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    The presence and absence of disease symptoms across a pop... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Huntington's disease qualifies as a genetic condition on both individual and population accounts

    The presence and absence of disease symptoms across a population is accounted for by the presence and absence of the mutation

    Bioethics
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    A single mutant gene is necessary, and arguably sufficient given standard backgr...Huntington's disease qualifies as a genetic condition on both individual and pop...

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    The third, and final, way in which genetic explanations are context-dependent is that they are a function of the present state of knowledge. Huntington's disease is deemed a genetic condition on both the individual and population accounts: a single mutant gene is necessary, and arguably sufficient given necessary (and standard) background conditions, for symptoms to appear in a given person; the presence and absence of disease symptoms in members of the population is accounted for in terms of th

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