Well you already seem somewhat affected judging by your ironic misspelling of 'doctor.'
Affect? Affect? Not affect- disaster!
Some things are a judgment call and the doctors specific training or bias is going to affect diagnosis. If it is something serious, ask the second doctor about the difference. It may change his mind or get a third opinion. Hopefully it would match one of the other two.
One affect may be that people today would be going north when they think they are going south. It would affect the compass that they may be using
yes. indeed it is. I would consider going to the doctors...
That, of course, depends upon who the applicant is. Are you applying for something? If so, how well do you respond to an intellectually demanding course? You would know the answer to that better than we would.
How deep it is and how fast it is going downhill that can also affect it
After all her years in academia earning three Ph.Ds, Jane's family knew that Jane would approach any issue intellectually in order to investigate all the facts.
Oh yes it can if you have it more than 4 day i would suggest going the doctors to have it checked up on
well if you don't have doctors then who is going to take care of you when you get sick. Some people don't know all the medical stuff so they would have no idea what to do if you got rally sick. That's why we have doctors.
Well if you were going some where the tide could affect your speed. The tide could affect the time it would take you to get there. The tide could affect the amount of fuel you would burn. The tide could affect the water depth. The tide could affect the clearance you have if you are going to go under a bridge. So check your tide chart. If you go with the tide you save time and fuel.
Something that may be able to help you find out how doctors do their reviews would be going through medical school yourself, or maybe even asking a doctor the next time you go in for a check-up.
Yes, without science there would be no doctors.