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Jan 12 2010, 4:48 PM EST
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Change: The first to outline the logic of thermodynamic stability of bonding, in the context of free energy changes, it seems, was American physical chemist Gilbert Lewis in 1916. [7] The earliest views on human bonding can be traced to the early 20th
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Jan 12 2010, 4:43 PM EST
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Change: 'Dynamics'Dynamics' of the Thermodynamics of Binding", as such: [3]“Whether two molecules will bind is determined by the free energy change (ΔG) of the interaction, composed of both enthalpic and entropic terms.”The definition given here by Forman-Kay, to note, is
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Jan 12 2010, 4:30 PM EST
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Change: Forman-Kay, in her 1999 article "The 'Dynamics of the Thermodynamics of Binding", as such: [3]“Whether two molecules will bind is determined by the free energy change (ΔG) of the interaction, composed of both enthalpic and entropic terms.”The definition given here by Forman-Kay,
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Jan 12 2010, 4:25 PM EST
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Jan 12 2010, 4:24 PM EST
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Change: etc. A≡B A≡B "Symbol"Anthropomorphic View" "Anthropomorphic "Symbol View" "Field Particle Exchange View"This basic structure of the human chemical bond, using a male-female perspective, is diagrammed in simple form below, from an energy view perspective: [2] History The earliest views on human bonding
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Jan 12 2010, 4:23 PM EST
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Change: The definition given here by Forman-Kay, to note, is defined in the context of interactions between protein molecules. The first to extrapolate this logic of free energy determined binding to the case of interactions between human molecules, was American chemical engineer Libb Thims in circa 2005, in his evolutionary psychology
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Mar 26 2009, 9:04 AM EDT
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Mar 26 2009, 9:03 AM EDT
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Mar 26 2009, 9:03 AM EDT
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Mar 26 2009, 9:02 AM EDT
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Mar 26 2009, 9:01 AM EDT
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Change: Field Particle Exchange View History The earliest views on human bonding can be traced to the early 20th century work of various parent-child psychologists, such as Anna Freud, Melanie Kline, James and Joycle Robertson, John Bowlby, Mary Ainsworth, Marshall Klaus, and John
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Feb 18 2009, 9:08 PM EST
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Change: weakerstrong bond)A + B → A≡B (strong bond) A + B → A=B (intermediate bond) A + B → A-B (weak bond) A + B → A--B (weaker bond) A + B → A - - - B (detaching stage bond)The question then immediately
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Nov 15 2008, 12:07 AM EST
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Change: Long-term stable marriages are held together via the Gottman stability ratio. In the basic attachment reaction, between two unacquainted individuals, A and B, a collision will occur, in a time-accelerated sense, and the the resultant "bond" that form can have various degrees of attachment strength: A
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Nov 15 2008, 12:05 AM EST
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Change: bonding,bonding, viewed such that the human bond is a chemical bond, such as described by American chemical engineer Linus Pauling's 1931 article "The Nature of the Chemical Bond", were done by American chemical engineer Libb Thims, between the years 2001 and
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Nov 15 2008, 12:03 AM EST
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Nov 15 2008, 12:03 AM EST
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Nov 15 2008, 12:03 AM EST
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Change: A - - - B (detaching stage bond) The question then immediately becomes: "how are these human chemical bonding variations (A≡B, A=B, A-B) quantified?" The central answer to this question lies in the understanding of the photon-electron interactions of the outer valence shell
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Nov 15 2008, 12:01 AM EST
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Change: Bowlby,Bowlby, Mary Ainsworth, Marshall Klaus, and John Kennell, among others, who developed theories on "attachment" and "parent-infant bonding". [3] Views on the neurochemical operation of the human bond, popularizing conceptions such as that oxytocin
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Nov 15 2008, 12:00 AM EST
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Change: There were only format changes (bold, italics, etc.) in this version. See this version for details.
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Nov 15 2008, 12:00 AM EST
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Change: -electron interactions of the outer valence shell electons of the bonded individuals, as is the case with all attachments between molecules. In this direction, human chemical bonds can be studied and modeled from a number of
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