weight balance - Definition. Was ist weight balance
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Was (wer) ist weight balance - definition

MEDIA BIAS IN WHICH JOURNALISTS PRESENT AN ISSUE AS BEING MORE BALANCED BETWEEN OPPOSING VIEWPOINTS THAN THE EVIDENCE SUPPORTS
Balance fallacy; Bothsidesism; Both sides; Both-sidesism; Due weight; Due and undue weight; Undue weight; False neutrality; Both sideism; Both sidism; Both sidesism; Bothsideism
  • date=23 October 2013}}</ref>

weigh         
  • Ancient Greek]] official bronze weights dating from around the 6th century BC, exhibited in the [[Ancient Agora Museum]] in Athens, housed in the [[Stoa of Attalus]].
  • 0}} in 0.86 seconds. This is a horizontal acceleration of 5.3{{spaces}}g. Combined with the vertical g-force in the stationary case the [[Pythagorean theorem]] yields a g-force of 5.4{{spaces}}g. It is this g-force that causes the driver's weight if one uses the operational definition. If one uses the gravitational definition, the driver's weight is unchanged by the motion of the car.
  • A [[weighbridge]], used for weighing trucks
  • work=Baburnama}}</ref>
  • moments]] acting on it sum to zero).
FORCE ACTING ON A MASS DUE TO GRAVITY
Gross weight; Measure of weight; Weigh; Net weight; Nett weight; Weighty; Weighing; Ponderous; Gross rail load; Laden weight; Units of weight; Wieght; Heaviness
v.
1) to weigh heavily
2) (d; intr.) ('to count') to weigh against (his testimony will weigh heavily against you)
3) (d; tr.) ('to balance') to weigh against (to weigh one argument against another)
4) (d; intr.) ('to press') to weigh on (legal problems weighed heavily on her mind)
5) (P; intr.) ('to have a weight') the suitcase weighs quite a lot
weight         
  • Ancient Greek]] official bronze weights dating from around the 6th century BC, exhibited in the [[Ancient Agora Museum]] in Athens, housed in the [[Stoa of Attalus]].
  • 0}} in 0.86 seconds. This is a horizontal acceleration of 5.3{{spaces}}g. Combined with the vertical g-force in the stationary case the [[Pythagorean theorem]] yields a g-force of 5.4{{spaces}}g. It is this g-force that causes the driver's weight if one uses the operational definition. If one uses the gravitational definition, the driver's weight is unchanged by the motion of the car.
  • A [[weighbridge]], used for weighing trucks
  • work=Baburnama}}</ref>
  • moments]] acting on it sum to zero).
FORCE ACTING ON A MASS DUE TO GRAVITY
Gross weight; Measure of weight; Weigh; Net weight; Nett weight; Weighty; Weighing; Ponderous; Gross rail load; Laden weight; Units of weight; Wieght; Heaviness
I
n.
amount weighed, heaviness
1) to gain, put on weight
2) to lose, take off weight
3) dead; gross; minimum; net weight
4) atomic; avoirdupois; birth; molecular weight
5) under a weight (the table collapsed under the weight of the food)
device used for its heaviness in athletic exercises
6) to lift weights
7) heavy; light weights
8) a set of weights
importance
9) to carry weight
10) to add; attach, give, lend weight to
11) considerable weight
12) (misc.) to throw one's weight around/about (BE) ('to flaunt one's influence'); to pull one's weight ('to do one's fair share')
II
v. (D; tr.) ('to slant') to weight against (the evidence was weighted against me)
Weight gain         
  • An 1895 advertisement for a weight gain product
INCREASE IN A PERSON'S TOTAL BODY MASS
Abnormal weight gain; Weight Gain; Gain weight; Gaining weight; Causes of weight gain
Weight gain is an increase in body weight. This can involve an increase in muscle mass, fat deposits, excess fluids such as water or other factors.

Wikipedia

False balance

False balance, also bothsidesism, is a media bias in which journalists present an issue as being more balanced between opposing viewpoints than the evidence supports. Journalists may present evidence and arguments out of proportion to the actual evidence for each side, or may omit information that would establish one side's claims as baseless. False balance has been cited as a cause of misinformation.

False balance is a bias which usually stems from an attempt to avoid bias and gives unsupported or dubious positions an illusion of respectability. It creates a public perception that some issues are scientifically contentious, though in reality they may not be, therefore creating doubt about the scientific state of research, and can be exploited by interest groups such as corporations like the fossil fuel industry or the tobacco industry, or ideologically motivated activists such as vaccination opponents or creationists.

Examples of false balance in reporting on science issues include the topics of human-caused climate change versus natural climate variability, the health effects of tobacco, the alleged relation between thiomersal and autism, alleged negative side effects of the HPV vaccine, and evolution versus intelligent design.