We also expect an increased participation of our project partners from the physical and natural sciences. |
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It is a first-tier journal for new methods and significant improvements in life sciences and chemistry. |
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Anthropology was better developed than other social sciences in this field. |
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A new medical school curriculum, the first of its kind, will prepare physicians to take advantage of advances in the behavioral sciences. |
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The first is a scientific encyclopaedia covering logic, natural sciences, psychology, geometry, astronomy, arithmetic and music. |
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By the 1990s, biology had replaced physics as the most important and visible of the natural sciences in America. |
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He consequently links early photography with the Realist project, tying it to an urge for naturalism in both the arts and sciences. |
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Few would pretend that an MBA stands comparison with a master's degree in basic sciences in scholarship or scientific content. |
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And physicists enjoy careers in engineering, chemistry, life sciences, and Earth sciences. |
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Few of our didactic programs are taught on an interdisciplinary basis with the other health sciences. |
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The series will partner with a companion Web site exploring the crucial role of behavioral and social sciences in important public issues. |
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Yet the percentage of women in computing, the physical sciences, and engineering remains lower than in other science-related disciplines. |
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Their absence is particularly striking in the physical sciences, mathematics, and engineering. |
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The theory and observation of the cosmic microwave background have changed the status of cosmology within the physical sciences. |
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Numerous thinkers and works contributed to making astronomy and the related sciences of astrology and cosmogony a near-accurate system. |
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The cosmological doctrines are perhaps the most needed in the task of laying down the foundations of the physical and biological sciences. |
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He wrote in an often opaque and always toplofty style, with a specialized vocabulary derived from the social sciences. |
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Hence, physical sciences gravitate towards prescriptive laws, whilst life sciences use descriptive laws. |
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New industrial estates for life sciences are being developed at a rapid rate throughout the Asia-Pacific region. |
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Clearly, empirically derived premises are more relevant to empirical sciences like physics and chemistry. |
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The plight of other sciences like physics, chemistry, biology and mathematics however, has not been recognised. |
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Those of you in the field of medicine, chemistry or occult sciences will be successful. |
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The sciences are well served in a number of leading fields, including astronomy, chemistry, medicine, and engineering. |
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Moreover, holistic method has proved useful in the hard sciences, for example in the geological theory of plate tectonics. |
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His aim was to study philosophy but first he would have to study physical sciences. |
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He is hoping to continue his studies and gain an honours degree in natural sciences. |
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And the same objection can be raised against any of the historical sciences including astronomy, evolutionary biology, geology and palaeontology. |
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Now, in the physical sciences, maths, chemistry, and so forth, this is generally the case. |
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He and Elaine also established scholarships for varsity swimmers and for students studying the life sciences. |
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Many cite the university's strengths in veterinary medicine, bioinformatics and plant sciences as their draw to this campus. |
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Biometeorology is a scientific branch, which can be seen as the link between meteorology, biology and medical sciences. |
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Committed to Fabianism and social reform, they envisaged a school devoted to the teaching of and research into the social sciences. |
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These biosatellites provided the foundation for subsequent experiments on the space shuttle's international life sciences Spacelab missions. |
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In the first and second year the core sciences will have emphasis on the fundamentals such as physics, chemistry, mathematics and bioscience. |
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The university library has more than 10,000 books on a variety of subjects including encyclopedia, life sciences and world books. |
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Then consider how the future looks to three experts in information technology, life sciences, and alternative energy. |
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Biotech is booming, and infotech is post-boom, but in chemistry and other basic sciences the trend has been down for a while. |
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This regeneration and instauration of the sciences is with justice due to the age of a prince surpassing all others in wisdom and learning. |
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There are no sources of philosophical knowledge that stand independent of, and prior to, the natural sciences. |
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Finally, the balance of power within the field has shifted from general philosophy of science to the philosophy of particular sciences. |
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Like many Swedenborgians, he had a strong interest in popular sciences and unorthodox medical movements, including phrenology and mesmerism. |
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For this study, Eccles and Vida compared young women and men who went into the social and biological sciences versus the physical sciences. |
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The social sciences can now follow their fellow hard sciences into the age of simulation. |
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This goes to illustrate the academic standards for humanities and social sciences in the past half century. |
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Art is a key to understanding the humanities, the sciences, history and the world. |
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We've had people give us scholarships aimed specifically at the social sciences and humanities. |
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Churchland's strengths lie primarily in her synoptic view of the behavioral sciences. |
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Research in the life sciences is committed, due to the built-in complexity of the subject under study, to the use of models. |
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The bulk of this is for fees and maintenance of students wanting to pursue an MSc in either engineering or the physical sciences. |
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The same is true of the hydraulic and equilibrium notions drawn from other sciences. |
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The report also relayed concerns about the widening gap between support for physical sciences as compared to life sciences. |
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In the pages of Physics Today, women in the physical sciences are only occasionally visible. |
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She went to Paris in 1891 for further studies and obtained licentiateships in physics and mathematical sciences. |
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Some interpreters have Aristotle distinguish the sciences on the basis of their degree of abstraction from matter. |
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During the introductions I mentioned that information science is integral to each of the sciences represented and received loud acclamation. |
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Culture is often accretive, in that it builds on the past, but equally it can lose technologies, sciences and ideas. |
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Nevertheless, Slovak parents generally advocated practical learning over an education in the sciences or liberal arts. |
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It thus encompasses in a unique way the arts, social sciences, and natural sciences. |
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It gives credit where credit is due, whether it be in the sciences or in philosophy or even in the theologies of other traditions. |
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By that time, Catrin was an undergraduate student studying criminology and criminal justice as part of a broader social sciences degree. |
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It was a similar story at Strathclyde University when I rang about its arts and social sciences course. |
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This state-of-the-art building will be the central meeting place for leading experts in earth sciences and electrical and computer engineering. |
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Proceeds of the show are normally used for donations to education and research in the earth sciences and lapidary arts. |
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We are here to write an essay and a poem for our arts and social sciences course. |
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In the social sciences, economics and econometrics are the most widespread and highly developed fields. |
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Other social sciences such as Economics, Sociology, and Anthropology were demarcated in similar fashion. |
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One of the first pieces we did was on the environment, so a study in earth sciences came in very helpful. |
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Students in earth sciences and geological engineering study rocks such as those you see in the rock garden. |
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Although the earth sciences are best known for geology, at Waterloo the field includes geophysics, hydrogeology and geochemistry. |
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Of all the social sciences, economics most closely resembles the natural sciences. |
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Critical Theory has a narrow and a broad meaning in philosophy and in the history of the social sciences. |
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And the list does not stop with other branches of psychology or even other social sciences. |
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Indeed, many physicists did not even believe that geology and biology were sciences at all. |
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Physical sciences, particularly earth sciences such as geology and hydrology, are popular subjects for study and research in Oman's university. |
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He joined the staff of the university in 1967 as the geology and geophysical sciences librarian. |
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Proposals from all disciplines of the humanities and social sciences are welcome. |
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In many instances, these three basic physical sciences even overlap, giving rise to joint disciplines such as astrophysics and chemical physics. |
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In the native model, however, the influences of majoring in the liberal arts and health sciences were absent. |
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Like the liberal arts, the sciences are increasingly engaged with a technical rather than a philosophical approach to their subjects. |
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The only liberal arts that are growing are psychology and the biological sciences. |
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Education during most of the 20th century divided, all too neatly, between liberal arts and the sciences. |
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Those students were excluded from Newcomb College, which only included women in the liberal arts and sciences. |
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Among the most vulnerable programs may be those in the liberal arts, especially the humanities and social sciences. |
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It is based in Exeter, and its experience is largely in publishing heavyweight academic journals in the social sciences. |
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Through the establishment of courses in humanities, management and economics, we expect to permeate liberal arts into the sciences. |
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Other physical sciences experiments are focused on subjects including foam and fire, both of which behave in very different ways in microgravity. |
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In some aspects, colleges of agriculture are beginning to look more like colleges of liberal arts and sciences. |
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Human actions and reactions do not conform to the laws of physics, mechanics, or the natural sciences. |
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In the 1850s, he developed his scientific method of attribution, a method inspired by the comparative methodologies of the natural sciences. |
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But as taboos about the body gradually lifted and the human sciences advanced, the knowledge of nervousness slowly changed. |
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Physics, the most mathematical of the natural sciences, should suffer the least from this abhorrent tendency. |
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Medicine and the natural sciences were also undergoing similar transformations. |
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The process is most advanced in the physical sciences, in which research activity demands a large amount of expensive equipment. |
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Undergraduate majors in the arts and humanities, natural sciences, or social sciences can prepare you for law school. |
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In 1910 he began studying medicine at Munich University, but he soon switched to natural sciences, then engineering. |
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In social sciences like archeology or history, it is clear that tomorrow is not the same as today. |
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On the other hand, students who have specialized majors in the sciences may wish to develop more general communications and analytical skills. |
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In my opinion the book is mandatory reading for all college majors in the social sciences. |
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This loss of sharp and influential minds has left the physical and social sciences in a poorer state than they need be. |
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Recently, St. George's University began offering baccalaureate degree programs at its school of arts and sciences. |
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He is known in life sciences worldwide and I think this makes us a key player now. |
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In any case, the contributions of Ibn Sina to several aspects of geology and mineralogy are significant in the history of these sciences. |
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Researchers from all fields of the behavioral and social sciences are encouraged to apply. |
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The work of Darwin and the subsequent discoveries in both the physical and natural sciences have moved this process toward completion. |
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England supports research and teaching in all areas of science and the social sciences. |
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Students at Birkbeck carry out research in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. |
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A major chunk of journals in biomedical sciences is brought out by learned societies. |
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Originally obtaining a natural sciences degree Gordon went on to obtain a PhD before turning to medicine. |
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Major social sciences today are economics, political science, anthropology, and sociology. |
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Since the sixteenth century, human anatomy had been one of the most venerated medical sciences of the early modern period. |
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He got his first job on a film set while still studying for a social sciences degree at Glasgow University. |
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And now we are so successful in the biomedical sciences we have the technical ability to change our very biological essence, our genes. |
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In practice, the opposite is occurring in every technical field except health sciences. |
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Current debates within the social sciences focus upon the impacts of one or more of these technologies. |
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In the first five lines, however, Archytas provides a proem on the value of the sciences in general. |
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The most prominent science journals are in the social sciences, which are led by economics and political science. |
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They adjusted their curriculum and linked communications science with the social sciences. |
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The physical and social sciences are all taught in Saudi Arabian universities, which exist in all the main cities. |
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By asking the people around him he learned that she studied and taught animal behavioral sciences at the university. |
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In the early 1960s, the emergence of the theory of plate tectonics started a revolution in the earth sciences. |
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My school encourages us to take bio, then chem, then physics, but because of our term system we can double up on sciences. |
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It is an extension of the evolution of the scientific method in the physical sciences into social science. |
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Interdisciplinary sciences such as biochemistry and social psychology would also have to be included. |
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These deaths are real deaths, and they pile up in ways that define our histories and literatures and social sciences. |
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It's taken the father-of-three 23 years to complete a BSc in geology and earth sciences from the Open University. |
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These offer a variety of courses and qualifications, from computing sciences and mechanical engineering to sports coaching and holistic therapy. |
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An awesome academic and bibliographer in the social sciences, he was also a palpable influence in my becoming a librarian. |
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For those determined Linneans out there, this academy of sciences maintains a Linnean scheme at Classification of the Extant Echinodermata. |
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About 25 percent of the program is now PhD-level scientists in the social or behavioral sciences, nutrition, biostatistics or epidemiology. |
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In all the social sciences, the doctrines of racialism were accepted as a given. |
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I take this to be an invitation to actively study genetics, atmospheric sciences and geology and so on. |
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Health professionals in radiography, pharmacy and medical sciences are also on the company's books. |
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The sciences of gemology and paleontology meet in a fascinating new exhibit. |
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It covers 4300 journals devoted to medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, healthcare systems, and the preclinical sciences. |
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It aims to promote basic and applied research in the medical sciences and biotechnology in Scotland. |
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Many of the most accepted theories in the social sciences encourage a mechanistic view of human nature. |
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It features stories on such topics as anomalous astronomical phenomena, anomalies in the physical sciences, scientific hoaxes and cryptozoology. |
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Compared to the natural sciences and medicine, psychology is a relatively new field. |
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It is also useful for students and teachers of medicine and the biomedical sciences. |
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Academic councils devoted to the applied sciences and practical studies also tended to be better funded. |
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This state-of-the-art building will be the central meeting place for leading experts in earth sciences. |
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Targeted to those scholars and others interested in behavioral sciences, this book remains reachable to non-psychologist types. |
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All interviewers held bachelor's degrees and most were in postgraduate study in the social sciences. |
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It seems that we have opposite tendencies to our counterparts in the social sciences. |
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The difficulties and importance of schooling during childhood have come to be viewed in a new light in the social sciences. |
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Day 1 focuses on the contribution from scientists in physics, material science and life sciences. |
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According to Aristotle, the first principles of the sciences are not merely contingently true. |
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Wagner addressed the question of disciplinarity and interdisciplinarity in the natural sciences. |
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The university offered studies in theology, medicine, and law, but nothing at that time in the natural sciences. |
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I have long been looking for outstanding problems in the biological sciences in which surface tension is important. |
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A reciprocal relationship between the knower and the known, common to all the sciences, is important here. |
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His interests extended to an enthusiastic study of mathematics, the natural sciences, and studies of alchemy and natural magic. |
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More undergraduates need to be motivated to specialize in math or the sciences. |
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It was not just the relation between mathematics and the physical sciences that fascinated him. |
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In all, ten experiments will be carried out during the 37th campaign, seven in physical sciences and three in life sciences. |
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You really won't get people taking up sciences in class when the materials are second class and out of date or old. |
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Since the end of the eighteenth century one of the fundamental laws of the physical sciences has been the law of conservation of matter. |
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The luminous mould has been developed by researchers at the commercial offshoot of the school of biological sciences at Edinburgh University. |
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What alternative means is there whereby the first principles of sciences are known? |
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Every high school will offer advanced placement courses in English language arts, mathematics, foreign languages, social studies and sciences. |
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The subject matter of the social sciences is conscious sentient beings who act out of choice. |
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In addition, value theory is apposite in the current renewal of interest in the economy across the social sciences. |
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The logically prior science within the theorematical sciences is nomology, the object of which is the notion of law. |
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Research also discloses terrible overcrowding among sciences, with some like pyrology and thermology, cramped in the single field of heat. |
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At the end of the '60s, earth sciences was added to the marine biology and oceanography degrees offered at Scripps. |
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Most offer degrees in law and the humanities and the social, health, and life sciences as well as engineering and the physical sciences. |
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Their intimate knowledge of plants, birds and other creatures of the tropical jungle could help advances in medical sciences. |
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Classification and physiological research dominated the zoological and botanical sciences in his time. |
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He took a double first in natural sciences at Cambridge before doing his clinical training in London. |
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South African universities and technikons are home to hot new innovations in the sciences, health sciences and engineering fields. |
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He supported research not only in the natural sciences, but also in anthropology and ethnography. |
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The hard sciences, for example, are at the cutting edge of economic development. |
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However, since most ratio variables exhibit this quality in the social sciences, they are not being distinguished here. |
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The mix of funding sources differs in significant ways for the social sciences versus the life sciences. |
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For example, it took almost a decade to change the name of the college because of opposition from liberal arts and sciences. |
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He received his PhD in 1983 and habilitated in 1986, both times specializing in political sciences at the University of Bonn. |
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The medical sciences were well developed, with particular success in cardiology, oncology, and laser surgery. |
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Graz was the first ever university to give a doctorate in technical sciences. |
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The natural sciences, on the other hand, aim to understand nature objectively and dispassionately. |
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The Rothschilds are still prominent in banking in Britain and are notable patrons of the arts and sciences. |
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In its broadest sense, archaeometry represents the interface between archaeology and the natural and physical sciences. |
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Some of the problems that we've been dealing with in the neurosciences and the cognitive sciences concerns the initial state of the organism. |
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Higher maths was good and the sciences and the languages, Irish especially was very good. |
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In addition, each center focuses on specific research areas such as vascular and cancer biology, endocrinology, or neurobiological sciences. |
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Nevertheless, it is very prestigious, and is often awarded to eminent people in the sciences and arts. |
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Diminishing returns in the sciences seem inevitable because the low-hanging fruit was picked first. |
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In July we have a science centre opening, which celebrates the life sciences. |
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First, the number of women studying medicine and life sciences in postgraduate programs has risen significantly. |
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The life sciences and related technology, such as genetic engineering, could lead to better careers in the near future. |
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Other sectors represented include software, engineering, microelectronics, material sciences and energy. |
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Ives said any efforts to tackle the problems must be linked to human sciences such as anthropology, social science, and human geography. |
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This site lists many useful sources for the life sciences, organized by topic. |
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However, it only took a few widely reported examples of misconduct in the life sciences for physicists to think that it was not their problem. |
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Sociolinguistics has close connections with the social sciences, in particular, sociology, anthropology, social psychology, and education. |
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Others continue their chemical education into graduate school in chemistry and life sciences. |
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I was in secondary school and I somehow got it into my head that because I was good at sciences I should become an engineer. |
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However, groupware developed specifically for life sciences centers around the in silico discovery process. |
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It was put forth as part of a broader effort to move the study of human behavior toward the life sciences. |
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It is a great tragedy that such research bodies in social sciences be controlled by those who are avowed opponents of secularism. |
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It was not all that concerned with the ontology or metaphysics of the natural sciences. |
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The book is aimed at undergraduate students in the life sciences, and will also be invaluable for many graduate students. |
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Progress in developing integration across the behavioral sciences can be limited by disinterest, isolationism, and even outright hostility. |
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The electronics sector is shedding jobs, and life sciences is set to become the bigger employer in the near future. |
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My job was not to persecute people for blasphemous advances of the sciences, or for heretical religious teachings. |
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Mathematics and statistics, like the natural sciences, draw their strength from being abstract. |
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However, young Danes tend to choose humanistic or social science studies over the natural sciences. |
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Some social sciences are felt to lack the rigour and testability associated with the natural sciences. |
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Feminist voices in the social sciences unconsciously echo this masculinist will to power in its relation to non-Western societies. |
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In addition, all institutions have freshman introductory courses both in natural sciences and social sciences. |
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We provide rapid access to the best knowledge in the traditional agricultural sciences as well as in newer fields like bioinformatics, genomics, and proteomics. |
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Pinker argues that we need not fear nihilism or meaninglessness from the modern human sciences because they show that morality is wired into the human brain. |
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Why should an engineer or space scientist care about the social sciences when they have done fine without them since the beginning of the space age? |
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He holds an undergraduate degree in natural sciences and an MA in health statistics, but no PhD and no climatology credentials. |
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Several experiments in physics, astronomy and the earth sciences will generate petabytes of data in the next few years, and so will some businesses. |
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He reported on an informal Spring 2004 meeting in Montreal that discussed potential earth science projects that could reinvigorate the solid earth sciences in Canada. |
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A course offered in the department of geological and earth sciences provides an introduction to astrobiology for upper-level undergraduates, as well as for graduate students. |
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In 1986 Kampf received an award for distinguished service in the earth sciences from the Scholarship Foundation of the American Federation of Mineralogical Societies. |
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He won a first-class degree in natural sciences in 1868 and, after a four-year dalliance with a career in medicine, was chosen for the Challenger expedition. |
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While Laplace and Gauss contributed to the physical sciences such as astronomy and geodesy, Fisher used his mathematical gifts to till the fertile ground of biology. |
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John, who left school at 16, learned in early March that he would receive his BSc degree in geology and earth sciences just a month before 25-year-old Alyson's own graduation. |
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So the title of your book is interesting because we hear a lot about educational standards declining because of fewer students excelling in sciences and math. |
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The sciences atrophied during the post-World War I industrial decline. |
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In the last several decades, the world has witnessed a knowledge explosion in the life sciences based on an understanding of genes and how they work. |
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We conduct science activity camps such as life sciences or nature camps where students are taught how to collect and analyse samples and discuss their findings. |
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I'm wrapping up a doctoral degree in the physical sciences and heading to an industrial job in a few months. |
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To prepare the terrain for a genuine emancipation, there is a need for founding social sciences and knowledge on bases that are decolonized, denationalized. |
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This look at the current status of robot evolution will intrigue technophiles, sci-fi fans and those with an interest in the social sciences alike. |
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The shifts and changes in sciences were initiated primarily by the women scientists and by the feminist scholars writing about science, like Keller. |
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The new sciences of bacteriology and pharmacology are prominent examples. |
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Tenured women in science are twice as likely as tenured men to be single, and more tenured women remain single in the social sciences and humanities, as well. |
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Knowing that Chinese rulers especially respected the mathematical sciences, he studied them diligently and became proficient at map-making and astronomy. |
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He says the Executive and SE are right to concentrate on specific business areas, such as life sciences, in which the country has proved itself to have some ability. |
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Thanks to the convergence of the information and genome sciences revolution, we are already on the threshold of isolating and characterizing virtually all useful genes. |
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Premises of the life sciences need to be based on the traditional conceptions of such central ideas as soul and life pertaining to all living things. |
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In addition, there is a large programme to fund research on a wide range of topics, including biology, physics, chemistry, agronomy, and human and social sciences. |
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The event focused on whether and how research in the life sciences could be used by terrorists or how enemy states that produce bioweapons should be controlled. |
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In 1869 Sofia travelled to Heidelberg to study mathematics and the natural sciences, only to discover that women could not matriculate at the university. |
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The basic human sciences involved are anatomy, physiology, and psychology. |
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First Plato identifies a group of five rather than four sciences and decries the neglect of his proposed fifth science, stereometry, with a probable allusion to Archytas. |
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The life sciences firm specialises in the niche area of chiral catalysis, which enables the production of pharmaceuticals with reduced side effects. |
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The majority of our analysts have advanced degrees in technical areas, such as operations research, mathematics, engineering, and management sciences. |
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The majority of the analysts have advanced degrees in technical areas such as operations research, mathematics, engineering, and management sciences. |
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The conference will cover many areas of mathematical sciences like astronomy, statistics, operations research, computer science and many other mathematically related subjects. |
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How do our research methods differ from those of the social sciences, operations research, linguistics and others from which we have obviously borrowed? |
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Thinking of language as an instinct inverts the popular wisdom, especially as it has been passed down in the canon of the humanities and social sciences. |
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Returning to the main point, I fully agree that for those in the humanities to remain woefully ignorant of the sciences is to remain in the bleachers of an intellectual life. |
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So there is good reason to say that during the war, military geography and military cartography emerged as full-fledged sciences in their own right. |
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If the sciences are indifferent to morality, what's to be done? |
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His intransigence was a refusal to bend within the social sciences. |
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Crucially, however, even within the confines of the biological sciences, the science of genetics does not, and cannot, speak with a single, oracular voice. |
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The social and physical sciences are strong in the areas of environmental studies, telecommunications, social policies of the state, geology, seismology, and archeology. |
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It would not surprise many to hear that the professional study of religion was a more efficient cause of secularization than the natural sciences. |
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The nature of these relationships has been central to human ecology and geography, microeconomics, and the anthropological and political sciences. |
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Western Switzerland has been recognised for microtechnology, hardware and software, special machinery such as robots, life sciences, and biotechnology, among others. |
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Aboard the Station, research has been conducted in bioastronautics, physical sciences, fundamental space biology, space product development and space flight disciplines. |
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It encompasses many different perspectives, including the more dominant biological and biosocial theories that are rooted in the behavioural sciences. |
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The cognitive dissonance inherent in this belief system makes it far less likely for a student to pursue the sciences for personal, family and community reasons. |
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The historian is interested in the truthfulness of his own understanding of the various sciences, not in the truth or falsehood of the science itself. |
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Fabricators and falsifiers in the sciences originate their frauds alone. |
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It was hoped that sixth-formers would study four or five AS-levels, mixing the arts, humanities, languages and sciences before narrowing down their choices in the upper-sixth. |
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Yet this has been accompanied by a huge growth in belief in the idea that our lives are ruled by the stars and in a world of spirits unknown to the sciences. |
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Such comforts take the forms of more leisure and ease in life in the field of physical sciences, while in the spiritual field they become rituals and traditions. |
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He had divided these indemonstrable principles into axioms, which are common to all sciences, and postulates, which are particular to a specific subject such as geometry. |
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The special flavour of postwar strategic studies came from those who had been working in the physical sciences and engineering rather than the social sciences and humanities. |
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It should scarcely come as a surprise then that so few college graduates pursue doctoral degrees in either the biological or physical sciences or computer science. |
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In all, thirteen experiments will be conducted in the areas of physical sciences and life sciences, there is also one student experiment flying during this campaign. |
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An important feature of modeling is that it has brought the rigor and analysis of mathematics to the doorstep of our fellow scientists in the natural and physical sciences. |
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That education must include the most basic ingredients of the physical sciences and arithmetic and their relevance to society's functioning and survival. |
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In the education of Smith engineers, the study of the humanities and social sciences is just as important as the study of the physical sciences and mathematics. |
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At the college level relatively few native-born Americans are choosing to study the hard sciences or engineering, from which so much innovation flows. |
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In the natural sciences, biology and geology should be emphasized. |
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Following regionalization, Capital Health employed her as program director of cardiac sciences and neurosciences at UAH and Royal Alexandra Hospital. |
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The social sciences are only based on a method called Verstehen. |
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There are also many references to contemporary natural sciences and a healthy smattering of Anglican divines, including Hooker, Andrewes, and Herbert. |
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This is a bold divorce between mathematics and the empirical sciences. |
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Although Whewell claimed that this pattern is repeated in the history of the sciences, he was careful to point out that the stages within the pattern often overlap. |
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While Chicago is humping herself in the interests of literature, art and the sciences, vain old Boston is frivoling away her precious time in an attempted renaissance of the cod fisheries. |
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Bibliology is cognate to other sciences on account of joint research problems, such as literary studies, science of progress, history, studies of culture, psychology, economics, and law. |
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Photology is always regarded as consisting of two sciences, with Experimental Photology and Mathematical Photology distinguished in all University curricula. |
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Chirognomy has no equal among the so-called occult sciences. |
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In such schools English can be used as the medium of instruction for mathematics and the natural sciences, while Urdu can be the medium for other subjects. |
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The next trick deals with exploiting the differences between the natural sciences and disciplines like linguistics, properly part of the humanities. |
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On the contrary, his assessment of the economic origins of human evolution relies heavily on literature, data and facts from anthropology, biology and other natural sciences. |
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Some of the great glories of science, including many who have adorned the non-physical sciences, have been as innocent of metaphysical theory as so many police lieutenants. |
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This was to change his life and, after this experience, he gave up military research to concentrate on the ethics of science and later on life sciences. |
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It is understood that the university's reputation for medicine and life sciences could be a deciding factor in the firm's decision on the site for its new venture. |
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Similarly, some very general theories in social science may be true but unscientific according to the standards of the physical and biological sciences. |
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The social sciences occupied an unsteady position somewhere in between. |
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Even as courts have, over the past two generations, grown more dismissive of hunches, there has been a counter-revolution in the cognitive sciences. |
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In sciences and social sciences the Rhondda has provided important academics within the aspects of Wales and on the World stage. |
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The past two decades have seen a phenomenal investment in microtechnology in the biological sciences. |
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It is an argument supported by Professor Heini Muter, who is prorector of Zurich University and responsible for medicine and natural sciences. |
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Currently, an important trend, particularly with respect to journals in the sciences, is open access via the Internet. |
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The vocabulary of social sciences is often incomprehensible to ordinary people. |
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Statistics is the only mathematical field required for many social sciences. |
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In contrast, the most popular degree for data science professionals was computer science, followed closely by engineering and the hard sciences. |
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Weber's methodology was developed in the context of a wider debate about methodology of social sciences, the Methodenstreit. |
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Swedenborg was stimulated by the alchemystical notions of both men, and he began to move beyond the natural to the supernatural sciences. |
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Most frequently, issues of chilly climate are noted among women pursuing doctorates in the sciences and engineering. |
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The sciences treat of things too refinedly, after an artificial, very different from the common and natural, way. |
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