It was the basis of military science and also of geography and administration. |
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Instead she chose to teach others and studied literature, political science and history on her own. |
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But, commensurately, we have a high responsibility to science itself as an open system of contestable evidence. |
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And artists find ways of contextualizing their work in the models of science and history of religion. |
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As I've said, this is bound to be a difficult proposition given the success of science. |
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Patents have made science increasingly profit-focused, a debasement which has led to calls from some scientists to do away with them altogether. |
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There's no degree course in prevaricating, sadly, unless you count management science. |
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Their experiments showed that the added sound did help undergraduate computer science students with debugging. |
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The expo has stalls on genome geography, genetic disorders and abuse of science. |
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Portland cement manufacturing incorporates many disciplines, from engineering to chemistry to geology to computer science. |
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They have undergraduate or graduate degrees in subjects including anthropology, geology, marine science and maritime history. |
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A fundamental tenet of the science of geology is the Principle of Uniformitarianism, which states that the present is a key to the past. |
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Stephen Jay Gould teaches biology, geology, and the history of science at Harvard University. |
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A degree in geoscience provides an ideal background for a science journalist. |
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The germs of these ideas, the roots of my own thought, are in Western philosophy and science rather than Oriental philosophy. |
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We've been asked time and time again to de-Christianize our Apologia science curriculum. |
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He seemed to have expertise in science and finance as well as his priestly duties. |
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Our whole economy is dependent on good science, from the production and processing of our primary industries right across the economy. |
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Gradually Joe, a science writer by profession, comes to recognize Jed's behavior as a case of de Clerambault's syndrome. |
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Symbols of science, art and magic can be found in primitive cave paintings in France. |
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Pinker talks about relativism, social constructivism, science studies, cultural studies, critical theory, postmodernism, and deconstructionism. |
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Not fraud, exactly, but neither is it pukka science deserving of that pristine white coat. |
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The world of science, logic, and technology has killed off the world of dragons, giants, and heroes. |
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The first principles of a science are not subject to deduction from more basic principles. |
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Our physical science is not a deductive system, but a series of generalizations based in observation of finite modes. |
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These are not specific geometrical properties but rather general assumptions which allow mathematics to proceed as a deductive science. |
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He was a giant among his peers in the world of science, obtaining three earned doctorates. |
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This past Monday night I was proctoring a first-year computer science exam. |
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One important aspect of the definition of women's nature emphasized women's inability to do intellectual work or science of any kind. |
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It would give more time for students with limited experience with computer science and programming to adapt and assimilate the knowledge. |
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Last month, the board approved new undergraduate degree programs in social work and marine science. |
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When entering a science fair, you can choose either to do a team project or an individual project. |
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Yet, for many people, science has artificially prolonged the dying process. |
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The delegacy admired that Suzhou had made great efforts to the science prevalence in community and school. |
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Their sports science team have been on high alert this week, running health checks on their globetrotting international stars. |
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His latest series of tests may put more physical science in political science. |
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So the former researcher spent months delving into the science to figure out what went wrong. |
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Acknowledging the need for corporate support of research, he worried that proprietary interests are hindering science in important ways. |
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It is a subtle and complex book, and it demands a knowledge of history and philosophy as well as of science. |
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Grosseteste applies the theory in the Posterior Analytics to itself, presenting it as a demonstrative science of demonstration. |
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They compared the new investigative approach against the demonstrative approach to teaching Junior Certificate science. |
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But denialists have never been interested in understanding the science, after all, if they understood it, they could not be in denial anymore. |
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This provides an example of useful science as contrasted with practical knowledge. |
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These essays provide a variety of interesting, provocative perspectives on science in Canada. |
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Our colleges and universities need deans, provosts and presidents who support and promote psychological science. |
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Pak Zen was a graduate from the department of library science at the University of Indonesia. |
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Such boundary crossings redefined the existing rigid departmentalization of science. |
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Graduate Studies were not departmentalized in those days, and Fisher ranged over mathematics, science, social science and philosophy. |
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The case for greenhouse-effect reform will only become persuasive once environmental science is depoliticized. |
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He mastered the science, but it deposited him at the foot of something much larger and more complicated. |
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The other option was science fiction with players having psionic powers, but we really felt more comfortable with the heroic fantasy theme. |
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Julius says the next 100 years are going to be a glorious golden age of maths, of science. |
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Science is sometimes an art, and psychiatry I would say is as much an art as it is a science. |
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Like every other medical science, psychiatry is there to help people, and is built around the scientific method. |
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This is the science of psychoacoustics, which deals with the effects of sound on our nervous system. |
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Memetics is a scientific theory unifying biology, psychology, and cognitive science. |
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It's science, not politics, and public opinion has no bearing on scientific findings. |
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For instance, a lesson in science is designed primarily to help students develop academic concepts. |
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Ms. Brophy, in one week, has earned the reputation amongst the science department of being able to tame even the wildest goof-offs in school. |
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The mountain gorilla, Gorilla beringei beringei, became known to science 100 years ago. |
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But this apparent desultoriness has been necessary, for I knew not for what branch of science I should eventually have to declare myself. |
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Hebden is a student of drum science now, and many of these tracks have a surprising punchiness. |
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Explanation is substituted for deduction, prediction, solution, determination and calculation as the objectives of science. |
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Rather, they represent a genuine science of mind, a science of insight that uncovers the pure nature of the mind and world that we experience. |
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Pure academic research and big science attract an even different personality type. |
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He draws science and aliens, nature and mathematics, pagan icons and purity in beauty. |
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I am a developmental biologist who also has a masters degree in the history of science. |
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People who in other countries would read light novels and popular magazines devoured works on art, science, history, and above all philosophy. |
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It always interested me why that happened, and why it happened at the same time that the science of ecology was born. |
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Structural equation models were first introduced into genetics, econometrics, and social science. |
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I've heard through the grapevine that his editorial was actually the subject of discussion in a political science class on campus. |
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His hobbies included graphology, the science of studying handwriting to determine an individual's character. |
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Linguistic science has long recognized that all dialects of a language are linguistically complex and rule governed. |
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We follow our fingertips and receptors when we use science to reshape nature and to build our personal Edens. |
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The agendas of science and the animal rights lobby are diametrically opposed. |
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You always think of science as being a man in a lab making a discovery, but it's not, it's teamwork. |
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We should show our gratitude to medical science and acknowledge the role of animals in modern medicine. |
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The National Research Council addresses the shortage of science and math teachers in the U.S. with a make-work plan for educrats. |
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Donnie Darko proves that it's possible to do science fiction with visual effects in the independent film arena. |
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Commitment to Plato's philosophy tended to reinforce a Pythagorean orientation towards science. |
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Increased productivity and efficiency in business today depend on the appliance of science. |
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Whether it is news, science, religion, or education, if it is happening on TV, it must follow the dictates of entertainment. |
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She is doing a science project on the calcium content of eggshells and wishes to include the shells of wild birds in her study. |
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Is it any wonder that the public's perception of science is that of a bunch of boring egomaniacs jargonizing endlessly about trivialities? |
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In the nineteenth century, the new science of dietetics began to elaborate basic nutritional standards. |
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Nonetheless, conceptions of Australian science have largely remained bound by the top-down perspective assumed by the diffusionist model. |
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I was truly elated to be graduating finally after six drawn out years in computing science. |
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They are literally up to their elbows in the science of life, and many of them have a stronger faith than most clergy. |
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And like most contemporary science fiction it offers a fairly grim view of the future. |
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Forensic science was a hot topic at the ACS National Meeting in San Diego, and elemental analysis was a recurring theme. |
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Then I attended a dino symposium and was nailed by the passion and intensity that paleontologists brought to their science. |
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In my day elhi education was always about 20 or more years behind the times in anything, be it history, science or whatever. |
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Furthest away are other science disciplines that would be grouped in different broad categories from psychology, like physics and chemistry. |
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That was extremely embarrassing for someone who does cognitive science and linguistics. |
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Reverting to conventional photography, the artist insists we look at these people as embodiments of the limitations of science and technology. |
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I really like science fiction, so rest assured, I wasn't dissing the genre. |
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Just keep in mind that you will be undertaking a science experiment with no guarantee of the outcome! |
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They were a product of their times, and philosophy, like science, is emendable. |
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A group of eminent scientists from around the world have voted Blade Runner the best science fiction movie of all time. |
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As I shoved it into my bag, I had to be especially careful not to crumple the sheet of paper that had all my science notes on it. |
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I like the science, and the effects, but the plot line is a little shallow, at least in my view. |
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Secular culture so often teaches us that religion and science are mutually exclusive, even contradictory, forces. |
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It took old-fashioned rocket science to put the contraption into orbit on September 27 last year. |
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Despite his major contribution to medical science, he died reviled, his name soon forgotten. |
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But behind these claims and the catchy marketing campaign to eat 'five a day' there is little solid science. |
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The history of science tells story after story of challenges to human intuition. |
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This is a scientific hypothesis, but it challenges the metaphysical assumption on which conventional science is based. |
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Soccer worldwide makes a science of invective against match officials after any game turning decision goes against them. |
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He aced in computer and science, and could make it as a scientist or even an inventor one day. |
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Rarely has a branch of science offered more inviting prospects for a novice hoping to undertake research. |
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Historical fact is one thing, but cooking the books where science is concerned is another altogether. |
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But in the realm of public debate, science and religion frequently seemed like irreconcilable enemies. |
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He was the father of experimental science, the sharpest thinker of his time, a great debater and a dismissive polemicist. |
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Leftists have been known to use literary theory to demonstrate flaws in science. |
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Young Russian noblemen were encouraged to learn about the latest technology, economic theory and political science. |
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As a Rhodes scholar at Oxford, he studied philosophy, political science, and economics. |
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But my favorite books to read are generally on political history and political science. |
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This is not to say that his conception of political science is primarily empirical rather than normative. |
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This left room for courses in economic history, the history of economic thought and even political science. |
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In law and political science there is a hierarchy of government pronouncement. |
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She entered Bryn Mawr College the following year, to major in economics and political science. |
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He is also an associate professor of political science at Stanford University. |
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He graduated from the University of Southern Colorado in Pueblo with a degree in political science. |
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Behaviouralists sought to make political science a true science, often through the use of statistics and quantitative analysis. |
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Their work was recently published in Applied Physics Letter and featured in several science journals. |
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Yet with so many accusations flying, it seems no amount of medical science is going to settle the matter. |
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In both polywater and N-rays, science nicely corrected itself, as it was designed to do. |
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Between the explosions and chase scenes, The Island ponders the theme of how far science should go to extend lives. |
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If the water had pooled on the surface at Meridiani Planum, the science team members are not hazarding high bets on what shape it took. |
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The pattern here is that businesses are falling for pop psychology fads that have no basis in the true science of psychology. |
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You should have no problem finding general interest and pop science articles on his work. |
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Most corrosively, however, is that the distrust of medical professionals is breeding contempt for all that is associated with medical science. |
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It has not only drawn a new generation of students into science and technology, but also popularized its sphere of scientific know-how. |
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Hence, Richardson's foreword drew scorn from veteran UFO investigators and science popularizers. |
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Think of this in the same way that science understands brute matter and its relation to cosmogenesis. |
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In turn, that led to the birth of a whole new science, cosmology, that gave us most of our modern ideas of the creation of the universe itself. |
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The intersection between cosmology and particle physics us likely to remain an exciting area of science for many years to come. |
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Is it necessary for humans to create stars in a laboratory in order for us to develop a science of cosmology? |
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It is more a reflection on the desire to win at all costs rather than an indictment of science. |
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From the perspective of modern science as well, drinking about one-half of your weight in fluid ounces of water each day is essential for health. |
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In a sense, costume drama is a bit like science fiction that looks backward rather than forward. |
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Her love of the reef is couched in the language of the nature study and science of her time. |
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The book opens with a discussion of positivism and empiricism, positions which regrettably are still dominant within social and natural science. |
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It was not an integral part of the new science of economics as taught by the Classical economists. |
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Also, students and postdocs have noted that outreach work re-energizes them and rekindles their excitement in bench science. |
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Ned is a meteorologist devoted to science and logic, the counterpoint to his sister and her belief in curses and irrational fate. |
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Postmodernists are disillusioned with this triumphalist view of science dispelling ignorance and making the world a better place. |
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Social constructivist theories of science nicely complement postmodernists' angst against science. |
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Of course, a follow-on discovery of fossilized microbes would be the planetary science story of the century. |
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Early Greek science postulated the existence of a primordial element as the foundation of the material universe. |
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The project also will test use of the Web to provide science lab courses to high schools. |
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The science behind that is a little sketchy, but it could be because they contain zinc, a mineral linked to progesterone and male potency. |
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But one is equally foolish to ignore the potential significance of the new science. |
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As an avid reader, I often find myself questioning the science in a lot of books, but Sawyer covers himself very well. |
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Its also pretty self evidently false, as the briefest foray into the science and its history will tell you. |
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Not satisfied with his triumphs in the areas of economics and political science, he has forayed into literature. |
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Now what are the chief objections to modern science, which foredoom it to failure and justify Occultism in decrying it? |
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Some third grade children study at special hagwons in order to get into high schools specializing in foreign languages or science. |
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But if the only way to do it is via a cranky and crabbed dismissal of science, count me out. |
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The reality is that every crackpot idea in the history of science has been defended on this very same basis. |
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Politically active creationists failed in their attempts to have creationism taught alongside evolution as a science. |
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Intelligent Design creationism is bad theology, bad politics, bad education, and bad science. |
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But intelligent design, which spreads doubt about evolution without being too overtly religious, may succeed where creation science failed. |
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But no creationist could ever pass a peer-review test, because there is a presuppositional bias against creation science. |
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In no way do the science standards support the teaching of notions of intelligent design or creation science or any of its variations. |
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The trouble with this analysis is that neither ID nor creation science are presented as religious ways of interpreting nature. |
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Ben has a great passion for creation science, particularly astronomy, and is also becoming quite knowledgeable on computers. |
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Master of seven languages, he was also an original thinker and one of the great pioneering figures of creation science. |
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There is no important difference between intelligent design and creation science. |
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At no time have I stated or implied that I wanted to insert creation science or intelligent design into the science curriculum standards. |
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Are you pleased then to see the various creation science movements throughout the world, and one very much on your home front here in Australia? |
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In retrospect, the movie almost reads like a stealth defense of creation science. |
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Although his treatment is unexpectedly mild, his conclusions about creation science are really less than kind. |
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Many science teachers took the occasion to attempt to discredit the creation science position. |
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Instead they argue that creation science fits the evidence every bit as well as the alternatives. |
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But perhaps the real similarity lies in the smash-and-grab variety of science both fossickers blithely espoused. |
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With a degree in political science and criminology, he became a probation officer in Florida. |
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Well now there's an institute named after her where they take science to criminology. |
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At the University of Northumbria, applications to study criminology and forensic science have doubled. |
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To those who have an education grounded in critical thinking and science we can see through it very clearly. |
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Many scientists enter the fray from evolutionary biology, the branch of science that conflicts most directly with religion. |
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A lot of ideas in science come when people come together, from cross-fertilization of ideas. |
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But can science find the means to thrive in a free-flowing digital information environment and still serve all its masters? |
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Clarifying what is science and what is superstition must become the top priority of India's freethinkers. |
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But science will shrink the space in which free will can operate by slowly exposing the mechanism of decision making. |
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Finding species that are unknown to science is crucial to their continued survival, he says. |
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The teaching of science subjects to secondary school students and college and university freshmen is often regarded as a difficult task. |
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Theoretical science has been slowly driven from the universities by the new crusaders of Postmodernism. |
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This site lists cryobiology topics that make excellent science fair ideas and do not require much equipment. |
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We know cryonics is the nutcase science of hyperfreezing cadavers in hopes that someday there will be a way to bring the dead to life. |
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In her lifetime she would go on to be one of the most influential figures in establishing the science of crystallography. |
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Indeed, why should there be a history of science distinct from the history of thought and action? |
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The French cubist painter Georges Braque once said that art is made to disturb, while science reassures. |
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As a result they have pushed forward the frontiers of animal science and human medicine. |
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The latest science says the following six foods provide healthy fuel for burning fat and building muscle. |
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Driving a car fueled by something other than gasoline or diesel fuel is no longer the stuff of science fiction. |
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Optimism about curability was misplaced despite the emerging science of psychiatry, and hospital crowding led to a lapse to custodianship again. |
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But active participation of the workers in the march of science is subject to fulfilment of very definite social conditions. |
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The primary lesson we took from our Delphic oracle project is not the well-worn message that modern science can elucidate ancient curiosities. |
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In focusing on the problems with the new science curriculum, my analysis here might seem one-sided. |
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Every now and then science throws us a curve ball, a technology at once staggeringly useful and breathtakingly dangerous. |
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We now have a modern science laboratory with all the facilities including a fume cupboard and a gas supply. |
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It is not often that Parliament has to frame legislation apt to apply to developments at the advanced cutting edge of science. |
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The real story was the implications of the cutting-edge science and resultant technology. |
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Once, such ideas were the stuff of futurist ponderings published in popular science and mechanics magazines. |
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Error, obscurity, conceptual fuzziness, and sheer ignorance are part of science, just as they are in any other human activity. |
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The Programme is broken into categories of earth science, life sciences, and human medicine. |
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In 9th grade I hated earth science, in 10th grade Biology was OK and in 11 th grade I liked Chemistry. |
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His election to Fellow in many professional societies was recognition of his contributions to the field of earth science. |
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Their findings promise to fuel what is already one of the hottest debates in earth science. |
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The grant money will enable 140 eighth-grade students to study earth science using the Aquarium's living collection and resources. |
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The meat, egg, dairy, fast food, and soft drink industries have abandoned a head-on assault on the science. |
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Hundreds of schools across the country are routinely cancelling science practicals because of lack of equipment and funding. |
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There is no laboratory for science practicals, class rooms are less in number, there are few teachers and no drinking water. |
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Some unfortunate chemist got caught and made an example of, and the system of scrutiny for science practicals was tightened up til it squeaked. |
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Seven participants had a bachelor of science in nursing degree, and one was a licensed practical nurse. |
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Tales of ecological woe, no matter how well-founded in science, rarely galvanize people to action. |
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I admire their idealism, but wish it could be tempered with a little pragmatism, and also that their science was more sound. |
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The gamma ray detector hardware and signal processing software is based on technologies originally developed for space science. |
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Predictability and planning become ever more important as farming becomes a more sophisticated science. |
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What really makes science different is empirical adequacy and predictive power of models. |
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Evolutionary theory pilots us around biology reliably and predictively, with a detailed and unblemished success that rivals anything in science. |
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The general lack of understanding of science is contributed to, in a large part, by society, a public weaned on predigested news. |
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It was inevitable that Darwinism and its later development into the science of genetics should face fierce opposition from theologians. |
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Some of her examples of falsified science journal articles are interesting here although they are somewhat dated. |
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Do these investigations of the face and body reach beyond the obscure and dated science of Duchenne, Charcot and their followers? |
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Another genre opportunity that is raised and discarded is that of science fiction. |
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The new university curriculum will include a Stage programme on the science, nutrition, history, culture and gastronomy of Irish food. |
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I was a science major as an undergrad, and took biology, chemistry, and physics in a pre-med curriculum. |
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The fundamental premise of the publication is that early design for space travel was influenced largely by science fiction. |
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He raised the possibility that this might have something to do with male preponderance at the very top of research science. |
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It uses preposterous science fiction to delve into deeper human emotions than the usual fluff with which we are served each spring. |
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Although girls do well in science subjects at GCSE, they often fail to take these subjects further. |
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Corridors are floored with black linoleum, which deadens noise and adds to the devout atmosphere, as if science were some kind of holy order. |
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Admission will require a bachelor's degree in another field and science prerequisites. |
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These were the fore-runners of the Geissler tubes used in science demonstrations. |
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Thus science provides human beings a degree of control over the material world that pre-scientific societies could only dream of. |
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The science of gemmology teaches how to pick the best and how to spot even the smallest flaw in diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and others. |
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New buildings should preserve the existing environment while applying the latest science and materials. |
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This book shows that science writing is by no means the preserve of specialists. |
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The press conference with the science spokesman for the three main parties was very low key. |
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That may be true in medicine, but in athletics, genetic engineering is not a theme of science fantasy, but a sobering fact of our cyborg present. |
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Kant took himself to be delimiting the a priori presuppositions of experience, and of empirical science. |
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The linear challenges will be met with science and technology efforts maturing before 2020, which are continuations of today's current technology. |
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As feminist theorists in the 1980s and 1990s proliferated differences in order to better represent the contours of twentieth-century life, science kept pace. |
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To see this dynamic at work, take, for instance, the nineteenth-century earth science of the American naval astronomer and hydrographic innovator Matthew Fontaine Maury. |
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It's inspirational when the president of the United States provides a figurative salute, along with fist bumps, to a bunch of high school science projects. |
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However, self-employed individuals in the earth sciences, physics and astronomy, and political science were the highest-paid doctorates in their field. |
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I went through a very traumatic experience just after that, and I wonder to this day what would have happened if that man had had training in creation science. |
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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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What's more, the management, accounting, and computer science majors are counting on the hierarchical corporate power structure to work in their favor upon graduation. |
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Nevertheless, our very procedure, in deriving therefrom a lawlike description of the infinite modes, presupposes the possibility of a deductive science. |
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Medical science still couldn't create an artificial limb that could be controlled like a natural one and Alex's father had been invalided out of the service. |
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In addition, if a staff member is knowledgeable about laser science and safety, he or she can conduct the yearly educational training and credentialing sessions. |
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But when I turned 15, I abandoned the study of science, having been warned that practicals in the afternoon would not permit me to play cricket at University. |
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Huge amounts of energy, invention, and creativity that could have gone into science or technology and into improving the quality of life are channelled into security. |
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If so, might it not suggest other responses to crime, such as rehabilitation, restitution, and addressing the multiple criminogenic factors revealed by behavioral science? |
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This revolution has transpired partly through advances in dental science and a greater awareness of the importance of oral health through dental education. |
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Talk of giving primary school children a basic grounding in science is fanciful if we cannot find enough teachers at second level to teach maths and physics. |
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Commentary has pretty much adopted him as their science guy, and he has published a steady stream of flapdoodle in their pages over the last decade. |
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Witness how eagerly we accept the idea that our food is being poisoned by the suspect motivations and carelessness of industry, government and science. |
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Use of the buildings, such as for social, tourism, education, science, culture, or religious purposes, must also be in coordination with the agency, she said. |
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Proto-fascists drew on contemporary science as well as irrationalism. |
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Were the amateurs doing science, or just prettying up the pictures? |
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The implications of map theory, game theory, topology, the fractals of chaos theory, have all lurked in ornament, awaiting their elevation to science. |
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It would be an irreparable loss to science if they should get away. |
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He gave up a tenured professorship in the animal science department. |
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The novel is like science fiction crossed with an SAS adventure. |
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The robust version of descriptive philosophy of science derives from, or superimposes upon, the conclusions of modest descriptivism, a theory about evaluative practice. |
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It's the night of nights for the science glitterati of Australia, a chance for scientists and their mates to whip off their lab coats and don their glad rags. |
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If science tells us only about 'reality' in the anti-realist, pragmatistic sense, then there's absolutely no reason one shouldn't think that 'reality' is naturalistic. |
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I have only been able to procure a few cyclopaedias of art and science. |
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Liquid helium will boil off constantly through a special porous plug in the dewar to maintain the science probe at its required temperature for up to 18 months. |
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It was to be a science of man in all his plenitude, in his totality. |
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It's a fast-paced pulp science fiction yarn with compelling characters. |
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Millennia of human history may be melting in the crucible of science. |
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For grades 7 and 8, teachers are more departmentalized and instruct in specific content areas such as science, mathematics, social studies, Spanish, and English. |
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Classical science formulated basic laws of nature upon exceptionally simple systems, such as the motion of the Earth around the sun or a frictionless pendulum. |
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Separation science involves the use of techniques to facilitate the separation, purification and analysis of complex mixtures of chemical and biological compounds. |
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The seven science instruments on the piano-sized probe would shed light on the bodies' surface properties, geology, interior makeup and atmospheres. |
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First of all, the land is chosen according to the ancient science of geomancy which considers the shape of the mountains, position of water and the cardinal directions. |
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The future cannot be prevised except in a general way, in an unfinished universe where science must expect to revise its formulations in further research. |
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An international science magazine is offering one reader the chance to win another life, through a competition offering a prize of cryonics treatment. |
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The fact that most people don't know what theory means is proof positive of the lousy job we already do of teaching philosophy of science to our students. |
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By providing key references for the broader history of science and of Canada, he enables those interested to place the contribution of geoscience into a broader context. |
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What are these other aspects of the societal dimension of science? |
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Establishments already in the area include the Newtown Music Centre and the Sci-Bono Discovery Centre, a large science edutainment centre set to open this year. |
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The belief system of many modern cults and spiritual groups is a hodgepodge conglomeration of ideas from religion, philosophy, psychology, the occult, and science. |
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Clay's interest in silent dating springs from his analysis of how you get groups to interact fruitfully, a critical topic in social science, especially in an age of blogging. |
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Pliny the Younger also posited that art, like science, evolves cumulatively, except for momentous turning points where many cultures intersect and interact. |
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Compared to physics and astronomy, cosmology is a young science. |
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Ethics without science is at best uninformed and at worst delusive, while science without ethics is at best suspect and at worst downright dangerous. |
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He is in a college preparatory program in Drummondville, studying science. |
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She received a master of science degree in foods and nutrition in combination with a graduate certificate in gerontology from the University of Utah. |
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He made contributions to numerous branches of mathematics, celestial mechanics, fluid mechanics, the special theory of relativity and the philosophy of science. |
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But I think Popper may have wanted to find out criteria of demarcation between science and such pseudosciences as astrology and Freudian psychoanalysis. |
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The working class will not be in a position to create a science and an art of its own until it has been fully emancipated from its present class position. |
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Because the rise of magic was almost coterminous with, and certainly related to the rise of science, there was not necessarily a causal connection between the two. |
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When the Princeton graduate, who majored in electrical engineering and computer science, decided to make the leap on to the internet he knew it would be dicey. |
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However, pre-press and production employers say math, science and IT skills are as important as creative software skills and new entrants are expected to learn on the job. |
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