Atomistic



N6-Methyladenosine (m6A) is the most frequent modification in eukaryotic messenger RNA (mRNA) and its cellular processing and functions are regulated by the reader proteins YTHDCs and YTHDFs. However, the mechanism of m6A recognition by the reader proteins is still elusive. Here, we investigate this recognition process by combining atomistic simulations, site-directed mutagenesis,. The atomistic understanding and modeling of these interfaces is challenging due to the structural complexity and the presence of the electrochemical potential. Including the potential explicitly in the quantum mechanical simulations is equivalent to simulating systems with a surface charge. The definition of atomistic is relating to atoms or atomism or something composed of many simple elements. The Periodic Table of Elements is an example of something that is atomistic. A painting made up of simple shapes is an example of something that is atomistic.

Social Atomism What Is It

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • adjective Of or having to do with atoms or atomism.
  • adjective Consisting of many separate, often disparate elements.
AtomisticAtomistic

from The Century Dictionary.

  • Pertaining to atomism or the atomists.
  • Consisting of atoms.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • adjectiverare Of or pertaining to atoms; relating to atomism.
  • adjective divided into separate and often disparate elements; -- the opposite of holistic.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

Atomistic worldview

Definition of atomistic in the Definitions.net dictionary. Meaning of atomistic. What does atomistic mean? Information and translations of atomistic in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.

  • adjective Of or pertaining to atoms or to atomism
  • adjective Divided into separate elements; not holistic
  • adjectiveeconomics (said of a market) divided such that no single actor can noticeably affect market-wide values such as the price; competitive

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • adjective divided into separate and often disparate elements
Atomistic individualism

Etymologies

Examples

  • This doctrine which I call atomistic and which appears to be anti-historical, reveals from under a concealing cloak a strongly materialistic nature.

  • Here, Norton (2001) objects to an 'atomistic' bias of western culture towards objects.

  • The danger is therefore not application of technology for the objective but 'atomistic' nature of 'man'.

  • The danger is therefore not application of technology for the objective but 'atomistic' nature of 'man'.

  • The danger is therefore not application of technology for the objective but 'atomistic' nature of 'man'.

  • The danger is therefore not application of technology for the objective but 'atomistic' nature of 'man'.

  • In microeconomics, in the course of teaching about the theory of the firm, I must lead students to an understanding that the beauty and purity of Adam Smith's paradigm of free markets simply does not apply to most situations because the very force of greed that makes capitalism such a powerful engine of innovation and efficiency is also, concomitantly, the force that ultimately wrecks the 'atomistic' model of competitive forces that allow prices to form by a natural process not under the control of any one agent or group of agents.

  • In microeconomics, in the course of teaching about the theory of the firm, I must lead students to an understanding that the beauty and purity of Adam Smith's paradigm of free markets simply does not apply to most situations because the very force of greed that makes capitalism such a powerful engine of innovation and efficiency is also, concomitantly, the force that ultimately wrecks the 'atomistic' model of competitive forces that allow prices to form by a natural process not under the control of any one agent or group of agents.

  • In microeconomics, in the course of teaching about the theory of the firm, I must lead students to an understanding that the beauty and purity of Adam Smith's paradigm of free markets simply does not apply to most situations because the very force of greed that makes capitalism such a powerful engine of innovation and efficiency is also, concomitantly, the force that ultimately wrecks the 'atomistic' model of competitive forces that allow prices to form by a natural process not under the control of any one agent or group of agents.

  • In microeconomics, in the course of teaching about the theory of the firm, I must lead students to an understanding that the beauty and purity of Adam Smith's paradigm of free markets simply does not apply to most situations because the very force of greed that makes capitalism such a powerful engine of innovation and efficiency is also, concomitantly, the force that ultimately wrecks the 'atomistic' model of competitive forces that allow prices to form by a natural process not under the control of any one agent or group of agents.

Related Words

same context (13)

Words that are found in similar contexts

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Definition of Atomistic Competition:

A market structure where firms are so numerous that the market represents perfect competition. In atomistic competition there will be the following features:

  1. Many small firms
  2. The absence of economies of scale
  3. Firms do not have the ability to set prices (they are price takers)
  4. Low Profits and low prices for consumers

Atomistic competition is quite rare in the real world. But, examples could include farmer’s markets for a product like potatoes. Many farmers sell their homogeneous product at the market, enabling customers to easily compare prices.

Another example could be foreign exchange traders. The product is homogenous and there should be perfect information about the available prices.

Atomistic Culture

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