Science
in sentence
4134 examples of Science in a sentence
If a young learner thinks that all viruses have DNA, that's not going to ruin their chances of success in
science.
But if a young learner can't understand anything in
science
and learns to hate it because it all sounds like this, that will ruin their chances of success.
There's a growing number of online resources that are dedicated to just explaining
science
in simple, understandable ways.
And I myself spend most of my free time making these
science
videos that I put on YouTube.
The feedback that I get is sometimes misspelled and it's often written in LOLcats, (Laughter) but nonetheless, it's so appreciative, so thankful that I know this is the right way we should be communicating
science.
There's still so much work left to be done, though, and if you're involved with
science
in any way, I urge you to join me.
Of the millions of projects on the Scratch website, there's everything from animated stories to school
science
projects to anime soap operas to virtual construction kits to recreations of classic video games to political opinion polls to trigonometry tutorials to interactive artwork, and, yes, interactive Mother's Day cards.
But there's an intriguing solution which is coming from what is known as the
science
of complexity.
This approach has been very successfully applied to many complex systems in physics, biology, computer science, the social sciences, but what about economics?
Scientists have sometimes criticized economists who believe ideas and concepts are more important than empirical data, because a foundational guideline in
science
is: Let the data speak.
This is rocket science, but it's not hard rocket
science.
Science
has the power to predict the future in many cases now.
I didn't have
science
in school.
And that is why so many students perceive this
science
like this ... as an obstacle in their path, and they fear it and they hate it and they call it a weed-out course.
I happen to love this science, and I think this position in which we have placed it is inexcusable.
It's not good for science, and it's not good for society, and I don't think it has to be this way.
So let's not forget the role of the blacksmith in this picture, because without the blacksmith, things would look a little different ... (Laughter) But this
science
is bigger than medicine.
This is a rich
science.
He and I wanted to demonstrate through the use of graphics like these to help someone talk about this intricate
science.
Then we'd had 100 years of modern rain science, and that had accelerated desertification, as we first discovered in Africa and then confirmed in the United States, and as you see in this picture of land managed by the federal government.
He was my Jedi and my rabbi while he was here, and Seymour taught me both to love flies and also to play with
science.
So in his book, "Regenesis," which I recommend, he has a chapter on the
science
of bringing back extinct species, and he has a machine called the Multiplex Automated Genome Engineering machine.
Could we really be the great generation that Mandela asked us to be? Might we answer that clarion call with science, with reason, with facts, and, dare I say it, emotions?
We may not yet have the flying cars
science
fiction promised us, but we can have walls that change color depending on temperature, keyboards that roll up, and windows that become opaque at the flick of a switch.
The biggest challenge is that material
science
is complex and requires expensive equipment.
But paper electronics is one of the most promising branches of material
science
in that it allows us to create cheaper and flexible electronics.
You would think this wouldn't be too hard, that we would simply have the ability to take this fundamental information that we're learning about how it is that basic biology teaches us about the causes of disease and build a bridge across this yawning gap between what we've learned about basic
science
and its application, a bridge that would look maybe something like this, where you'd have to put together a nice shiny way to get from one side to the other.
You probably know, if you've been paying attention to some of the
science
literature that you can now take a skin cell and encourage it to become a liver cell or a heart cell or a kidney cell or a brain cell for any of us.
So game theory is a branch of, originally, applied mathematics, used mostly in economics and political science, a little bit in biology, that gives us a mathematical taxonomy of social life and it predicts what people are likely to do and believe others will do in cases where everyone's actions affect everyone else.
As you probably know, in science, when you write a kind of special paper, only six or seven people read it.
Back
Next
Related words
Fiction
About
Technology
Which
There
World
Their
People
Would
Other
Years
Think
Could
Should
Research
Climate
Where
Really
Social
Engineering