to be of bekannt, the gurgle of safety and pleasure; the unbekannt and its startle, recoil, eyes opening wider for the unfamiliar, recoil,or gurgle of comfort. The goal is survival, How to move from the first responste to welcome the known comfortable and fear of the different.
Bekannt: Known. Knowable perhaps, but where is the motivation to understand when the bekannt is not threatened. e headstone. Not an unknown, but an outsider lies here, and Schroder is his name. Some of the unknowns, the unknowables, are indeed foreigners in other lands.
Parroting inherited privilege, however, refusing with a sneering smile to let others pass through to their own goals, daring them to try to proceed as you assert right to turf, mistaking blockage as strength, is a big seed of destruction for the whole. Watch it grow. The blindly impermeable culture claimed by those who did not earn by merit, is indeed a fabric that will uravel. So, social fabric, or social membrane. Kids' choice, adults' choice, but who guides the kids.
1. For all: Basic needs, education, mobility, and healthcare,
2. Taxation: All income above poverty at steadily increasing rates.
3. Competition: Foster opportunity without automatic disqualification or limit by reason of any trait.
4. Accommodation: For healing, nurturance of self and family, including pregnancy.
5. Choice: Foster mobility and communications for fair competition for all.
6. Autonomy: No imposition within the fingertip-stride span of any person without affirmative, unqualified, and repeated consent.
What dangers when a symbol is appropriated by an extremist political group. See The Rise of a Fallen Feather.
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