REMAINING WORK FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL DOCTRINE TO BE PUBLISHED (DEADLINE OF APRIL 5, 2030)
- A HOUSE DESIGN
- AN INSTRUMENT DESIGN AND A CELLPHONE DESIGN
- A LAND VESSEL DESIGN
- AN AIR VESSEL DESIGN
- A SEA VESSEL DESIGN
- SURGICAL DOCTRINE
- EXAMPLE, Person, "Ow! The front of my head hurts..."
- (This surgical example of the anatomical component known as the 'FRONTAL BONE' can be found in the very first surgery series text as the first term.)
- Frontal Bone
- Definition: The frontal bone is a bone of the human skull that forms the forehead, the upper part of the eye sockets (orbits), and part of the roof of the nasal cavity. It is a single bone, although it develops from two halves that fuse during early childhood.
- Function in relation to the eleven systems:
- Nervous: The frontal bone protects the brain.
- Circulatory: The frontal bone protects the arterial and veinal systems of the skull.
- Respiratory: The frontal bone protects the oxygenating processes of the skull.
- Muscular: The frontal bone supports cranial musculature.
- Skeletal: The frontal bone is an integral component of the skeletal systems fundamental architecture.
- Integumentary: The frontal bone provides frame and support for the dermis - both directly and indirectly via its role as a morphologically wrought component of the body's shape and size.
- Digestive: The frontal bone protects the 'eat' and 'content' mechanics of the body found within the brain.
- Excretory: The frontal bone protects the waste processing mechanics of the body found within and about the skull.
- Immune: The frontal bone provides support and protection for the immunological faculties of the skull.
- Endocrine: The frontal bone protects the hormone producing, facilitating, processing faculties of the skull.
- Reproductive: The frontal bone protects the reproductive faculties of the skull.
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Head and Neck (The frontal bone term is found here)
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Back and Spinal Cord
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Thorax
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Abdomen
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Pelvis and Perineum
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Upper Limb
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Lower Limb
- The Fundamental Philosophy Surgery Series | Cross-Sectional Anatomy
- Inflammation-Based Conditions
- Labor-Based Conditions
- Septic Conditions
- Hunger Conditions
- Pleasure/Pain Conditions
- Chronic Conditions
- Fundamental Philosophy Plant Food Formulas
- A problem occurs.
- The recognition follows.
- An assessment is conducted.
- An approach is formulated.
- An evaluation of the chosen course of action is done.
- The action is cleared for execution.
- Execution of the chosen action is conducted.
- Monitoring for gradient elements of efficacy is performed.
- The process is confirmed as successful and cataloged. OR
- The steps repeat until the process is successful.
The terms for the surgery series come from the book 'ATLAS OF HUMAN ANATOMY' written by FRANK H. NETTER, M.D. and his team. Thank you Dr. Netter.
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