- human diploid cell vaccine
rabies: …and most effective vaccines are human diploid cell vaccine (HDCV), purified chick embryo cell culture (PCEC), and rabies vaccine adsorbed (RVA). With older vaccines, at least 16 injections were required, whereas with HDCV, PCEC, or RVA, 5 are usually sufficient. Persons at risk of rabies by virtue of occupation (e.g.,…
- human disease
human disease, an impairment of the normal state of a human being that interrupts or modifies its vital functions. Before human disease can be discussed, the meanings of the terms health, physical fitness, illness, and disease must be considered. Health could be defined theoretically in terms of
- Human Ecology (book by Hawley)
social structure: Later trends in social structure theory: … developed by Amos Hawley in Human Ecology (1986). For Hawley, the explanatory variables are the makeup of the population, the external environment, the complex of organizations, and technology. Research has revealed that these variables account for differences in the spatial characteristics, rhythm of activities, mobility patterns, and external relations between…
- human ecology (sociology)
human ecology, man’s collective interaction with his environment. Influenced by the work of biologists on the interaction of organisms within their environments, social scientists undertook to study human groups in a similar way. Thus, ecology in the social sciences is the study of the ways in
- human endogenous retrovirus (virus group)
retrovirus: Human ERVs (HERVs) have become distributed within human DNA over the course of evolution. They are passed from one generation to the next and make up an estimated 1 to nearly 5 percent of the human genome. HERVs are suspected of having influenced the evolution…
- human engineering (bioengineering)
human-factors engineering, science dealing with the application of information on physical and psychological characteristics to the design of devices and systems for human use. The term human-factors engineering is used to designate equally a body of knowledge, a process, and a profession. As a
- human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (pathology)
breast cancer: Causes and symptoms: Specific mutations in genes called HER2, BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2, and p53 have been linked to breast cancer; these mutations may be inherited or acquired. Mutations that are inherited often substantially increase a person’s risk for developing breast cancer. For example, whereas some 12 percent of women in the general population…
- human equality (human rights)
equality, Generally, an ideal of uniformity in treatment or status by those in a position to affect either. Acknowledgment of the right to equality often must be coerced from the advantaged by the disadvantaged. Equality of opportunity was the founding creed of U.S. society, but equality among all
- human evolution
human evolution, the process by which human beings developed on Earth from now-extinct primates. Viewed zoologically, we humans are Homo sapiens, a culture-bearing upright-walking species that lives on the ground and very likely first evolved in Africa about 315,000 years ago. We are now the only
- human exposure/rodent potency index (pathology)
Bruce Ames: The Ames test: Known as the HERP (human exposure/rodent potency) index, the system rates carcinogenesis according to the degree to which a chemical induces tumour growth in experimental animals. Ames considered HERP to be “an index of possible hazard.” Drawing on HERP data, he and colleagues wrote in a letter to…
- human factor IX (bioengineering)
pharming: …gene encodes a substance called human factor IX, a clotting factor that occurs naturally in most people but that is absent in people with hemophilia, who require replacement therapy with a therapeutic form of the substance. Polly, along with two other sheep engineered to produce human factor IX that also…
- Human Factor, The (film by Preminger [1979])
Otto Preminger: Later films: Preminger’s last picture was The Human Factor (1979), an adaptation of Graham Greene’s espionage novel starring Derek Jacobi and Nicol Williamson.
- Human Factor, The (novel by Greene)
Otto Preminger: Later films: …adaptation of Graham Greene’s espionage novel starring Derek Jacobi and Nicol Williamson.
- human fecundity
myth: Hunting and agricultural deities: …marriage in order to gain fecundity for humans (this happens in ancient Mesopotamian religions, for instance).
- human fertility (human reproduction)
fertility, ability of an individual or couple to reproduce through normal sexual activity. About 90 percent of healthy, fertile women are able to conceive within one year if they have intercourse regularly without contraception. Normal fertility requires the production of enough healthy sperm by
- human flea (insect)
flea: Importance: …flea (Ctenocephalides felis), the so-called human flea (Pulex irritans), the dog flea (Ctenocephalides canis), the sticktight flea (Echidnophaga gallinacea), and the jigger, or chigoe, flea (Tunga penetrans). Poultry may be parasitized by the European chicken flea (Ceratophyllus gallinae) and, in the United States, by the
- Human Freedom and the Self (paper by Chisholm)
free will and moral responsibility: Libertarianism: …in his seminal paper “Human Freedom and the Self” (1964), these theories hold that free actions are caused by agents themselves rather than by some prior event or state of affairs. Although Chisholm’s theory preserves the intuition that the ultimate origin of an action—and thus the ultimate moral responsibility…
- human genome
human genome, all of the approximately three billion base pairs of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) that make up the entire set of chromosomes of the human organism. The human genome includes the coding regions of DNA, which encode all the genes (between 20,000 and 25,000) of the human organism, as well
- Human Genome Project (scientific project)
Human Genome Project (HGP), an international collaboration that successfully determined, stored, and rendered publicly available the sequences of almost all the genetic content of the chromosomes of the human organism, otherwise known as the human genome. The Human Genome Project (HGP), which
- human geography
geography: Human geography: Since 1945 human geography has contained five main divisions. The first four—economic, social, cultural, and political—reflect both the main areas of contemporary life and the social science disciplines with which geographers interact (i.e., economics, sociology, anthropology, and political science and
- human growth hormone
growth hormone (GH), peptide hormone secreted by the anterior lobe of the pituitary gland. It stimulates the growth of essentially all tissues of the body, including bone. GH is synthesized and secreted by anterior pituitary cells called somatotrophs, which release between one and two milligrams of
- Human Highlight Film, the (American basketball player)
Atlanta Hawks: …post-draft trade that brought rookie Dominique Wilkins into the fold. Wilkins—known as “the Human Highlight Film” because of his impressively acrobatic slam dunks—led the Hawks to four consecutive 50-win seasons in the 1980s and made his mark as one of the most prolific scorers in NBA history. His individual accomplishments…
- human immune serum globulin (biochemistry)
infectious disease: HISG: Human immune serum globulin (HISG) is prepared from human serum. Special treatment of the serum removes various undesirable proteins and infectious viruses, thus providing a safe product for intramuscular injection. HISG is used for the treatment of antibody deficiency conditions and for the prevention…
- human immunodeficiency virus (virus)
HIV, retrovirus that attacks and gradually destroys the immune system, leaving the host unprotected against infection. HIV is classified as a lentivirus (meaning “slow virus”). Persons who are infected with HIV often die from secondary infections or cancer. AIDS is the final stage of HIV infection.
- human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (infectious agent)
AIDS: The origin of HIV: …strain of HIV, known as HIV-1 group M, have indicated that the virus emerged between 1884 and 1924 in central and western Africa. Researchers estimate that that strain of the virus began spreading throughout those areas in the late 1950s. Later, in the mid-1960s, an evolved strain called HIV-1 group…
- human immunodeficiency virus type 2
AIDS: Groups and subtypes of HIV: HIV-2 is divided into groups A through E, with subtypes A and B being the most relevant to human infection. HIV-2, which is found primarily in western Africa, can cause AIDS, but it does so more slowly than HIV-1. There is some evidence that HIV-2…
- human intelligence (military intelligence)
intelligence: Sources of intelligence: …eavesdropping and code breaking; and human intelligence, which involves the secret agent working at the classic spy trade. Broadly speaking, the relative value of these sources is reflected in the order in which they are listed above. A photograph, for example, constitutes hard (i.e., reliable) intelligence, whereas the report of…
- Human Knowledge: Its Scope and Limits (work by Russell)
Bertrand Russell: …last major contribution to philosophy, Human Knowledge: Its Scope and Limits (1948). During this period Russell, for once in his life, found favour with the authorities, and he received many official tributes, including the Order of Merit in 1949 and the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950. His private life,…
- Human League, the (British music group)
Jam and Lewis: …to other acts, including Britain’s Human League.
- human leukocyte antigen (biochemistry)
human leukocyte antigen (HLA), any of the numerous antigens (substances capable of stimulating an immune response) involved in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) in humans. The HLA genes encode the cell-surface proteins that are part of the MHC. HLA antigens are programmed by a highly
- human leukocyte group A antigen (biochemistry)
human leukocyte antigen (HLA), any of the numerous antigens (substances capable of stimulating an immune response) involved in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) in humans. The HLA genes encode the cell-surface proteins that are part of the MHC. HLA antigens are programmed by a highly
- human louse (insect)
human louse, (Pediculus humanus), a common species of sucking louse in the family Pediculidae (suborder Anoplura, order Phthiraptera) that is found wherever human beings live, feeds on blood, and can be an important carrier of epidemic typhus and other louse-borne human diseases such as trench
- human microbiome
human microbiome, the full array of microorganisms (the microbiota) that live on and in humans and, more specifically, the collection of microbial genomes that contribute to the broader genetic portrait, or metagenome, of a human. The genomes that constitute the human microbiome represent a
- Human Microbiome Project (microbiology and genetics)
human microbiome: Discovery of the human microbiome: …after 2007, the year the Human Microbiome Project (HMP)—a five-year-long international effort to characterize the microbial communities found in the human body and to identify each microorganism’s role in health and disease—was launched. The project capitalized on the decreasing cost of whole genome sequencing technology, which allows organisms to be…
- human migration
human migration, the permanent change of residence by an individual or group; it excludes such movements as nomadism, migrant labour, commuting, and tourism, all of which are transitory in nature. A brief treatment of human migration follows. For further discussion, see population: Migration.
- Human Mind, The (work by Menninger)
Menninger family: …in Karl Menninger’s first book, The Human Mind (1930), which became a best seller. In 1931 the Menninger Sanitarium became the first institution to gain approval as a training facility for nurses specializing in psychiatric care, and in 1933 it opened a neuropsychiatric residency program for physicians.
- human mortality (demography)
mortality, in demographic usage, the frequency of death in a population. In general, the risk of death at any given age is less for females than for males, except during the childbearing years (in economically developed societies females have a lower mortality even during those years). The risk of
- Human Nature (film by Gondry [2001])
Tim Robbins: … (2000), and Michel Gondry’s satiric Human Nature (2001). Robbins’s portrayal of a man broken by a devastating event in his past and falsely accused of having committed a horrific crime in the present in Clint Eastwood’s Mystic River (2003) earned him both a Golden Globe and an Academy Award for…
- human nature
human nature, fundamental dispositions and traits of humans. Theories about the nature of humankind form a part of every culture. In the West, one traditional question centred on whether humans are naturally selfish and competitive (see Thomas Hobbes; John Locke) or social and altruistic (see Karl
- Human Nature and the Social Order (work by Thorndike)
Edward L. Thorndike: …Interests, and Attitudes (1935) and Human Nature and the Social Order (1940).
- Human Nature and the Social Order (work by Cooley)
social group: …groups, set forth in his Human Nature and the Social Order (1902). “Primary group” refers to those personal relations that are direct, face-to-face, relatively permanent, and intimate, such as the relations in a family, a group of close friends, and the like. “Secondary group” (an expression that Cooley himself did…
- Human Nature in Politics (work by Wallas)
political science: Developments in the United States: …Wallas (1858–1932) had argued in Human Nature in Politics that a new political science should favour the quantification of psychological elements (human nature), including nonrational and subconscious inferences, a view similarly expressed in Public Opinion (1922) by the American journalist and political scientist Walter Lippmann (1889–1974).
- Human Origins, Institute of (American research organization)
Donald Johanson: He founded the Institute of Human Origins (IHO) in 1981 in Berkeley, California, where he served as the IHO’s director and as a research associate in the anthropology department at the University of California. After moving the institute to Arizona State University in Tempe in 1997, he served…
- human paleontology
paleoanthropology, interdisciplinary branch of anthropology concerned with the origins and development of early humans. Fossils are assessed by the techniques of physical anthropology, comparative anatomy, and the theory of evolution. Artifacts, such as bone and stone tools, are identified and
- human papillomavirus (infectious agent)
human papillomavirus (HPV), any of a subgroup of viruses belonging to the family Papovaviridae that infect humans, causing warts (papillomas) and other benign tumours as well as cancers of the genital tract, especially of the uterine cervix in women. They are small polygonal viruses containing
- human papillomavirus quadrivalent vaccine, recombinant (vaccine)
Gardasil, trade name of human papillomavirus (HPV) quadrivalent (types 6, 11, 16, and 18) vaccine, recombinant, the first HPV vaccine used primarily to prevent cervical cancer in women. Developed by Scottish-born Australian immunologist Ian Frazer, the vaccine works against four types of HPV—6, 11,
- human placental lactogen (hormone)
hormone: Progestins: …human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) and human placental lactogen (HPL). HCG, like the pituitary gonadotropins, is a glycoprotein, with a molecular weight of 25,000 to 30,000. HPL is a protein, with a molecular weight variously estimated at about 19,000 or 30,000. One or perhaps both of these hormones, which become detectable…
- Human Poems (work by Vallejo)
César Vallejo: …of poetry, Poemas humanos (1939; Human Poems), which presents an apocalyptic vision of an industrial society in crisis and unable to advance beyond a state of mass evil, alienation, and despair.
- human race
human being, a culture-bearing primate classified in the genus Homo, especially the species H. sapiens. Human beings are anatomically similar and related to the great apes but are distinguished by a more highly developed brain and a resultant capacity for articulate speech and abstract reasoning.
- human relations (personnel administration)
public administration: Responses to incrementalism: …been an increasing emphasis on human relations. This originated in the 1930s when what became known as the Hawthorne research, involving the workers and management of an industrial plant near Chicago, brought out the importance to productivity of social or informal organization, good communications, individual and group behaviour, and attitudes…
- Human Relations Area Files (social sciences)
cultural anthropology: The new research and fieldwork: …arranged in what are called Human Relations Area Files. More and more typologies are being constructed, typologies based on political systems or technology, or systems of kinship. In addition, new readings of the material are being attempted in the hope that mathematical formulations or models might be obtained. Also emerging…
- human resources management (business)
human resources management, the management of the people in working organizations. It is also frequently called personnel management, industrial relations, employee relations, manpower management, and personnel administration. It represents a major subcategory of general management, focusing
- human rights
human rights, rights that belong to an individual or group of individuals simply for being human, or as a consequence of inherent human vulnerability, or because they are requisite to the possibility of a just society. Whatever their theoretical justification, human rights refer to a wide continuum
- Human Rights Act 1998 (United Kingdom)
Human Rights Act 1998, legislation that defines the fundamental rights and freedoms to which everyone in the United Kingdom is entitled. Under the act persons in the United Kingdom are able to pursue cases relating to their human rights in U.K. courts. Before the implementation of the Human Rights
- Human Rights and Biomedicine, Convention on (1997)
health law: Patients’ rights: …the 1997 Council of Europe Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine. The general purpose of the convention is to “protect the dignity and identity of all human beings and guarantee everyone, without discrimination, respect for their integrity and other rights and fundamental freedoms with regard to the applications of biology…
- Human Rights Campaign (American organization)
Human Rights Campaign (HRC), U.S. political advocacy organization promoting equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, and queer (LGBTQ) individuals and communities. The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) was founded in 1980 by American gay rights activist Steve Endean as the Human Rights Campaign
- Human Rights Council (UN)
human rights: The UN Commission on Human Rights (1946–2006) and the UN Human Rights Council: Between 1946 and 2006 the UN Commission on Human Rights, created as a subsidiary body of ECOSOC, served as the UN’s central policy organ in the human rights field. For the first 20…
- Human Rights Day (United Nations)
Human Rights Day, international day of observance, held annually on December 10, in commemoration of the anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights plays a prominent role in coordinating
- Human Rights First (nongovernmental organization)
Human Rights First (HRF), nongovernmental organization founded in New York City in 1978 to defend human rights worldwide. HRF aims to promote laws and policies that protect the universal freedoms of all individuals—regardless of political, economic, or religious affiliation. The organization is
- Human Rights Protection Party (political party, Samoa)
Samoa: Political process: The Human Rights Protection Party (HRPP) dominated politics throughout most of Samoa’s independent history. The main opposition throughout the 1990s and early 2000s was the Samoan National Development Party (SNDP) and its successor, the Samoan Democratic United Party (SDUP). The most significant challenge to the HRPP…
- Human Rights Watch (international organization)
Human Rights Watch, international nongovernmental organization that investigates and documents human rights violations and advocates for policies to prevent such abuses. Founded in 1978 as Helsinki Watch to monitor the Soviet Union’s adherence to the Helsinki Accords, the group subsequently
- Human Rights, Commission on (UN)
human rights: The UN Commission on Human Rights (1946–2006) and the UN Human Rights Council: Between 1946 and 2006 the UN Commission on Human Rights, created as a subsidiary body of ECOSOC, served as the UN’s central policy organ in the human rights field. For the first 20…
- Human Rights, Universal Declaration of (1948)
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), foundational document of international human rights law. It has been referred to as humanity’s Magna Carta by Eleanor Roosevelt, who chaired the United Nations (UN) Commission on Human Rights that was responsible for the drafting of the document. After
- human sacrifice
human sacrifice, the offering of the life of a human being to a deity. The occurrence of human sacrifice can usually be related to the recognition of human blood as the sacred life force. Bloodless forms of killing, however, such as strangulation and drowning, have been used in some cultures. The
- Human Schemata (work by Liu Zongzhou)
Confucianism: Confucian learning in Jin, Yuan, and Ming: His Human Schemata (Renpu) offered a rigorous phenomenological description of human mistakes as a corrective to Wang Yangming’s moral optimism. Liu’s student Huang Zongxi (1610–95) compiled a comprehensive biographical history of Ming Confucians based on Liu’s writings. One of Huang’s contemporaries, Gu Yanwu (1613–82), was also…
- human security (political science)
human security, approach to national and international security that gives primacy to human beings and their complex social and economic interactions. The concept of human security represents a departure from orthodox security studies, which focus on the security of the state. The subjects of the
- Human Sexual Response (work by Masters and Johnson)
Masters and Johnson: …were summarized in the book Human Sexual Response (1966), which was considered by many to be the first comprehensive study of the physiology and anatomy of human sexual activity under laboratory conditions—much of it the result of actual research observation of individuals engaged in sexually stimulating activity alone or with…
- Human Side of Enterprise, The (work by McGregor)
industrial relations: Participative management: …management theorist Douglas McGregor in The Human Side of Enterprise (1960). In this book McGregor challenged many of the prevailing managerial assumptions about worker motivation and behaviour. According to the prevailing view, which he labeled “Theory X,” workers were seen as uninformed, lazy, and untrustworthy members of the organization. Management’s…
- Human Stain, The (novel by Roth)
Philip Roth: …for Operation Shylock (1993) and The Human Stain. Everyman also marked the start of a period during which Roth produced relatively brief novels, all focused on issues of mortality. Exit Ghost (2007) revisits Zuckerman, who has been reawoken to life’s possibilities after more than a decade of self-imposed exile in…
- Human Stain, The (film by Benton [2003])
Anthony Hopkins: Hannibal Lecter, Richard M. Nixon, and John Quincy Adams: …adaptation of Philip Roth’s novel The Human Stain. In 2005 he starred as a brilliant mathematician afflicted with mental illness in Proof and as a New Zealand motorcycle racer in The World’s Fastest Indian. After enlivening the legal thriller Fracture (2007), Hopkins appeared in several big-budget movies rooted in mythology,
- human T-cell lymphotropic virus, type 1 (infectious agent)
human disease: Viruses: …with an RNA virus, the human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV-1). While much experimental and clinical evidence supports the carcinogenic role of the above-mentioned viruses in humans, additional research suggests that other factors also may be required. Observations that support the multifactorial nature of viral carcinogenesis include the continuous but not…
- human T-cell lymphotropic virus, type III (infectious agent)
AIDS: The origin of HIV: …strain of HIV, known as HIV-1 group M, have indicated that the virus emerged between 1884 and 1924 in central and western Africa. Researchers estimate that that strain of the virus began spreading throughout those areas in the late 1950s. Later, in the mid-1960s, an evolved strain called HIV-1 group…
- Human Torch (comic-book character)
Human Torch, fictional superhero. Human Torch was one of the “big three” heroes of Marvel (then known as Timely) Comics, along with Captain America and the Sub-Mariner—and one of the most popular Marvel superheroes of the 1940s. Like the Sub-Mariner, he was first seen on the newsstands in Marvel
- Human Touch (album by Springsteen)
Bruce Springsteen: On his own: …of Love (1987) and including Human Touch and Lucky Town (released simultaneously in 1992). The songs on those albums are intensely personal reflections on intimate relationships. In general, they have not been as popular.
- human trafficking (crime)
human trafficking, form of modern-day slavery involving the illegal transport of individuals by force or deception for the purpose of labour, sexual exploitation, or activities in which others benefit financially. Human trafficking is a global problem affecting people of all ages. It is estimated
- Human Voice, The (film by Almodóvar [2020])
Tilda Swinton: …lone role in Pedro Almodóvar’s The Human Voice (2020), an adaptation of Jean Cocteau’s play. The short movie premiered at the 2020 Venice Film Festival, where Swinton also received a lifetime achievement award. In Memoria (2021) she was cast as a woman who hears unexplained noises. In 2022 she appeared…
- Human Windmill, the (American boxer)
Harry Greb was an American professional boxer who was one of the cleverest and most colourful performers in the ring. His ring name refers to his nonstop punching style of boxing. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Greb trained very little and was legendary for his carousing and
- Human, All-Too-Human (work by Nietzsche)
Friedrich Nietzsche: Basel years (1869–79): …his aphoristic Menschliches, Allzumenschliches (Human, All-Too-Human) appeared. Because his health deteriorated steadily, he resigned his professorial chair on June 14, 1879, and was granted a pension of 3,000 Swiss francs per year for six years.
- human-caused climate change
climate change: Human activities: …to the climatic impact of human activities. Most of this attention has focused on carbon dioxide emission via fossil-fuel combustion and deforestation. Human activities also yield releases of other greenhouse gases, such as methane (from rice cultivation, livestock, landfills, and other sources) and chlorofluorocarbons (from
- human-computer interaction (society and technology)
computer science: Human-computer interaction: ) Human-computer interaction (HCI) is concerned with designing effective interaction between users and computers and the construction of interfaces that support this interaction. HCI occurs at an interface that includes both software and hardware. User interface design impacts the life cycle of software, so…
- human-computer interface (computing)
human-machine interface, means by which humans and computers communicate with each other. The human-machine interface includes the hardware and software that is used to translate user (i.e., human) input into commands and to present results to the user. Usability of the human-machine interface is
- human-factors engineering (bioengineering)
human-factors engineering, science dealing with the application of information on physical and psychological characteristics to the design of devices and systems for human use. The term human-factors engineering is used to designate equally a body of knowledge, a process, and a profession. As a
- human-factors psychology (bioengineering)
human-factors engineering, science dealing with the application of information on physical and psychological characteristics to the design of devices and systems for human use. The term human-factors engineering is used to designate equally a body of knowledge, a process, and a profession. As a
- human-induced climate change
climate change: Human activities: …to the climatic impact of human activities. Most of this attention has focused on carbon dioxide emission via fossil-fuel combustion and deforestation. Human activities also yield releases of other greenhouse gases, such as methane (from rice cultivation, livestock, landfills, and other sources) and chlorofluorocarbons (from
- human-induced extinction (ecology)
extinction: Human-induced extinctions: Many species have become extinct because of hunting and overharvesting, the conversion of wetlands and forests to croplands and urban areas, pollution, the introduction of invasive species, and other forms of human-caused destruction of their natural
- human-machine interaction (society and technology)
computer science: Human-computer interaction: ) Human-computer interaction (HCI) is concerned with designing effective interaction between users and computers and the construction of interfaces that support this interaction. HCI occurs at an interface that includes both software and hardware. User interface design impacts the life cycle of software, so…
- human-machine interface (computing)
human-machine interface, means by which humans and computers communicate with each other. The human-machine interface includes the hardware and software that is used to translate user (i.e., human) input into commands and to present results to the user. Usability of the human-machine interface is
- human-machine model (ergonomics)
human-factors engineering: The human-machine model: Human-factors engineers regard humans as an element in systems, and a human-machine model is the usual way of representing that relationship. The simplest model of a human-machine unit consists of an individual operator working with a single machine. In any machine system the…
- human-powered aircraft
airplane: Heavier-than-air: …first achieved fame with the human-powered Gossamer Condor, which navigated a short course in 1977. Two of his later designs, the human-powered Gossamer Albatross and the solar-powered Solar Challenger, successfully crossed the English Channel. Others in the field have carried on MacCready’s work, and a human-powered helicopter has been flown.…
- human-resource capitalism
human capital: Human-resource capitalism: The concept of human capital stems from the economic model of human-resource capitalism, which emphasizes the relationship between improved productivity or performance and the need for continuous and long-term investments in the development of human resources. This model can be applied on a…
- human-welfare ecology (environmentalism)
environmentalism: Emancipatory environmentalism: One form of emancipatory environmentalism, human-welfare ecology—which aims to enhance human life by creating a safe and clean environment—was part of a broader concern with distributive justice and reflected the tendency, later characterized as “postmaterialist,” of citizens in advanced industrial societies to place more importance on “quality-of-life” issues than on…
- Humana Building (building, Louisville, Kentucky, United States)
Michael Graves: …Oregon (completed 1982), and the Humana Building (or Humana Tower) in Louisville, Kentucky (1985). The Portland Building was the epitome of postmodernist architecture that, with its colourful structure and facades decorated with a stylized garland, defied the austere static steel and glass box of the Modernist sensibilities. Its classical tripartite…
- Humanae vitae (encyclical by Paul VI)
St. John Paul II: Decision to join the priesthood: …work appears to have influenced Humanae vitae (1968; “Of Human Life”), Paul VI’s encyclical rejecting artificial contraception, which became one of the church’s most ignored teachings. Some bishops also disagreed with it, saying privately that, on this issue, Wojtyła may have made basic theological mistakes.
- Humane Society of the United States (American organization)
Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), nonprofit animal-welfare and animal rights advocacy group founded in 1954. The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) is one of the largest such organizations in the world, with more than 10 million members and regional offices and field
- Humani generis (work by Pius XII)
Pius XII: After World War II: …French theology in his encyclical Humani generis (“Of the Human Race”) and supported traditional teachings regarding marital relations and birth control.
- Humani generis unitas (work by Pius XII)
Pius XII: Early pontificate: Humani generis unitas (“The Unity of the Human Race”), Pius XI’s planned encyclical against racism and anti-Semitism, was returned to its authors by the new pope. Trained as a diplomat, Pius XII followed the cautious course paved by Leo XIII and Benedict XV rather than…
- humanism
humanism, system of education and mode of inquiry that originated in northern Italy during the 13th and 14th centuries and later spread through continental Europe and England. The term is alternatively applied to a variety of Western beliefs, methods, and philosophies that place central emphasis on
- Humanisme et terreur (work by Merleau-Ponty)
Maurice Merleau-Ponty: …a group of Marxist essays, Humanisme et terreur (“Humanism and Terror”), the most sophisticated defense of Soviet communism in the late 1940s. He argued for suspended judgment of Soviet terrorism and attacked what he regarded as Western hypocrisy. The Korean War disillusioned Merleau-Ponty and he broke with Sartre, who defended…
- humanistic education
education: Traditional movements: …essentialism was what was called humanistic, or liberal, education in its traditional form. Although many intellectuals argued the case, Robert M. Hutchins, president and then chancellor of the University of Chicago from 1929 to 1951, and Mortimer J. Adler, professor of the philosophy of law at the same institution, were…
- humanistic psychology
humanistic psychology, a movement in psychology supporting the belief that humans, as individuals, are unique beings and should be recognized and treated as such by psychologists and psychiatrists. The movement grew in opposition to the two mainstream 20th-century trends in psychology, behaviourism