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AP US Presidents Accomplishments, Years, Party Set Flashcards

Presidents, their parties, year in office, and accomplishments/historical happenings.
Thanks
http://apusnotes.nfshost.com/timeline/presidents for info.

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1449714013Washington No Party 1789Jay's Treaty, Pinkney's Treaty, Whiskey Rebellion1
1449714014Adams Federalist 1797Barbary Pirates, XYZ, Alien and Sedition act2
1449714015Jefferson Dem. Rep. 1801Louisiana Purchase, Embargo Act, Non-intercourse Act, Lewis & Clark, Marbury v. Madison3
1449714016Madison Dem. Rep. 1809Macon's Bill No2, Protectionist Tariff 1816, War of 1812, Treaty of Ghent, Fletcher v. Peck4
1449714017Monroe Dem. Rep. 1817"Good Feelings" Second Bank of US, Panic of 1819, Monroe Doctrine, Russo-American Treaty, Treaty of 1818, Missouri Compromise, Gibbons v. Ogden, Dartmouth College v. Woodward5
1449714018J.Q. Adams Dem. Rep. 1825Tariff of Abominations, Corrupt Bargain6
1449714019Jackson Dem 1825Tariff of 1832, Compromise Tariff of 1833, Indian Removal Act, Nullification, Clay's Comprimise7
1449714020Van Buren Dem 1837Panic of 1837, Republic of TX,8
1449714021Harrison Whig 1841Died in office9
1449714022Tyler Whig 1841Webster-Ashburton Treaty, Fort Laramie Treaty, Manifest Destiny10
1449714023Polk Dem 1845Restored independent treasury, Annexation of TX & CA, Mexican War, 49th Parallel, Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo11
1449714024Taylor Whig 1849Died in office. Was a commander during the Mexican War.12
1449714025Fillmore Whig 1850The Compromise of 1850, Fugitive Slave Act13
1449714026Pierce Dem 1853Gadsden Purchase, Ostend Manifesto, Kansas-Nebraska Act and crisis,14
1449714027Buchanan Dem 1857Tariff of 1857, financial crash 1857, Dred Scott case, Lincoln Douglas Debates, Harper's Ferry15
1449714028Lincoln Rep 1861Civil War, Emancipation Proclamation, Crittenden compromise, Freedmen's bureau, Habeas Corpus Act,16
1449714029Johnson Unionist 186513th & 14th Amendment, Civil Rights Act of 1866, Reconstruction, Alaska bought, tried for impeachment17
1449714030Grant Rep 1869Panic of 1873, Tariff of 1870, `72, `75, Credit Mobilier Scandal, 15th Amendment, Civil Rights Act of 1875, end of Reconstruction, Yellowstone18
1449714031Hayes Rep 1877Bland-Allison Act, Compromise of 1877,19
1449714032Garfield Rep 1881Assassinated20
1449714033Arthur Rep 1881Pendleton Civil Service Act, Chinese Exclusion Act21
1449714034Cleveland Dem 1885Interstate Commerce Act , Dawes Severalty Act22
1449714035Harrison Rep 1889Sherman Anti-Trust Act, Sherman Silver Purchase Act replaced Bland-Allison Act, McKinley Tariff Act, Forest Reserve Act23
1449714036Cleveland Dem 1893Panic of 1893, Wilson-Gorman Tariff, Plessy v. Ferguson, Hawaiian troubles24
1449714037McKinley Rep 1897Dingley Tariff, Gold Standard Act, Spanish-American War, Open Door, Yellow Jouralism25
1449714038T. Roosevelt Rep 1901Swift Co. v. US, Elkins Act, Hepburn Act, Meat Inspection Act, Panama Canal, Pure Food and Drug Act, Gentlemen's Agreement, Muller v. Oregon26
1449714039Taft Rep 1909Mann-Elkins Act, 17th amendment, Dollar diplomacy27
1449714040Wilson Dem 1913Federal Reserve Act, Underwood-Simons Tariff, La Follette Seamen's Act, Keating-Owens Act, War Revenue Act, War Industries Board, Farm Loan Act, Great Migration, Espionage and Sedition acts, Schenk v. US, Treaty of Versailles, 14 Points, League of Nations, Red Scare28
1449714041Harding Rep 1921Teapot Dome, 4;5;9 Power Treaties, Open Door, died in office29
1449714042Coolidge Rep 1923Dawes Plan, Kellog-Briand Pact, Snyder Act 1924, Scopes trial, Soldier's Bonus Act30
1449714043Hoover Rep 1929Agricultural Marketing Act, Hawley-Smoot Tariff, The Crash, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Glass-Steagall Act, Federal Home Loan Bank Act, Bonus Expeditionary Force31
1449714044FD Roosevelt Dem 1933New Deal: Civilian Conservation Corps, Federal Emergency Relief Admin, Works Progress Admin, Agricultural Adjustment Admin, Industrial Recovery Act, National Recover Admin, TVA. Indian Reorganization Act, Dust Bowl, Good Neighbor. New Deal 2: Wagner Act, Social Security, Court-Packing, Committee for Industrial Organization. Fair Labor Standards. Yalta, Neutrality Acts32
1449714045Truman Dem 1945Fair Deal. GI Bill, Taft-Hartley Act, Atomic Energy Commission, Truman Doctrine, Committee on Civil Rights, National Security Act, Containment, NATO, Red Scare, The Marshall Plan, Nuremburg Trials, Korean War33
1449714046Eisenhower Rep 1945GI Bill of Rights, Great Black Migration, suburbanization, Dulles, U-2, Brown decision, Civil Rights Commission, Hungarian Revolution, Suez Crisis, Eisenhower Doctrine, AK and Hawaii become states.34
1449714047Kennedy Dem 1961Bay of Pigs, Cuban Missile Crisis, Peace Corps, Berlin Wall constructed, Civil Rights: King speaks at the Mall35
1449714048LB Johnson Dem 1963Social Security Act, Civil Rights Act, 24th & 25th Amendment, Vietnam, Paris Peace Talks, Great Society36
1449714049Nixon Rep 1969Detene: SALT, Moscow summit, Kissinger, Clean Air Act, EPA, War Powers Act, 26th Amendment, Moon landing, Watergate.37
1449714050Ford Rep 1974South Nam falls38
1449714051Carter Dem 1977Energy Department, Camp David, Panama Canal Treaty, Iran Hostage Crisis39
1449714052Reagan Rep 1981Reaganomics, SDI initiative, Intermediate Nuclear Force Treaty, Iran-Contra Scandal40
1449714053GHW Bush Rep 1989Americans with Disabilities Act, Gulf War, Berlin Falls, USSR dissolves, War on Drugs, 27th Amendment, Webster v. Reproductive Health Services41
1449714054Clinton Dem 1993Welfare reform, WTC Bombed, EU created42

Biology Chapter 55 Flashcards

University of Louisiana Lafayette
Biolovy 111 Chapter 55 Test 4

Terms : Hide Images
551230744Behavioris the observable response of organisms to internal or external stimuli1
551230745Behavioral ecologystudies how behavior contributes to the differential survival and reproduction of organisms2
551230746Ethologyfocused on the physiological mechanisms of behavior Proximate causes - change in day length -cause deer rut3
551230747Behavioral ecologistsfocus on the adaptive significance of a behavior Ultimate causes - effect on reproductive success and survival4
551230748Fixed action patterns (FAP)Innate or genetically programmed behavior Commonly called Instinctual Once initiated, will continue until completed Egg-rolling response in geese Improves fitness because it increases survival of young Sign Stimulus - initiates behavior Egg out of nest Male sticklebacks attack red ventral surface while ignoring realistic fish model lacking red underside5
551230749Learningmodify behavior based on previous behavior6
551230750Habituationsimplest form of learning Organism ignores repeated stimulus Form of nonassociative learning - decrease in response to stimulus due to repetition7
551230751Associative learningassociation develops between stimulus and response Behavior is changed or conditioned throughout the association 2 main types8
551230752Classical Conditioning- involuntary response becomes associated positively or negatively with a stimulus that did not originally elicit the response Pavlov's dog salivates when the bell rings Food is the unconditioned stimulus Bell is the conditioned stimulus Salivation in response to food is the unconditioned response Salivation in response to the bell is conditioned response9
551230753Operant conditioninganimal's behavior reinforced by a consequence (reward or punishment) Skinner box where rat bumps into a lever and gets food Associate lever with food Also called trial-and-error learning Birds will learn to avoid bad tasting butterflies10
551230754Cognitive Learningability to solve problems with conscious thought and without direct environmental feedback Chimpanzees stack boxes to reach banana Ravens retrieve meat by pulling up a string11
551230755Behavior is often a mix ofinnate and learned12
551230756Critical periodtime when many animals develop species-specific patterns of behavior13
551230757Imprintinggoslings follow the first moving thing as "mother" (human, watering can, black box) Innate behavior is the ability to imprint Factors in the environment are the stimulus to which imprinting is directed14
551230758Migrationexperienced birds can correct for displacement (complex navigational skill) while young, inexperienced birds cannot correct15
551230759Local and long-range migrationLocal movements Migration16
551230760Local movementsMovements to find food, water, nesting site Kinesis - movement in response to stimulus but not directed toward or away from source Taxis- more directed movement Positive phototaxis - toward light Negative phototaxis - away from light Other examples include sea turtle hatchlings, and positive rheotaxis in fish17
551230761Migration- long-range seasonal movement generally linked to seasonal availability of food Bird, mammal, and insect examples 3 mechanisms to find their way Arctic terns : 24,800 miles migrated yearly18
551230762Pilotinganimal moves from one familiar landmark to the next Features of the coastline, for example19
551230763Orientationability to follow compass bearing and travel in straight line - cannot adjust for course20
551230764Navigationfollow compass bearings but also set or adjust path Adult starlings can adjust flight path when transported and released (juveniles cannot21
551230765ForagingOptimality theory predicts an animal should behave in a way that maximizes benefits of a behavior minus its costs Optimal foraging proposes that an animal seeks to obtain the most energy possible with the least expenditure of energy The more net energy gained, the greater the reproductive success22
551230766Shore crabs and musselsPrefer intermediate mussels with highest rate of energy return Larger mussels yield more energy but take longer to open Smaller mussels are easier to open but yield less energy23
551230767Territoryfixed area in which individual or group excludes others Optimize territory size based on costs and benefits Benefit is exclusive access to resource- food, mates, nesting sites Costly to defend24
551230768Golden-winged sunbirdSaved 780 calories a day in reduced foraging activity Spent 728 calories in defending the territory Net gain of 52 calories a day25
551230769CommunicationUse of specifically designed signals or displays to modify the behavior of others Chemical Auditory Visual Tactile26
551230770Chemical communicationCommon among canines and felines Scent trails laid by social insects Pheromones produced by female moths to attract males Queen bee releases pheromones to suppress reproductive system of workers27
551230771Auditory communicationSounds travel farther in air Air at dawn and dusk less turbulent Many males use auditory communication to attract females Sound production can also lure predators28
551230772Visual communicationCompetition among males for most impressive displays leads to elaborate coloration and extensive ornamentation Male fireflies flash species specific number and duration of flashes Predator uses flashes to lure males in to eat them29
551230773Tactile communicationUsed to establish bonds between group members Round dance or waggle dance of honeybee scout conveys food location30
551230774Living in groupsMuch of animal behavior directed at other animals Some of the more complex behavior occurs in groups like flocks or herds Group living can reduce predation through Increased vigilance Protection in numbers31
551230775Many eyes hypothesisIncreased vigilance by living in groups, individuals may decrease the amount of time scanning for predators and increase time feeding If each pigeon occasionally looks up to scan for a hawk, the bigger the group, the more likely that one bird will spot a hawk early enough for the flock to take flight32
551230776Protection in numbersTypically, predators take one prey item per attack In a large group, chances of being that prey item are reduced "Selfish herd"- each individual can minimize the danger to itself by choosing the location that is closest to the center of the group Group size may be the result of trade offs between the benefits of group living and costs like grooming and altruism33
551230777AltruismBehavior that appears to benefit others at a cost to oneself Most altruistic acts serve to benefit the individual's close relatives34
551230778Group Selectiongroup containing altruists would have a survival advantage over group composed of selfish individuals35
551230779Individual selection more likely because...Mutant individuals that use resources have an advantage over those that conserve resources Selfish individuals can immigrate from other areas For group selection to work, groups must die faster than others - individuals die more often than groups Group selection assumes that individuals can predict food availability to conserve resources as needed - little evidence that they can36
551230780Example of selfish behaviorMale hanuman langurs kill infants when they take over groups of females from other males When not nursing, females become sexually receptive sooner, so a male can father offspring sooner Infanticide ensures that the male will father more offspring Genes governing this trait spread by natural selection37
551230781Coefficient of Relatednessprobability that any 2 individuals will share a copy of a particular gene is a quantity r An organism can not only pass on its genes by having offspring but also by ensuring that relatives survive Inclusive fitness designates the total number of copies of genes passed on through one's relatives or as one's own offspring38
551230782Kinselectionbehavior that lowers an individual's own fitness but enhances the reproductive success of relatives39
551230783Hamilton's RuleAltruistic gene favored by natural selection when rB>C r is the coefficient of relatedness of donor (altruist) to recipient B is benefit to recipient C is cost incurred by dono40
551230784Datana Caterpillars exampleBrightly colored and assume specific pose when threatened Predator has to eat one to learn to avoid them Death of individual in group of related caterpillars benefits siblings r =0.5, B=50, and C=1, then 25(0.5x50)>1 so genes will spread41
551230785Altruism in social insects due to genetics and lifestyleMost extreme form of altruism is sterile castes in social insects Eusociality - workers (females) help queen raise offspring Haplodiplady- females are diploid, males are haploid, females are more related to their sisters (0.75) than they would be to their own offspring (0.5) Existence of eusocial mammals predicted based on lifestyle Naked mole rats have a queen who suppresses reproduction in other females42
551230786Reciprocal AltruismCost to the altruist offset by likelihood of a return benefit Female vampire bats will share food Unrelated females are more likely to share food with those that had recently shared with them43
551230787Monogamy- each individual mates exclusively with one partner44
551230788Polygamyindividuals mate with more than one partner Polygyny - one male mates with many females Polyandry - one female mates with many males45
551230789Mating systemsNatural selection favors production of the rarer sex so that the sex ratio is kept balanced at 1:146
551230790Sexual selection(how to pick mate) Promotes traits that will increase an organism's mating success 2 forms47
551230791Intersexualmember of one sex chooses mate based on particular characteristics48
551230792Intrasexualmembers of one sex compete over partners with the winner performing most of the matings49
551230793Female hangingfliesdemand a nuptial gift - allows female to produce more eggs and allows male to copulate longer50
551230794Female sticklebacksprefer males that shake more during courtship as evidence that he will be a better parent51
551230795widowbirdChoices based on plumage color or courtship displays - widowbird with experimentally lengthened tails attracted more females and fathered more clutches52
551230796Mate competition between individualsIn many species, females do not actively choose between mates Instead they mate with competitively superior males Dominance determined by fighting or ritualized sparring Male-male competition produces males substantially larger than females Small males can still father offspring by intercepting females53
551230797Mate-guarding hypothesismales stay with a female to protect her from being fertilized by other males54
551230798Male Assistance hypothesismales remain with females to help them rear offspring - he would have few surviving offspring if he did not55
551230799Female-enforced monogamy hypothesisfemale interferes with male attracting other females56
551230800PolygynyOne male mates with more than one female Females mate with only one male Associated with uniparental care of young Males contribute little to raising young Sexual dimorphism typical Types Resource based polygyny - patchy distribution of resource and female visits for resource Harem mating structure - females naturally congregate and male controls area Communal courting - males display in lek, females mate after males display57
551230801PolyandryOne female mates with several males Rarer Female is larger of the sexes Female spotted sandpiper reproductive success limited only by the number of males she can find to incubate her eggs Male pipefish have brood pouches and female produces enough eggs for 2 male brood pouches if she can find another male58

Ecology Exam 1 Flashcards

Intro to Ecology, Microevolution and Natural Selection, Biomes, Habitats and Niches, Physiological Ecology, Behavioral Ecology.

Terms : Hide Images
476651563Habitatphysical area in which an organism lives1
476651564Nichefunctional role and distribution of an organism in a community; the organisms place in a biotic environment in relation to food and predators.2
476651567Fundamental Nicheany set of conditions under which an organism can survive3
476651568Realized Nichedescribes conditions under which the organism really does occur (actual measurements)4
476651569Niche BredthThe range, along an environmental gradient, within which the niche occurs. The niche is represented as a bell curve, and the optimum ecological performance is right in the middle, at the top of the curve5
476651570Niche Overlapdescribes how much two niches overlap6
476651571What is Levin's Index?measure of niche bredth which runs from a low of 1 to a high of infinity.7
476651572Homeostasisprocess by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment8
476651573Homeostasis Balance=in-out9
476651574Heat/Temp Balance Equation=H_Organism=H_m (+/-) H_env (-) H_e heat of organism=metabolic heat plus or minus heat gain/loss from environment minus evaporative water loss10
476651575What factors affect the heat balance? (4)Surface area:volume ratio, ambient temp vs. body temp, behavioral adaptations, and morphology.11
476651576Ectothermorganism obtains heat form external source12
476651577Endothermorganism generates body heat internally13
476651578Homeothermorganism maintains constant internal temp no matter the external environment14
476651579Poikiliothermorganism's internal temp corresponds with external temp of environment15
476651581Osmosisdiffusion of molecules through a semipermeable membrane from a place of higher concentration to a place of lower concentration until the concentration on both sides is equal16
476651582Hyperosmoticgreater solute concentration, movement of water out of cell17
476651583Hypoosmoticless solute concentration, water moves into cell18
476651584Isosmoticequal amount of water on both sides19
476651585OsmoconformerOrganism which have internal water and ion balances that track along with external environment.20
476651586Osmoregulatororganism which maintain constant internal water and ion balance over a wide range of external ion concentrations21
476651587What affects osmoregulation? (7)body size, ambient ion vs. internal ion concentration, permeability of integument (skin), type of food eaten, temperature, activity level, and illness or poor health.22
477449488What are the 4 components of a territory?Site attachment, exclusive use of the area, aggressive defense of area, and boundary switching.23
477449489Boundary Switchingat edges, animal more likely to retreat than attack24
477449492Arbitrary Rule hypothesisterritories are won according to some "arbitrary" rule, e.g. first to attack wins; territory holder wins; largest one wins25
477449493Resource-Holding Power Asymmetry hypothesisterritories are only obtained and kept by those individuals that are larger and stronger26
477449494Value Asymmetry hypothesisvalue of territory to resident is greater than the value of that territory to an intruder27
477449495Migrationlong term movement from one location to another, it involves navigation and orientation28
477586061Ontogenetic Migrationanimals spend part of life span in one area, then the rest in a second habitat29
477586062Iruptive migrationsimilar to seasonal migration, but occurs irregularly30
477586063What is migration triggered by?Changes is photoperiod, in seasonal migration this usually occurs twice31
477586064Orientationability to move in correct direction32
477586065Navigationability to determine where you are in relation to your final goal33
477586066What are the 3 minor types of migratory cues?topographic, meterorological, and chemical34
477586067What are the 3 major types of migratory cues?Solar, stellar, and magnetic (involves direction of earth's geomagnetic field lines, animals with this ability have magnetic crystals in brain or ear).35
477586068Polygynyone male and multiple females36
477586069Polyandryone female and multiple males37
477586070Polygyandrymultiple males and females38
477586071Female defense polygynymales exhibit strong intrasexual competition to obtain sole access to females39
477586072Resource Defense polygynymales guard areas containing resources needed or wanted by females40
477586073Scramble Competition polygynymales attempt to mate with as many females as possible by outracing other males41
477586074Lek polygynymales defend small area that contains no resources or females (remember bowerbird)42
477586075Intersexual selectionone sex makes decision about which members of opposite sex to mate with (female)43
477586076Intrasexual selectionindividuals of same sex compete to gain access to other sex (male)44
477586077What are the 5 models of female choice?direct benefits, good genes, runaway selection, sensory bias, and cryptic choice45
477586078Runaway selectionfemales want ever larger values of a certain trait on males46
477586079Sensory Biasmales evolve trait that stimulates female's preference47
477586080Cryptic choicefemales can choose which male gamete they want to fertilize their eggs48

Ecology Exam 1 Flashcards

Intro to Ecology, Microevolution and Natural Selection, Biomes, Habitats and Niches, Physiological Ecology, Behavioral Ecology.

Terms : Hide Images
476651563Habitatphysical area in which an organism lives1
476651564Nichefunctional role and distribution of an organism in a community; the organisms place in a biotic environment in relation to food and predators.2
476651567Fundamental Nicheany set of conditions under which an organism can survive3
476651568Realized Nichedescribes conditions under which the organism really does occur (actual measurements)4
476651569Niche BredthThe range, along an environmental gradient, within which the niche occurs. The niche is represented as a bell curve, and the optimum ecological performance is right in the middle, at the top of the curve5
476651570Niche Overlapdescribes how much two niches overlap6
476651571What is Levin's Index?measure of niche bredth which runs from a low of 1 to a high of infinity.7
476651572Homeostasisprocess by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment8
476651573Homeostasis Balance=in-out9
476651574Heat/Temp Balance Equation=H_Organism=H_m (+/-) H_env (-) H_e heat of organism=metabolic heat plus or minus heat gain/loss from environment minus evaporative water loss10
476651575What factors affect the heat balance? (4)Surface area:volume ratio, ambient temp vs. body temp, behavioral adaptations, and morphology.11
476651576Ectothermorganism obtains heat form external source12
476651577Endothermorganism generates body heat internally13
476651578Homeothermorganism maintains constant internal temp no matter the external environment14
476651579Poikiliothermorganism's internal temp corresponds with external temp of environment15
476651581Osmosisdiffusion of molecules through a semipermeable membrane from a place of higher concentration to a place of lower concentration until the concentration on both sides is equal16
476651582Hyperosmoticgreater solute concentration, movement of water out of cell17
476651583Hypoosmoticless solute concentration, water moves into cell18
476651584Isosmoticequal amount of water on both sides19
476651585OsmoconformerOrganism which have internal water and ion balances that track along with external environment.20
476651586Osmoregulatororganism which maintain constant internal water and ion balance over a wide range of external ion concentrations21
476651587What affects osmoregulation? (7)body size, ambient ion vs. internal ion concentration, permeability of integument (skin), type of food eaten, temperature, activity level, and illness or poor health.22
477449488What are the 4 components of a territory?Site attachment, exclusive use of the area, aggressive defense of area, and boundary switching.23
477449489Boundary Switchingat edges, animal more likely to retreat than attack24
477449492Arbitrary Rule hypothesisterritories are won according to some "arbitrary" rule, e.g. first to attack wins; territory holder wins; largest one wins25
477449493Resource-Holding Power Asymmetry hypothesisterritories are only obtained and kept by those individuals that are larger and stronger26
477449494Value Asymmetry hypothesisvalue of territory to resident is greater than the value of that territory to an intruder27
477449495Migrationlong term movement from one location to another, it involves navigation and orientation28
477586061Ontogenetic Migrationanimals spend part of life span in one area, then the rest in a second habitat29
477586062Iruptive migrationsimilar to seasonal migration, but occurs irregularly30
477586063What is migration triggered by?Changes is photoperiod, in seasonal migration this usually occurs twice31
477586064Orientationability to move in correct direction32
477586065Navigationability to determine where you are in relation to your final goal33
477586066What are the 3 minor types of migratory cues?topographic, meterorological, and chemical34
477586067What are the 3 major types of migratory cues?Solar, stellar, and magnetic (involves direction of earth's geomagnetic field lines, animals with this ability have magnetic crystals in brain or ear).35
477586068Polygynyone male and multiple females36
477586069Polyandryone female and multiple males37
477586070Polygyandrymultiple males and females38
477586071Female defense polygynymales exhibit strong intrasexual competition to obtain sole access to females39
477586072Resource Defense polygynymales guard areas containing resources needed or wanted by females40
477586073Scramble Competition polygynymales attempt to mate with as many females as possible by outracing other males41
477586074Lek polygynymales defend small area that contains no resources or females (remember bowerbird)42
477586075Intersexual selectionone sex makes decision about which members of opposite sex to mate with (female)43
477586076Intrasexual selectionindividuals of same sex compete to gain access to other sex (male)44
477586077What are the 5 models of female choice?direct benefits, good genes, runaway selection, sensory bias, and cryptic choice45
477586078Runaway selectionfemales want ever larger values of a certain trait on males46
477586079Sensory Biasmales evolve trait that stimulates female's preference47
477586080Cryptic choicefemales can choose which male gamete they want to fertilize their eggs48

Philosophy Terms Glossary Flashcards

All glossary terms from "Philosophy The Power Of Ideas"

Terms : Hide Images
358764205"Absolutethe","That which is unconditioned and uncaused by anything else; it is frequently thought of as God, a perfect and solitary, self-caused eternal being that is the source or essence of all that exists but that is itself beyond the possibility of conceptualization or definition",1
358764206Absolute IdealismThe early nineteenth-century school of philosophy that maintained that being is the transcendental unfolding or expression of thought or reason,2
358764207AcademicsPhilosophers of the third and second centuries B.C.E. in what had been Plato's Academy; they had the reputation of maintaining that all things are inapprehensible,3
358764208Act-utilitarianismA form of utilitarianism (subscribed to by Bentham) in which the rightness of an act is determined by its effect on the general happiness,4
358764209AestheticsThe philosophical study of art and of value judgments about art and of beauty in general,5
358764210Alterity"The condition of being ""Other"" to the center of power and authority",6
358764211Analytic philosophyThe predominant twentieth-century philosophical tradition in English-speaking countries; analytic philosophy has its roots in British empiricism and holds that analysis is the proper method of philosophy,7
358764212Analytic statement(Quine): A statement that holds come what may,8
358764213AnarchismA utopian political theory that seeks to eliminate all authority and state rule in favor of a society based on voluntary cooperation and free association of individuals and groups,9
358764214AntirepresentationalismA philosophy that denies that the mind or language contains or is a representation of reality,10
358764215Appeal to emotionTrying to establish a position by playing on someone's emotions,11
358764216Applied ethics"Moral theory applied to specific contemporary moral issues, such as abortion, affirmative action, pornography, capital punishment, and so on",12
358764217A priori/a posteriori pair"In the philosophy of Saul Kripke, an a priori truth is a statement known to be true independently of any experience, and its opposite, an a posteriori truth, is a statement known to be true through experience",13
358764218A priori principleA proposition whose truth we do not need to know through sensory experience and that no conceivable experience could serve to refute,14
358764219ArgumentA reason for accepting a position,15
358764220Argument by analogy"As in an argument for the existence of God: the idea that the world is analogous to a human contrivance and therefore, just as the human contrivance has a creator, the world must also have a creator",16
358764221Argument from designA proof for the existence of God based on the idea that the universe and its parts give evidence of purpose or design and therefore require a divine designer,17
358764222Argumentum ad hominemThe mistaken idea that you can successfully challenge any view by criticizing the person whose view it is,18
358764223AtaraxiaThe goal of unperturbedness and tranquility of mind that was considered the highest good by ancient thinkers such as the Skeptics,19
358764224Atomism"The ancient Greek philosophy that holds that all things are composed of simple, indivisible minute particles",20
358764225Authenticity"In Sartre's philosophy, a way of understanding the essential nature of the human being by seeing it as a totality",21
358764226Bad Faith"In the philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre, essentially self-deception or lying to oneself, especially when this takes the form of blaming circumstances for one's fate and not seizing the freedom to realize oneself in action",22
358764227Begging the questionThe fallacy of assuming as a premise the very conclusion of the argument is intended to prove,23
358764228Behaviorism"The methodological principle in psychology according to which meaningful psychological inquiry confines itself to psychological phenomena that can be behaviorally defined; the theory in philosophy that when we talk about a person's mental states, we are referring in fact to the person's disposition to behave in certain ways",24
358764229Buddhism"A philosophical tradition, founded by Gautama Siddhartha Buddha in the fifth century B.C.E., that took on various forms as a religion and spread throughout Asia; Buddhism attempts to help the individual conquer the suffering and mutability of human existence through the elimination of desire and ego and attainment of the state of nirvana",25
358764230Bushido"The way or ethic of the samurai warrior, based on service and demanding rigorous training, usually both in the military and literary arts",26
358764231Capabilities approach"In the philosophy of Martha Nussbaum, the principle that all nations and governments should provide for the core ingredients of human dignity",27
358764232CapitalismAn economic system in which ownership of the means of production and distribution is maintained mostly by private individuals and corporations,28
358764233Categorical imperative"Immanuel Kant's formulation of a moral law that holds unconditionally, that is, categorically; in its most common formulation, states that you are to act in such a way that you could desire the principle on which you act to be a universal law",29
358764234Clear and distinct criterion"René Descartes' criterion of truth, according to which that, and only that, which is perceived as clearly and distinctly as the fact of one's own existence is certain",30
358764235Code PinkA third wave women's grassroots peace and justice movement that opposes any kind of military force,31
358764236Communism"(capital ""c"") The ideology of the Communist Party; (lowercase ""c"") an economic system",32
358764237Communitarian"One who holds that there is a common good defined by one's society, the attainment of which has priority over individual liberty",33
358764238ConceptualismThe theory that universals are concepts and exist only in the mind,34
358764239ConfucianismA philosophical tradition that began with Confucius in the sixth century B.C.E. and continues to the present day; Confucianism is a practical philosophy that hopes to establish a better world order by means of moral perfection of the individual,35
358764240ConsequentialismEthical theories that evaluate actions by their consequences,36
358764241ConservatismA political philosophy based on respect for established institutions and traditions and that favors preservation of the status quo over social experimentation,37
358764242Continental philosophy"The philosophical traditions of continental Europe; includes phenomenology, existentialism, hermeneutics, deconstruction, and critical theory",38
358764243Contractarian theory"The political theory according to which a legitimate state exists only by virtue of an agreement or ""contract"" among the subjects of the state",39
358764244ContractualismEthical theories according to which right and wrong are established by a societal agreement or social contract,40
358764245Copernican revolution in philosophy"A new perspective in epistemology, introduced by Immanuel Kant, according to which the objects of experience must conform in certain respects to our knowledge of them",41
358764246Cosmological argumentAn argument for the existence of God according to which the universe and its parts can be neither accidental nor self-caused and must ultimately have been brought into existence by God,42
358764247CounterargumentAn argument that counters the given argument,43
358764248Critical theoryA philosophical method that seeks to provide a radical critique of knowledge by taking into account the situation and interests involved,44
358764249Cultural relativismThe theory that what is right (and wrong) is what your culture believes is right (and wrong),45
358764250CyberfeminismThe idea that women can resist the patriarchy through their communication links in computer technology,46
358764251Cynicism"A school of philosophy founded around the fifth century B.C.E., probably by Antisthenes of Diogenes; the Cynics sought to lead lives of total simplicity and naturalness by rejecting all comforts and conveniences of society",47
358764252CyrenaicismThe philosophy of Aristippus and others who lived in Cyrene about Plato's time; it emphasized seeking a life of as many intense pleasures as possible,48
358764253Deontological ethicsEthical theories according to which what I ought to do is whatever it is my moral duty to do,49
358764254Descriptive egoismThe doctrine that maintains that in conscious action a person always seeks self-interest above all else,50
358764255Descriptive relativismThe doctrine that the moral standards people subscribe to differ from culture to culture and from society to society,51
358764256DeterminismThe doctrine that a person could not have acted otherwise than as she or he did act,52
358764257Ding-an-sich"German for ""thing-in-itself"": a thing as it is independent of any consciousness of it",53
358764258Divine-command ethicsEthical theory according to which what is morally right and good is determined by divine command,54
358764259Divine law"In the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, God's gift to humankind, apprehended through revelation, that directs us to our supernatural goal, eternal happiness",55
358764260Double aspect theory"The idea that whatever exists is both mental and physical; that is that the mental and physical are just different ways of looking at the same things, Spinoza, Benedictus de",56
358764261Dualism"Two-ism; the doctrine that existing things belong to one or another but not both, of two distinct categories of things, usually deemed to be physical and nonphysical or spiritual",57
358764262EcofeminismA branch of feminist philosophy that opposes any form of oppression that endangers nature,58
358764263Écriture féminine"A ""feminine"" form of writing primarily invented by Cixous and Kristeva that is neither prose nor poetry, uses metaphor to elide boundaries between theory and fiction, and disrupts masculinist discourse",59
358764264EgoismThe doctrine that in conscious action one seeks (or ought to seek) self-interest above all else,60
358764265Egoistic ethical hedonismThe theory that one ought to seek one's own pleasure above all else,61
358764266Eightfold Path"The way or practice recommended in Buddhism that includes: Right View, Right Aim, Right Speech, Right Action, Right Living, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Contemplation",62
358764267Emotivism"The theory that moral (and other) value judgments are expressions of emotions, attitudes, and feelings",63
358764268EmpiricismThe philosophy that all knowledge originates in sensory experience,64
358764269Epicureanism"(capital ""e"") The philosophy of followers of Epicurus, who believed that personal pleasure is the highest good but advocated renouncing momentary pleasures in favor of more lasting ones",65
358764270Epistemological detourThe attempt to utilize epistemological inquiry to arrive at metaphysical truths,66
358764271Epistemology"The branch of philosophy concerned primarily with the criteria, nature, and possibility of knowledge",67
358764272EpocheSuspension of judgment concerning the truth of falsity of a proposition,68
358764273Equivalence ThesisThe idea that letting people die of starvation is as bad as killing them,69
358764274Esse est percipi"Latin for ""to be is to be perceived,"" a doctrine that George Berkeley made the basis of his philosophy. Only that which is perceived exists; Berkeley held, however, that the minds that do the perceiving also exist",70
358764275Essentialism"The belief that there are natural, innate differences between women and men, a rejection of the idea that gender is a social construction",71
358764276Eternal law"In the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, the divine reason of God that rules over all things at all times",72
358764277Ethical hedonismThe doctrine that you ought to seek pleasure over all else,73
358764278Ethical naturalismThe belief that moral value judgments are really judgments of the natural world,74
358764279Ethical relativismThe theory that there are no absolute and universally valid moral standards and values and that therefore the moral standards and values that apply to you are merely those that are accepted by your society,75
358764280Ethical skepticismThe doctrine that moral knowledge is not possible,76
358764281Ethics"The branch of philosophy that considers the nature, criteria, sources, logic, and validity of moral value judgments",77
358764282Ethnophilosophy"A systematically descriptive method of investigating the philosophical concepts that are important in a culture, especially a culture that is primarily transmitted through unwritten stories, rituals, and statements of belief",78
358764283Evil demon conjecture"The conjecture used by Descartes that states: For all I know, an all-powerful ""god"" or demon has manipulated me so that all I take as true is in fact false",79
358764284Existence precedes essence (Sartre)"Sartre's way of saying, you are what you make of yourself",80
358764285Existentialism"A tradition of twentieth-century philosophy having its roots in the nineteenth century but coming to flower in Europe after World War II; of central concern is the question of how the individual is to find an authentic existence in this world, in which there is no ultimate reason why things happen one way and not another",81
358764286Ex nihilo"Latin for ""out of nothing""",82
358764287Extension"A property by which a thing occupies space; according to Descartes, the essential attribute of matter",83
358764288FallacyA mistake in reasoning,84
358764289False dilemmaOffering only two options when in fact more than two options exist,85
358764290Fascism"The totalitarian political philosophy of the Mussolini government in Italy, which stressed the primacy of the state and leadership by an elite who embody the will and intelligence of the people; the term is sometimes more generally used for any totalitarian movement",86
358764291FeminismMovement in support of the view that men and women should have equal social value and status,87
358764292First mover"God, in St.Thomas's first proof of God's existence",88
358764293Five WaysSt.Thomas Aquinas's five proofs of God's existence,89
358764294Form"Aristotle’s theory of forms; in Plato’s philosophy that which is denoted by a general word, a word (such as “good”) that applies to more than a single thing",90
358764295FoundationalismThe doctrine that a belief qualifies as knowledge only if it logically follows from propositions that are incorrigible (incapable of being false if you believe that they are true),91
358764296Four Noble Truths"Buddha's answer to the central problem of life: (1) There is suffering; (2) suffering has specific and identifiable causes; (3) suffering can be ended; (4) the way to end suffering is through enlightened living, as expressed in the Eightfold Path",92
358764297Free-market economy"An economic system built around the belief that supply and demand, competition, and a free play of market forces best serve the interests of society and the common good",93
358764298Functionalism"The doctrine that what a thing is must be understood and analyzed not by what it is made of but by its function; for example, anything that functions as a mousetrap is a mousetrap, regardless of what it is made of or how it looks or is assembled",94
358764299Gender"A person's biological sex as constructed, understood, interpreted, and institutionalized by society",95
358764300General will"In the philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the will of a politically united people, the will of a state",96
358764301Genushow a thing is similar to other things,97
358764302HedonismThe pursuit of pleasure,98
358764303Hellenistic ageThe period of Macedonian domination of the Greek-speaking world from around 335 B.C.E. to about 30 B.C.E.,99
358764304HermeneuticsInterpretive understanding that seeks systematically to access the essence of things,100
358764305HinduismThe Western word for the religious beliefs and practices of the majority of the people of India,101
358764306Human law"In the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, the laws and statutes of society that are derived from our understanding of natural law",102
358764307Hypothetical imperativeAn imperative that states what you ought to do if a certain end is desired,103
358764308Id"In Sigmund Freud's theory, the part of the psyche that is the unconscious source of instinctive impulses and drives",104
358764309Idealism"The doctrine that only what is mental (thought, consciousness, perception) exists and that so-called physical things are manifestations of mind or thought",105
358764310"Identityproblem of",What are the criteria of the sameness of an entity?,106
358764311Identity theoryThe theory that mental states and events are brain states and events,107
358764312IncorrigibleThe property of a proposition that cannot be false if you believe it to be true,108
358764313Indeterminacy of translation"In the philosophy of W. V. O. Quine, the idea that alternative incompatible translations of any language are compatible with the linguistic behavior of its speakers",109
358764314Individual relativismThe theory that what is right (and wrong) is what you believe is right (and wrong),110
358764315Inscrutability of reference"In the philosophy of W. V. O. Quine, the idea that alternative conceptions of what objects a theory refers to are equally compatible with the totality of physical facts",111
358764316Instrumental end"Something desirable as a means to an end, but not desirable for its own sake",112
358764317Instrumentalism"A theory held by John Dewey, among others, that ideas, judgments, and propositions are not merely true or false; rather, they are tools to understand experience and solve problems",113
358764318Intelligent design or evolutionThe idea that the universe cannot be explained except on the supposition that it is the creation of an intelligent designer,114
358764319Interactionist dualismThe theory that the physical body and the nonphysical mind interact with each other,115
358764320Intrinsic endSomething that is desirable for its own sake and not merely as a means to an end,116
358764321Invisible-hand explanationAn explanation of a phenomenon as an unforeseen indirect consequence of action taken for some other purpose,117
358764322KarmaThe idea that your point of departure in life is determined by your decisions and deeds in earlier lives,118
358764323Language game"The context in which an utterance is made, which determines the purposes served by the utterance and hence its meaning; Wittgenstein believed that philosophical problems are due to ignoring the ""game"" in which certain concepts are used",119
358764324Law of the Father"In Lacan's theory, a system that contains encoded patriarchal values in language",120
358764325Lawrence v.TexasA 2003 ruling by the United States Supreme Court that a Texas law prohibiting homosexual sodomy was unconstitutional,121
358764326Leviathan"The coiled snake or dragon in the Book of Job in the Bible; in the philosophy of Thomas Hobbes, ""that mortal God, to which we owe our peace and defense""; that is, the state (or its sovereign) created by social contract",122
358764327LiberalismA political philosophy whose basic tenet is that each individual should have the maximum freedom consistent with the freedom of others,123
358764328Libertarian"Someone who believes in free will; alternatively, someone who upholds the principles of liberty of thought and action",124
358764329LogicThe study of correct inference,125
358764330Logical atomism"The metaphysical theory that the world does not consist of things but of facts, that is, things having certain properties and standing in certain relationship to one another. The ultimate facts are atomic in that they are logically independent of one another and are unresolvable into simpler facts; likewise, an empirically correct description of the world will consist ultimately of logically independent and unanalyzable atomic propositions that correspond to the atomic facts",126
358764331Logical positivism"The philosophy of the Vienna Circle, according to which an purported statement of fact, if not a verbal truism, is meaningless unless certain conceivable observations would serve to confirm or deny it",127
358764332LogicismThe thesis that the concepts of mathematics can be defined in terms of concepts of logic and that all mathematical truths can be proved from principles of formal logic,128
358764333Logocentrism"A term coined by Derrida that refers to the traditional Western ways of thinking about truth, consciousness, and reason in language",129
358764334Marxism"The socialist philosophy of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, and their followers that postulates the labor theory of value, the dialectical interplay of social institutions, class struggle, and dictatorship of the proletariat leading to a classless society",130
358764335MaterialismThe theory that only physical entities exist and that so-called mental things are manifestations of an underlying physical reality,131
358764336Means (forces) of productionIn Marxism the means of producing the satisfaction of needs,132
358764337Metaethics"The philosophical investigation of the sources, criteria, meaning, verification, validation, and logical interrelationships of moral value",133
358764338MetaphysicsThe branch of philosophy that studies the nature and fundamental features of being,134
358764339Mirror stage"In Lacanian theory, the stage of development when the child identifies itself with its own image, separate from its mother",135
358764340Modified skepticA skeptic who does not doubt that at least some things are known but denies or suspends judgment on the possibility of knowledge about some particular subject,136
358764341Monad"From the Greek word meaning ""unit.'"" Pythagoras used the word to denote the first number of a series, and Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz used the word to denote the unextended, simple, soul-like basic elements of the universe",137
358764342Moral argument for the existence of God"The argument that maintains that morality, to be more than merely relative and contingent, must come from and be guaranteed by a supreme being, God",138
358764343Moral imperative"Distinguished by Kant from a hypothetical imperative, which holds conditionally (e.g., ""If you desire health, then eat well!""), a moral imperative holds unconditionally (e.g., ""Do your duty!"")",139
358764344Morality of intentIt is not what you do that matters morally but the state of mind with which you do it,140
358764345Moral judgment"A value judgment about what is morally right or wrong, good or bad, proper or improper",141
358764346Naturalist fallacyThinking that a moral value judgment is entailed by a descriptive statement. Perhaps not really a fallacy,142
358764347Naturalized epistemologyThe view that the important epistemological problems are those that can be resolved by psychological investigation of the processes involved in acquiring and revising beliefs,143
358764348Natural law"in Hobbes's philosophy, a value-neutral principle, discovered by reason, of how best to preserve one's life; in the Stoic philosophy, a principle of rationality that infuses the universe, to which human behavior ought to conform; in Thomas Aquinas's philosophy, God's eternal law as it applies to humans on earth and dictates the fundamental principles of morality",144
358764349Natural law political theory"The view that questions of political ethics are to be answered by natural law, which alone determines what is right, good, just, and proper (and their alternatives)",145
358764350Natural rightA right thought to belong by nature to all human beings at all times and in all circumstances,146
358764351Necessary beingA being whose nonexistence is impossible,147
358764352Necessary/contingent pair"In the philosophy of Saul Kripke, a necessary truth is a statement that could not possibly be false. A contingent truth is a statement that is true but could have been false",148
358764353Neoplatonism"A further development of Platonic philosophy under the influence of Aristotelian and Pythagorean philosophy and Christian mysticism; it flourished between the third and sixth centuries, stressing a mystical intuition of the highest One or God, a transcendent source of all being",149
358764354Nihil in intellectu quod prius non fuerit in sensuNothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses; an epistemological principle formulated by Thomas Aquinas as an extrapolation of Aristotle's thinking,150
358764355NihilismThe rejection of values and beliefs,151
358764356Nirvana"In Buddhism, the highest good; the extinction of will and of the accompanying ego, greed, anger, delusion, and clinging to existence. Achievement of nirvana means being freed from all future rebirths",152
358764357NominalismThe theory that only individual things are real,153
358764358Normative ethicsA system of moral value judgments together with their justifications,154
358764359Normative questionsQuestions about the value of something. Norms are standards,155
358764360Noumena"In the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, things as they are in themselves independent of all possible experience of them",156
358764361Nous"A Greek word variously translated as ""thinking,"" ""mind,"" ""spirit,"" and ""intellect""",157
358764362OccasionalismA variant of parallelism according to which an act of willing your body to do something is the occasion for God to cause your body to do it,158
358764363Ontological argumentThe argument that God's existence is entailed by the definition or concept of God,159
358764364OntologyThe branch of metaphysics that deals with the study of existence or being,160
358764365Original positionJohn Rawls' name for a hypothetical condition in which rational and unbiased individuals select the principles of social justice that govern a well-ordered society,161
358764366Pan-African philosophyA cultural categorization of philosophical activity that includes the work of African thinkers and thinkers of African descent wherever they are located,162
358764367Paradox of hedonism"Henry Sidgwick's term for the fact that the desire for pleasure, if it is too strong, defeats its own aim",163
358764368Parallelism"The doctrine that there are two parallel and coordinated series of events, one mental and the other physical, and that apparent causal interaction between the mind and the body is to be explained as a manifestation of the correlation between the two series",164
358764369PatriarchySecond wave feminist term representing the set of institutions that legitimized universal male power,165
358764370Perception"A modern word for what Thomas Hobbes called ""sense,"" the basic mental activity from which all other mental phenomena are derived",166
358764371"Personal identityproblem of",What are the criteria of sameness of person?,167
358764372PerspectivismThe idea that all perception and conceptualization takes place from a particular perspective,168
358764373PhallocentrismA Lacanian term that describes the symbolic order in which the phallus is privileged,169
358764374PhallusA symbolic representation of the penis,170
358764375Phenomena"In Kant's philosophy, objects as experienced and hence as organized and unified by the categories of the understanding and the forms of space and time; things as they appear to us or, alternatively, the appearances themselves",171
358764376Phenomenalism"The theory that we only know phenomena; in analytic philosophy, the theory that propositions referring to physical objects can, in principle, be expressed in propositions referring only to sense-data",172
358764377Phenomenological reductionA method of putting aside the ordinary attitude toward the world and its objects in order to see the objects of pure consciousness through intuition,173
358764378PhenomenologyThe objective philosophical investigation of essences or meanings developed by the philosopher Edmund Husserl (1859â€"1938),174
358764379Philosophy of mind"That area of analytic philosophy concerned with the nature of consciousness, mental states, the mind, and the proper analysis of everyday psychological vocabulary",175
358764380Political philosophy"The philosophical study of the state, its justification, and its ethically proper organization",176
358764381PostmodernismThe period of twentieth-century Western culture following modernism that challenges traditional cultural values in a variety of ways,177
358764382Pragmatic theory of truth"In Dewey's and William James's philosophies, a theory of justification according to which (roughly) a belief may be accepted as true if it ""works,""; in Peirce's philosophy, a species of correspondence theory",178
358764383PragmatismPhilosophies that hold that the meaning of concepts lies in the difference they make to conduct and that the function of thought is to guide action,179
358764384Prescriptive egoismThe doctrine that in all conscious action you ought to seek your self-interest above all else,180
358764385Prescriptive judgmentA statement that assigns a value to a thing; a value judgment,181
358764386Pre-Socratic philosophers"Greek philosophers who lived before Socrates - Anaxagoras; Anaximander; Anaximenes; Atomists, the; Democritus; Empedocles; Heraclitus; Leucippus; Parmenides; Pythagoras; Thales; Zeno of Elea",182
358764387Principle of noncontradictionThe principle that a proposition and its contradictory cannot both be true and one or the other must be true,183
358764388Principle of reasonSee A priori principle,184
358764389Principle of sufficient reasonThe principle that there is a sufficient reason why things are exactly as they are and are not otherwise,185
358764390Principle of the identity of indiscernibles"The principle according to which if entity X and entity Y have exactly the same set of properties, then X = Y",186
358764391Private language"In the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein, a language that can be understood by only a single individual",187
358764392Productive relations"In Marxism, social institutions and practices",188
358764393PsychoanalysisA psychological theory and therapeutic method developed by Sigmund Freud,189
358764394PsycholinguisticsA branch of linguistics that studies psychological aspects of language,190
358764395Psychological hedonismThe theory that pleasure is the object of a person's desire,191
358764396PyrrhonistsMembers of a school of philosophical skepticism in the Hellenistic and Roman periods who attempted to suspend judgment on all knowledge claims,192
358764397Pythagoreans"Pythagoras and his followers, whose doctrineâ€"a combination of mathematics and philosophyâ€"gave birth to the concept in metaphysics that fundamental reality is eternal, unchanging, and accessible only to reason",193
358764398Queer theoryA theory that deconstructs binary oppositions/sexual boundaries,194
358764399Rationalism"The epistemological theory that reason is either the sole or primary source of knowledge; in practice, most rationalists maintain merely that at least some truths are not known solely on the basis of sensory experience",195
358764400RealismThe theory that the real world is independent of the mind; the theory that universals exist outside the mind,196
358764401Red herringThe fallacy of addressing a point other than the one actually at issue,197
358764402Reductio ad absurdumProving a proposition by showing that its nonacceptance would involve an absurdity,198
358764403ReductionismThe idea that every meaningful statement reduces to the experience that would confirm or disconfirm it; See also Translatability thesis,199
358764404RepresentationalismThe doctrine that true beliefs are accurate representations of the state of affairs they are about,200
358764405Representative realism"The theory that we perceive objects indirectly by means of representations (ideas, perceptions) of them",201
358764406Rule-utilitarianismA form of utilitarianism (subscribed to by John Stuart Mill) in which the rightness of an act is determined by the impact on the general happiness of the rule or principle the action exemplifies,202
358764407SamuraiThe warrior aristocracy of Japan,203
358764408SemioticThe pre-Oedipal stage when the child does not distinguish between itself and its mother,204
358764409Sense-dataThat which you are immediately aware of in sensory experience; the contents of awareness,205
358764410SkepticOne who questions or suspends judgment on the possibility of knowledge,206
358764411Skepticism"(capital ""s"") A school of philosophy that emerged in the Hellenistic and Roman periods after Plato; included the Academics and the Pyrrhonists; (lowercase ""s"") the doctrine that true knowledge is uncertain or impossible",207
358764412Social contractAn agreement among individuals forming an organized society or between the community and the ruler that defines the rights and duties of each,208
358764413Socialism"The theory that communal ownership of land, capital, and the means of production is the best way of serving the common good",209
358764414Social philosophyThe philosophical study of society and its institutions; concerned especially with determining the features of the ideal or best society. See also Political philosophy,210
358764415SophistsAncient Greek rhetoricians who taught debating skills for a fee,211
358764416Specific differenceHow a thing is specifically different from other things in the same genus,212
358764417Stoicism"(capital ""s"") The ethical philosophy of the ancient Greek Stoics, who emphasized the serene or untroubled life as the highest good and thought it best reached through acceptance of the natural order of things; (lowercase ""s"") the practice of a stoic, one who is indifferent to pleasure and pain",213
358764418Straw manThe fallacy of trying to refute someone's view by misrepresenting it,214
358764419Subjectivism"In ethics, the doctrine that what is right is determined by what people believe is right; elsewhere, the theory that limits knowledge of conscious states",215
358764420Superego"In Sigmund Freud's theory, that part of the psyche that functions as conscience",216
358764421Switching the burden of proofTrying to prove a position by asking an opponent to disprove it,217
358764422Synthetic truth (Quine)"A true statement that is not such that it holds ""come what may""",218
358764423Tabula rasa"Latin for ""blank tablet""; also, John Locke's metaphor for the condition of the mind prior to the imprint of sensory experience",219
358764424Tacit consent"An implied rather than explicitly consent, as, for example, when you consent to the laws of your state by continuing to live in it",220
358764425Tao"In Chinese philosophy, the Way: the ultimate and eternal principle of unity, meaning, and harmony in the universe; See also Taoism",221
358764426Taoism"One of the great philosophical traditions in China, according to which the individual will find peace and tranquility through quietly following the Tao",222
358764427Teleological explanation"An explanation of a thing in terms of its ends, goals, purposes, or functions",223
358764428Ten TropesA collection of ten arguments by the Skeptic against the possibility of knowledge,224
358764429TheodicyA defense of God's goodness and omnipotence in view of apparent evil,225
358764430Theoretical positsEntities whose existence we hypothesize to explain our sensory experience,226
358764431Theory of FormsPlato's central metaphysical concept. See also Form,227
358764432Thesis-antithesis-synthesis"In the philosophy of Hegel, to each thesis there is an antithesis (opposite), and the two are a unity in a higher synthesis",228
358764433Thing-in-itselfEnglish for Ding-an-sich: a thing as it is independent of any consciousness of it,229
358764434Third Man argument"Aristotle's criticism of Plato's Theory of Forms, according to which there must be a third thing that ties together a Form with the particular things that exemplify it",230
358764435Thought"According to Descartes, the essential attribute of mind",231
358764436Thought experimentImagining a situation in order to extract a lesson of philosophical importance,232
358764437Total skeptic"One who maintains nothing can be known or, alternatively, suspends judgment in all matters",233
358764438Transcendental phenomenologyAn epistemological method that seeks the certainty of a pure of consciousness of objects in the transcendental ego,234
358764439Translatability thesis"The idea that, in theory, statements about the world could all be translated into statements that refer to immediate sensory experience",235
358764440Übermensch"In the philosophy of Nietzsche, the ""Superman"" who escapes the triviality of society by embracing the will to power and rejecting the slave mentality that permeates society and dominates religion",236
358764441Universal"That which is denoted by a general word, a word (such as ""chair"") that applies to more than a single thing",237
358764442Universalistic ethical hedonism"The doctrine that one ought to seek, over everything else, the greatest pleasure for the greatest number of people; See also Utilitarianism",238
358764443Universal phenomenology of consciousnessAttempts made by Hegel and Husserl to devise a pure science of knowing,239
358764444UtilitarianismThe doctrine that the rightness of an action is identical with the happiness it produces as its consequence,240
358764445Value judgmentA proposition that explicitly or implicitly assigns a value to something,241
358764446Veil of ignorance"In Indian philosophy, the perspective from which the world is viewed as a multiplicity of things; in John Rawls's philosophy, the metaphor for the conditions under which rational individuals are to select the principles of justice that govern the well-ordered society",242
358764447Verifiability criterion (theory) of meaningThe dictum that a sentence must express something verifiable if it is to express an empirically meaningful statement,243
358764448Vienna CircleA group of philosophers and scientists centered at the University of Vienna in the 1920s and 1930s who espoused logical positivism,244
358764449Virtue ethics"Ethical theories according to which what I ought to do is what the virtuous person would do; for virtue ethics, the primary question is, What kind of person ought I to be?",245
358764450Zen Buddhism"A form of Buddhism that reached its zenith in China and later developed in Japan, Korea, and the West; its name (Chinese Ch'an Japanese Zen) derives from Sanskrit Dhyana (meditation). In early China the central tenet of Zen Buddhism was meditation rather than adherence to a particular scripture",246

APUSH Enduring Vision 7E Chapter 1 Flashcards

This is a flash card set for all terms in Chapter 1 of Enduring Vision, 7th edition. Hope all my fellow APUSH students can enjoy. :)

Terms : Hide Images
876496958Wampum (p.3)a quantity of small cylindrical beads made by North American Indians from shells, strung together and worn as a decorative belt or other decoration or used as money.1
876496959Iroquois Confederacy (p.3)The 5 Iroquois nations (Onondaga, Mohawk, Oneida, Cayuga and Seneca) submerged on differences and created a confederacy based upon the condolence ceremony.2
876496960Paleo-Indians (p.6)Earliest Americans. Established foundation of Native American life, and had well-defined hunting territories.3
876496961Bands (p.6)Paleo-Indians traveled in bands, consisting of several families and totaling to about 15-50 people. Egalitarian.4
876496962Reciprocity (p.6)Mutual Bestowing of gifts and favors. Equal power among bands, no one party accumulate profit and power at others' expense.5
876496963Archaic People (p.6)Warming climate allowed some Indians to form year-round villages with more food sources.6
876496964Mesoamerica (p.7)Home to most sophisticated early plant cultivators. (Central and southern Mexico, as well with Central America.) Maize agriculture was highly developed by 2500 B.C.E.7
876496965Chiefdoms (p.7)Hereditary rulers exercised absolute power , their realms consisted of a few closely clustered communities.8
876496966States (p.7)Ruler or government exercising direct authority over many communities.9
876496967Aztecs (p.7)One of the two mighty Empires to challenge large states that flourished in Mesoamerica and South America. Migrated from the north and settled the shore of lake Texcoco. First as subjects.10
876496968Incas (p.11)Second empire, arose in Western Hemisphere. The Incas conquered and subordinated societies over much of the Andes and adjacent regions after 1438.11
876496969Hohokam (p.11)Located in Southern Arizona, these people built irrigation canals that enabled them to harvest two crops a year. Organized large, coordinated work parties to construct and maintain canals.12
876496970Ancestral Pueblo (p.11)Four corners. Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah meet. By around 700 C.E. they harvested crops, permanent residence, and made pottery. Became most powerful people in the SW.13
876496971Poverty Point (p.13)By 1200 B.C.E. about 5,000 people lived here, on lower Mississippi.14
876496972Adena (p.13)Different kind of mound building culture, emerged in Ohio valley around 400 B.C.E. Their villages were smaller than Poverty Point, rarely exceeding 400 inhabitants. Most mounds contained graves, treatment of their dead differed upon social and/or political status. Some cremated, others in clay basins, others in elaborate tombs.15
876496973Hopewell (p.13)After 100 B.C.E. Adena culture evolved into the more complex and widespread culture. Spread from Ohio Valley to the Illinois River valley. Elites were buried with thousands of freshwater pearls or copper ornaments, or with sheets of mica, quartz, or other sacred substances. Also had extensive trade networks.16
876496974Mississippian (p.13)Beginning around 700 C.E. the first full-time farmers in the East lived on the floodplains of the Mississippi River and its major tributaries.17
876496975Cahokia (p.13)Around 900 C.E. Mississippian centers formed extensive networks based upon river-borne trade, and shared religious beliefs, each dominated by a metropolis. This one was the largest and most powerful, located near modern day St. Louis, Missouri.18
876496976Nuclear families (p.16)Husband, wife, and biological children. Lived with one of the parents' relatives.19
876496977Extended families (p.16)Multigenerational, often containing a nuclear family, among other relatives.20

AP Microeconomics Terms 2014 Flashcards

Terms in the 2014-2015 AP microeconomics glossary

Terms : Hide Images
868444361Absolute AdvantageThe ability to produce more of a good than all other producers.1
868444362Absolute(or money) pricesThe price of a good measured in units of currency2
868444363accounting profitThe difference between total revenue and total explicit cosy3
868444365all else equalThe assumption that all other variables are held constant so that we can predict how a change in one variable affects a second. Also known as the "ceteris paribus" assumption4
868444366allocative effiencyProduction of the combination of goods and services5
868444367average fixed cost(AFC)Total fixed cost divided by output6
868444368Average product(APL) of laborTotal product divided by the labor employed7
868444369Average tax rateThe proportion of total income paid to taxes8
868444370Average total cost(ATC)Total cost divided by output9
868444371Average variable cost(AVC)Total variable cost divided by output10
868444372Capitalist market system(capitalism)An economic system based upon the fundamentals of private property, freedom, self-interest, and prices11
868444373CartelFirms that agree to maximize their joint profits rather than compete12
868444374Circular flow of economic activity(or circular of goods and services)A model that shows how households and firms circulate resources, goods, and incomes through the economy. This basic model is expanded to include the government and the foreign sector.13
868444375collusive oligopolyModels where firms agree to work together to mutually improve their situation14
868444376comparative advantageThe ability to produce a good at lower opportunity cost than all other producers15
868444377complementary goodsTwo goods that provide more utility when consumed together than when consumed separately16
868444378constant returns to scaleThe horizontal range of long-run average total cost where LRAC is constant over a variety of plant sizes17
868444379constrained utility maximizationGiven prices and income, a consumer stops consuming a good when the price paid for the next unit is equal to the marginal utility recieved18
868444380consumer surplusThe difference between a buyer's willingness to pay and the price actually paid.19
868444381cross-price elasticity of demanda measure of how sensitive the consumption of good X is to a change in the price of good Y20
868444382deadweight lossThe lost net benefit to society caused by a movement from the competitive market equilibrium.21
868444383demand curveShows the quantity of a good demanded at all prices22
868444384demand for laborShows the quantity of labor demanded at all wages. Labor demand for a firm hiring in a competitive labor market is MRPL.23
868444385demand scheduleA table showing quantity demanded for a good at all prices24
868444386derived demandDemand for a resource arising from the demand for the goods produced by the resources25
868444387determinants of demandthe external factors that shift demand to the left or right26
868444388determinants of supplythe external factors that influence supply. When these variables change, the entire supply curve shifts to the left or right27
868444389disequilibruimAny price where the quantity demanded does not equal the quantity suppiled28
868444390diseconomies of scaleThe upward part of the long-run average total cost curve where LRAC rises as plant size rises29
868444391domestic priceThe equilibrium price of a good in a nation without trade30
868444392dominant strategyA strategy that is always the best strategy to pursue, regardless of what a rival is doing31
868444393economic costsThe sum of explicit and implicit costs of production32
868444394economic growthThe increase in an economy's PPF over time33
868444395economic profitThe difference between total revenue and total economic cost34
868444396economicsThe study of how society allocates scarce resources35
868444397economies of scaleThe downward part of the long-run average total cost curve where LRAC falls as plant size rises36
868444398egalitarianismThe philosophy that all citizens should receive an equal share of the economic resources37
868444399elasticityMeasures the sensitivity, or responsiveness, of a choice to a change in an external factor38
868444400elasticity along the demand curveAt the midpoint of a linear demand curve, Ed=1. Above the midpoint demand is elastic, and below the midpoint demand is inelastic39
868444401excess capacityThe difference between the long run output in monopolistic competition and the output at minimum average total cost40
868444402excess demandThe difference between quantity supplied and quantity demanded. A shortage41
868444403excess supplyThe difference between quantity supplied and quantity demanded. A surplus42
868444404excise taxA per unit tax on a specific good or service43
868444405explicit costsDirect, purchased, out-of-pocket costs, paid to resource suppliers outside the firm. Also referred to as accounting costs44
868444406exportsGoods and services produced domestically but sold abroad45
868444407factors of productionInputs or resources that go into the production function to produce goods and services46
868444408firmAn organization that employs factors of production to produce a good or service that it hopes to profitably sell47
868444409fixed inputsProduction inputs that cannot be changed in the short run48
868444410four-firm concentration ratioThe sum of the market share of the four largest firms in the industry49
868444411free riderAn individual who receives the benefit of a good without incurring any cost for the good50
868444412free rider problemThe lack of private funding for a public good due to the presence of free riders51
868444413game theoryAn approach for modeling the strategic interactions of firms in oligopoly markets52
868444414Gini ratioA measure of income inequality. As the Gini ratio gets closer to zero, the more equally the income is distributed. As the Gini ratio gets closer to one, the more unequally the income is distributed.53
868444415human capitalThe amount of knowledge and skills that labor can apply to the work that they do54
868444416implicit costsIndirect, non-purchased, or opportunity costs of resources provided by the entrepreneur55
868444417importsGoods produced abroad but consumed domestically56
868444418incidence of taxThe division of a tax between consumers and producers57
868444419income effectDue to the higher price, the change in quantity demanded that results from a change in the consumer's purchasing power(or real income)58
868444420income elasticityA measure of how sensitive consumption of a good is to a change in consumers' income59
868444421inferior goodsA good for which demand decreases with an increase in consumer income60
868444422law of demandAll else equal, when the price of a good rises, the quantity demanded of that good falls61
868444423law of diminishing marginal returnsAs successive units of a variable input are added to a fixed input, beyond some point the marginal product declines62
868444424law of diminishing marginal utilityIn a given time period, as consumption of an item increases, the marginal(additional) utility from that item falls63
868444425law of increasing costsAs more of a good is produced, the greater is its opportunity(or marginal) cost64
868444426law of increasing marginal utilityIn a given time period, as consumption of an item increases, the marginal(additional) utility from that item falls65
868444427law of supplyAll else equal, when the price of a good rises, the quantity supplied of that good rises66
868444428least-cost ruleThe combination of labor and capital that minimizes total costs for a given production rate is where MP1/PL=MPK/PK67
868444429long runA period of time long enough for the firm to alter all production inputs, including the plant size68
868444430Lorenz curveA graphical device that shows how a nation's income is distributed across the nation's households69
868444431luxuryA good for which the proportional increase in consumption exceeds the proportional increase in income70
868444432marginalThe next unit, or increment of, an action71
868444433marginal analysisMaking decisions based upon weighting the marginal benefits and costs of that action. The rational decision maker chooses an action if the MB is greater than or equal to MC.72
868444434marginal benefit(MB)...The additional benefit received from the consumption of the next unit of a good or service73
868444435Marginal cost(MC)The additional cost of producing one more unit of output74
868444436marginal productivity theoryThe theory that a citizen's share of economic resources is proportional to the marginal revenue product of his or her labor75
868444437marginal product(MPL) of laborThe change in total product in resulting from a change in the labor unit76
868444438marginal resource cost(MRC)The change in a firm's total cost from the hiring of an additional unit of an input77
868444439marginal revenue product of labor(MPR)The change in a firm's total revenue from the hiring of an additional unit of input78
868444440marginal tax rateThe rate paid on the last dollar earned, calculated by taking the ratio of the change in the change in income79
868444441marginal utitilityThe change in an individual's total utility from the consumption of an additional unit of a good or service.80
868444442marketA group with buyers and sellers of a good or service81
868444443market economyAn economic system in which resources are allocated through the decentralized decisions of firms and consumers82
868444444market equilibruimExists the only price where the quantity supplied equals the quantity demanded. Or, it is the only quantity where the price consumers are willing to pay is exactly the price producers are willing to accept83
868444445market failureThe inability of the free market to allocate resources efficiently84
868444446market powerThe ability to set a price above the perfectly competitive level85
868444447monopolistic competitionA market structure characterized by a few small firms producing a differentiated product with easy entry into the market86
868444448monopolyA market structure in which one firm is the sole producer of a good with no close substitutes in a market power i.e. wage setter87
868444449monopsonyA factor market in which there is a sole firm that has market power88
868444450natural monopolyThe case where economies of scale are so extensive that is less costly for one firm to supply the entire range of demand than for multiple firms to share the market89
868444451necessityA good for which the proportional increase in consumption is less than the proportional increase in income90
868444452negative externalityThe existence of spillover costs upon third parties from the production of a good91
868444453noncollusive oligopolyModels of industries in which firms are competitive rivals seeking to gain at the expense of their rivals92
868444454nonrenewable resourcesNatural resources that cannot replenish themselves93
868444455normal goodsA good for which demand increases with an increase94
868444456normal profitThe opportunity cost of the entrepreneur's talents. Another way of saying the firm is earning zero economic profit95
868444457oligopolyA very diverse market structure characterized by a small number of interdependent large firms, producing either a standardized or differentiated product in a market with a barrier to entry.96
868444458opportunity costThe value of the sacrifice made to pursue a course of action97
868444459perfectly elasticIn this special case, the demand curve is horizontal, meaning consumers have an instantaneous and infinite response to a change in price98
868444460perfectly inelasticIn this special case, the demand curve is vertical and there is absolutely no response to a change in price.99
868444461positive externalityThe existence of spillover benefits upon third parties from the production of a good.100
868444462price ceilingA legal maximum price above which a product can't be sold101
868444463price discriminationThe sale of the same product to different groups of consumers at different prices102
868444464price elasticity of demandMeasures the sensitivity of consumers' quantity demanded for good X when the price of good X changes103
868444465price elasticity of supplyMeasures the sensitivity of producers' quantity supplied for good X when the price of good X changes.104
868444466price floorA legal minimum price below which the product cannot be sold105
868444467prisoner's dilemmaA game where the two rivals achieve a less desirable outcome because they are unable to coordinate their strategies106
868444468private goodsGoods that are both rival and excludable107
868444469producer surplusThe difference between the price received and the marginal cost of producing the good108
868444470productive effiencyProduction of maximum output for a given level of technology, into finished goods and services109
868444471production functionThe mechanism for combining production resources, with existing technology, into finished goods and services110
868444472production possibilitiesThe different quantities of goods that am economy can produce with a given amount of scarce resources111
868444473production possibility curveA graphical device that shows the combination of two goods that a nation can efficiently produce with available resources and technology112
868444474productivityThe quantity of output that can be produced per worker in a given amount of time113
868444475profit maximizing resource employmentThe firm hires a resource up to the point where MRP=MRC114
868444476progressive taxA tax where the proportion of income paid in taxes rises as income rises115
868444477proportional taxA tax where the proportion of income paid in taxes is constant no matter the level of income116
868444479protective tariffAn excise tax levied on an imported good that is produced in the domestic market so that it may be protected from foreign competition117
868444480public goodsGoods that are both nonrival and nonexcludable118
868444481quintilesWhen you rank household income from lowest to highest, each quintile represents 20 percent of all households119
868444482quotaA maximum amount of a good that can be imported into the domestic market120
868444483regressive taxA tax where the proportion of income paid in taxes decreases as income rises.121
868444484relative pricesThe price of one unit of good X measured not in currency, but in the number of units of good Y that must be sacrificed to acquire good X122
868444485renewable resourcesNatural resources that can replenish themselves if they are not over harvested123
868444486resourcesAlso called factors of production, these are commonly grouped into the four categories of labor, physical capital, land or natural resources, and entrepreneurial ability.124
868444487revenue tariffAn excise tax levied on goods that are not produced in the domestic market.125
868444488scarcityThe imbalance between limited productive resources and unlimited human wants126
868444489shortageA situation in which, at the market price, the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied127
868444490short runA period of time too short to change the size of the plant, but many other, more variable resources can be adjusted to meet demand.128
868444491specializationProduction of goods, or performance of tasks, based upon comparative advantage129
868444492spillover benefitsAdditional benefits to society, not captured by the market demand curve from the production of a good.130
868444493spillover costsAdditional benefits to society, not captured by the market demand curve from the production of a good131
868444494subsidyA government transfer, either to consumers or producers, on the consumption or production of a good132
868444495substitute goodsTwo goods are consumer substitutes if they provide essentially the same utility to the consumer133
868444496substitution effectThe change in quantity demanded resulting from a change in the price of good relative to the price of other goods134
868444497supply curveShows the quantity of a good supplied at all prices135
868444498supply scheduleA table showing quantity supplied for a good at various prices136
868444499surplusA situation in which, at the going market price, the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded137
868444500tax bracketA range of income on which a given marginal tax rate is applied138
868444501technologyA nation's knowledge of how to produce goods in the best possible way139
868444502total cost(TC)The sum of total fixed and total variable costs at any level level of output140
868444503total fixed costs(TFC)Production costs that do not vary with the level of output141
868444504total product(TPL) of laborThe total quantity of output produced for a given quantity of labor employed142
868444505total revenueThe price of a good multiplied by the quantity of that good sold143
868444506total revenue testTotal revenue rises with a price increase if demand is price inelastic and falls with a price increase if demand is price elastic144
868444507total utilityThe total happiness received from consumption of a number of units of a good145
868444508total variable costs(TVC)production costs that change with the level of output146
868444509total welfareThe sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus147
868444510trade-offsThe reality of scarce resources implies that individuals, firms, and governments are constantly faced with difficult choices that involve benefits and costs148
868444511unit elastic demandEd=1. The percentage change in price is equal to percentage change in quantity demanded.149
868444512utilityHappiness, or benefit or satisfaction, or enjoyment gained from consumption of goods or services150
868444513utility maximizing ruleThe consumer chooses amounts of goods X and Y, with their limited income, so that the marginal utility per dollar spent is equal for both goods.151
868444514utilsA hypothetical unit of measurement often used to quantify utility; aka "happy points"152
868444515variable inputsProduction inputs that the firm can adjust in the short run to meet changes in demand for the firm's output.153
868444516world priceThe global equilibrium price of a good when nations engage in trade154

Chapter 48 Vocabulary: Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling Flashcards

Review of vocabulary from chapter 48 of Eighth Edition AP Biology (Campbell, Reece)

Terms : Hide Images
86246004NeuronsNerve cells that transfer information within the body86246004
86246005Sensory NeuronsTransmit information from eyes and other sensors that detect external stimuli86246005
86246006InterneuronsMake only local connections86246006
86246007Motor NeuronsTransmit signals to muscle cells, causing them to contract86246007
86246008Central Nervous System (CNS)Includes the brain and a longitudinal nerve cord86246008
86246009Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)Carries information into and out of the CNS86246009
86246010Cell BodyContains most of a neuron's organelles and its nucleus86246010
86246011Dendriteshighly branched extensions that receive signals from other neurons86246011
86246012AxonA long extension that transmits signals to other cells86246012
86246013Axon HillockCone shaped region of an axon where it joins the cell body86246013
86246014SynapseThe end of an axon that transmits information86246014
86246015Synaptic TerminalThe part of each axon branch that forms a special connection86246015
86246016NeurotransmittersPass information from the transmitting neuron to the receiving cell86246016
86246017Presynaptic Cellthe transmitting neuron in a synapse86246017
86246018Postsynaptic CellThe neuron, muscle, or gland cell that receives the signal86246018
86246019Membrane PotentialA voltage across a cell's plasma membrane86246019
86246020Resting PotentialThe membrane potential of a neuron that is not sending signals86246020
86246021Ion ChannelsPores formed by clusters of specialized proteins that span the membrane86246021
86246022Equilibrium PotentialThe magnitude of the membrane voltage at equilibrium for a particular ion86246022
86246023Gated Ion ChannelsProtein channels that open or close in response to stimuli86246023
86246024HyperpolarizationThe increase in the magnitude of the membrane potential86246024
86246025DepolarizationReduction in the magnitude of the membrane potential- involves gated sodium channels86246025
86246026Voltage-Gated Ion ChannelsChannels that open or close in response to a change in the membrane potential86246026
86246027Action PotentialA massive change in membrane voltage86246027
86246028ThresholdThe particular value to which a depolarization increases, causing an action potential86246028
86246029Refractory PeriodThe "downtime" following an action potential86246029
86246030Myelin SheathA layer of electrical insulation that surrounds the axon86246030
86246031OligodendrocytesType of glia in the CNS86246031
86246032Schwann CellsType of glia in the PNS86246032
86246033Nodes of RanvierGaps in the Myelin sheath to which voltage-gated sodium channels are confined86246033
86246034Saltatory ConductionThe inward current produced during the rising phase of an action potential that travels from one node to the next86246034
86246035Synaptic VesiclesMembrane-bounded compartments in which synthesized neurotransmitters are kept86246035
86246036Synaptic CleftThe narrow gap that separates the presynaptic neuron from the postsynaptic cell86246036
86246037Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials (EPSPs)Depolarizations that bring the membrane potential back toward threshold86246037
86246038Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials (IPSPs)Hyperpolarizations that move the membrane potential away from threshold86246038
86246039Temporal SummationTwo or more presynaptic impulses arrive in rapid succession and impulses summate (two different times add up)86246039
86246040Spatial SummationIntegration by a postsynaptic neuron of inputs (EPSPs and IPSPs) from multiple sources.86246040
86246041AcetylcholineCommon vertebrate neurotransmitter that creates an EPSP (excitatory everywhere but the heart)86246041
86246042Biogenic AminesNeurotransmitters derived from amino acids86246042
86246043SerotoninA biogenic amine synthesized from tryptophan86246043
86246044DopamineA catecholamine that acts only as a neurotransmitter86246044
86246045Epinephrine and NorepinephrineBoth neurotransmitters and hormones86246045
86246046Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA)An inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain86246046
86246047GlutamateExcitatory- most common neurotransmitter in the brain86246047
86246048NeuropeptidesRelatively short chains of amino acids that act as neurotransmitters that act via signal transduction pathways86246048
86246049Substance PAn excitatory neurotransmitter that mediates perception of pain86246049
86246050EndorphinsNatural analgesics that decrease pain perception86246050

AP Biology Chapters 48 and 49 Vocabulary Campbell Reece Biology 8th Edition Flashcards

Vocabulary from chapters 48 and 49 of Campbell Reece Biology 8th Edition for AP Biology.

Terms : Hide Images
139338286Organization of Nervous SystemCNS and PNS; PNS breaks into Sensory and Motor; Motor Breaks into Somatic and Autonomic Nervous Systems; Autonomic breaks into Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Nervous systems1
139338287DendritesReceive nerve impulses toward the cell body2
139338288Inter-neuronsConnect sensory and motor neurons; located in CNS3
139338289Reflex ArcConsists of two or three neurons - a sensory and motor neuron, and sometimes an inter-neuron4
139338290Blood-brain barrierFormed by specialized glial cells and lines capillaries in the CNS which restricts the passage of harmful chemicals from the blood into the CNS5
139338291Refractory PeriodThe lag time in which a neuron cannot fire because the neuron must reach -70 millivolts6
139338292Nodes of RanvierGaps in myelin sheath in vertebrates7
139338293Salatory ConductionWhen an action potential leaps from node to node which speeds up nerve impulses8
139338294Excitatory Postsynaptic Potential (EPSP)When NA+ gates open and the membranes moves toward the threshold potential. An action potential is generated if this happens9
139338295Inhibitory Postsynaptic PotentialWhen K+ gates open and the membrane becomes more polarized. Generating an action potential in this cell is more difficult10
139338296AcetycholineFound at neuromuscular junctions; stimulates muscles to contract11
139338297Neuromuscular JunctionsGaps between motor neurons and muscle cells12
139338298Epinephrine, Norepinephrine, Dopamine, SerotoninDerived from amino acids and are secreted into synapses between neurons13
139338299Gamma Aminobutyric Acid (GABA)An inhibitory neurotransmitter among neurons in the brain14

AP Enviromental Science Flash Cards Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
293457362Ionizing radiation:enough energy to knock electrons from atoms forming ions, capable of causing cancer (ex gamma-Xrays-UV)1
293457363High Quality Energy:organized & concentrated, can perform useful work (ex fossil fuel & nuclear)2
293457364Low Quality Energy:disorganized, dispersed (heat in ocean or air wind, solar)3
293457365First Law of Thermodynamics:energy is neither created nor destroyed, but may be converted from one form to another4
293457366Second Law of Thermodynamics:when energy is changed from one form to another, some useful energy is always degraded into lower quality energy (usually heat)5
293466655Natural radioactive decay:unstable radioisotopes decay releasing gamma rays, alpha & beta particles6
293466656Half life:the time it takes for 1/2 the mass of a radioisotope to decay7
293466657Estimate of how long a radioactive isotope must be stored until it decays to a safe level:approximately 10 half-lives8
293466658Nuclear Fission:nuclei of isotopes split apart when struck by neutrons9
293466659Nuclear Fusion:2 isotopes of light elements (H) forced together at high temperatures till they fuse to form a heavier nucleus. Expensive, break even point not reached yet10
293466660Ore:a rock that contains a large enough concentration of a mineral making it profitable to mine11
293466661Mineral Reserve:identified deposits currently profitable to extract12
293466662Best solution to Energy shortage:conservation and increase efficiency13
293466663Surface mining:cheaper & can remove more mineral, less hazardous to workers14
293466664Humus:organic, dark material remaining after decomposition by microorganisms15
293466665Leaching:: removal of dissolved materials from soil by water moving downwards16
293466666Illuviation:deposit of leached material in lower soil layers (B)17
293466667Loam:perfect agricultural soil with equal portions of sand, silt, clay18
293466668Solutions to soil problems:conservation tillage, crop rotation, contour plowing, organic fertilizers19
293466669Parts of the hydrologic cycle:evaporation, transpiration, runoff, condensation, precipitation, infiltration20
293466670Aquifer:any water bearing layer in the ground21
293466671Cone of depression:lowering of the water table around a pumping well22
293466672Salt water intrusion:near the coast, overpumping of groundwater causes salty water to move into the aquifer23
293466673ENSO:El Nino Southern Oscillation, see-sawing of air pressure over the S. Pacific24
293466674During an El Nino year:trade winds weaken & warm water sloshed back to SA. During a Non El Nino year: Easterly trade winds and ocean currents pool warm water in the western Pacific, allowing upwelling of nutrient rich water off the West coast of South America25
293487758Effects of El Nino:welling decreases disrupting food chains, N US has mild winters, SW US has increased rainfall, less Atlantic Hurricanes26
293487759Nitrogen fixing:because atmospheric Nitrogen cannot be used directly by plants it must first be converted into ammonia by bacteria27
293487760Ammonification:decomposers covert organic waste into ammonia28
293487761Nitrification:ammonia is converted to nitrate ions (NO-3)29
293487762Assimilation:inorganic N is converted into organic molecules such as DNA/amino acids & proteins30
293487763Denitrification:bacteria convert ammonia back into Nitrogen.31
293487764Phosphorus does not circulate as easily as N because:it does not exist as a gas, but is released by weathering of phosphate rocks32
293487765Because soils contain very little phosphorus:it is a major limiting factor for plant growth33
293487766Excess phosphorus is added to aquatic ecosystems by:runoff of animal wastes, fertilizer discharge of sewage34
293487767Photosynthesis:plants convert atmospheric C (CO2) into complex carbohydrates (glucose C6H12O6).35
293487768Aerobic respiration:oxygen consuming producers, consumers & decomposers break down complex organic compounds & convert C back into CO236
293487769Largest reservoirs of C:carbonate rocks first, oceans second37
293487770Biotic/abiotic:living & nonliving components of an ecosystem38
293487771Producer/Autotroph:photosynthetic life39
293487772Major trophic levels:producers-primary consumer-secondary consumer-tertiary consumer40
293487773Energy flow in food webs:only 10% of the usable energy is transferred41
293487774Why is only 10% transferred:usable energy lost as heat (2nd law), not all biomass is digested & absorbed, predators expend energy to catch prey42
293487775Primary succession:development of communities in a lifeless area not previously inhabited by life (lava)43
293487776Secondary succession:life progresses where soil remains (clear cut forest)44
293487777Mutualism:symbiotic relationship where both partners benefit45
293487778Commensalism:symbiotic relationship where one partner benefits & the other is unaffected46
293487779Parasitism:relationship in which one partner obtains nutrients at the expense of the host47
293487780Biome:large distinct terrestrial region having similar climate, soil, plants & animals48
293487781Carrying capacity:the number of individuals that can be sustained in an area.49
293487782R strategist:reproduce early, many small unprotected offspring50
293487783K strategist:reproduce late, few, cared for offspring51
293487784. Natural selection:organisms that possess favorable adaptations pass them onto the next generation52
293690808Thomas Malthus:said human population cannot continue to increase -->consequences will be war, famine & disease53
293690809Doubling time:rule of 70 ---> 70 divided by the percent growth rate54
293690810Preindustrial stage:birth & death rates high, population grows slowly, infant mortality high55
293690811Transitional stage:death rate lower, better health care, population grows fast56
293690812Industrial stage:decline in birth rate, population growth slows57
293690813Postindustrial stage:low birth & death rates58
293690814Most important thing affecting population growth:low status of women59
293690815Ways to decrease birth rate:family planning, contraception, economic rewards & penalties60
293690816Salinization of soil:in arid regions, water evaporates leaving salts behind61
293690817Ways to conserve water:(agriculture, drip/trickle irrigation)(industry, recyling)(home, use gray water, repair leaks, low flow fixtures)62
293690818Point vs non point sources:(Point, from specific location such as pipe)(Non-point, from over an area such as runoff)63
293690819BOD:biological oxygen demand, amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic decomposers to break down organic materials64
293690820Eutrophication:rapid algal growth caused by an excess of N & P65
293690821Hypoxia:when aquatic plants die, the BOD rises as aerobic decomposers break down the plants, the DO drops & the water cannot support life66
293690822Minamata Disease:mental impairments caused by mercury67
293690823Primary air pollutants:produced by humans & nature (CO, CO2, SO2, NO, hydrocarbons, particulates)68
293690824Secondary pollutants:formed by reaction of primary pollutants69
293690825Particulate matter (source, effect, reduction):(burning fossil fuels & car exhaust) (reduces visibility & respiratory irritation) (filtering, electrostatic precipitators, alternative energy)70
293690826Nitrogen Oxides:(Source: auto exhaust) (Effects: acidification of lakes, respiratory irritation, leads to smog & ozone) (Equation for acid formation: NO + O2 = NO2 + H2O = HNO3) (Reduction: catalytic converter)71
293690827Sulfur oxides:(Source: coal burning) (Effects: acid deposition, respiratory irritation, damages plants) (Equation for acid formation: SO2 + O2 = SO3 + H2O = H2SO4) (Reduction: scrubbers, burn low sulfur fuel)72
293690828Carbon oxides:(Source: auto exhaust, incomplete combustion) (Effects: CO binds to hemoglobin reducing bloods ability to carry O, CO2 contributes to global warming) (Reduction: catalytic converter, emission testing, oxygenated fuel, mass transit)73
293690829Ozone:(Formation: secondary pollutant, NO2+UV=NO+O O+O2=O3, with VOC's) (Effects: respiratory irritant, plant damage) (Reduction: reduce NO emissions & VOCs)74
293690830Industrial smog:found in cities that burn large amounts of coal75
293690831Photochemical smog:formed by chemical reactions involving sunlight76
293690832Acid deposition:caused by sulfuric and nitric acids resulting in lowered pH of surface waters77
293690833Greenhouse gases:(Examples: H2O, CO2, O3, methane (CH4), CFC's) (EFFECT: they trap outgoing infrared (heat) energy causing earth to warm 84. Effects of global warming: rising sea level (thermal expansion), extreme weather, droughts (famine), and extinctions78

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