| classical conditioning |
the learning which results from the association of stimuli with reflex responses. For example, punitive authority figures experienced early on in life may reflexively elicit feelings of anxiety which become
Ãâó: www.oup.com/uk/booksites/content/0199253978/studen...
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| clastogenic |
This is the adjective applied to any substance or process causing chromosomal breaks.
Ãâó: www.bio.hw.ac.uk/edintox/glossall.htm
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| clay |
natural earth material with various applications in sculpture: a material that can be manipulated or moulded by hand, when moist. It can be dried in the air or fired in a kiln to make it a permanent relatively nonporous material: used for the direct process of modelling: clay models are used for the indirect process of casting. See also Modelling Clay
Ãâó: collections.ic.gc.ca/sculpture/text/glossary.html
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| clairvoyance |
A faculty of seeing with the inner eye or spiritual sight. As now used, it is a loose and flippant term, embracing under its meaning both a happy guess due to natural shrewdness or intuition, and also that faculty which was so remarkably exercised by Jacob Boehme and Swedenborg. Yet even these two great seers, since they could never rise superior to the general spirit of the Jewish Bible and Sectarian teachings, have sadly confused what they saw, and fallen far short of true clairvoyance.
Ãâó: www.theosociety.org/pasadena/key/key-glos.htm
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| classification |
Process through which the educational, vocational, treatment, and security needs of an offender are determined.
Ãâó: www.dphilpotlaw.com/html/glossary.html
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