Science
in sentence
4134 examples of Science in a sentence
We visited the great museums and historic buildings of both Europe and the Middle East, but to encourage my growing interest in
science
and technology, they would simply drop me off in places like the London
Science
Museum, where I would wander endlessly for hours by myself studying the history of
science
and technology.
Largely because of that visit, I came to understand that, contrary to what I was being told in school, the worlds of art and design were not, in fact, incompatible with
science
and engineering.
They also needed the storytelling and leadership skills necessary to fund and execute it, and a mastery of
science
and technology with the ability and knowhow to push existing innovations even farther.
We need to help them to find their own role models, and give them the confidence to believe in themselves and to believe that anything is possible, and just as my grandpa did when he took me shopping for surplus, and just as my parents did when they took me to
science
museums, we need to encourage them to find their own path, even if it's very different from our own.
We also need them to understand something that doesn't seem adequately appreciated in our increasingly tech-dependent world, that art and design are not luxuries, nor somehow incompatible with
science
and engineering.
So I think the other path that we can go down that's going to be more effective is one of more
science.
It's doing
science
that allowed us to develop all these mechanisms for computing this personal data in the first place.
And so I think encouraging this kind of
science
and supporting researchers who want to cede some of that control back to users and away from the social media companies means that going forward, as these tools evolve and advance, means that we're going to have an educated and empowered user base, and I think all of us can agree that that's a pretty ideal way to go forward.
Looking deeply inside nature, through the magnifying glass of science, designers extract principles, processes and materials that are forming the very basis of design methodology.
The mission of the center is to put forth fundamental
science
and technological capability that will allow the biomechatronic and regenerative repair of humans, across a broad range of brain and body disabilities.
This basic
science
motivates what we build.
Anyway, this is a chart where you want to get that number to continue, and it's going to be possible, using the
science
of new vaccines, getting the vaccines out to kids.
Because the delivery piece is every bit as important as the
science.
What is the intersection between technology, art and
science?
But, surprisingly, the
science
community didn't like this technically accurate name and decided to call it Gibson Assembly.
That's not
science
fiction.
I think this is the coolest possible
science.
Actually, the
science
to make those machines was really in time to produce fusion during that curve.
Science
starts with observation, but the trick is to identify the patterns and signatures that we might otherwise dismiss as myth or coincidence, isolate them, and test them with scientific rigor.
And so it's not surprising, perhaps, that in July of this year, Shark Attack Mitigation Systems in collaboration with the University of Western Australia Oceans Institute made an announcement which captured the attention of the worldwide media and of ocean users worldwide, and that was around the development of technology to mitigate or reduce the risk of shark attack based on the
science
of what sharks can see.
And I have for you today the story of that journey, but also the notion that
science
can be as powerful as a translator as it can be for invention.
I wanted to put some
science
to this anecdotal evidence, because if
science
could support this concept, then we might have at least part of the solution to shark attack right under our very nose.
The next thing we needed to do was to convert this into wetsuits that people might actually wear, and to that end, I invited Ray Smith, a surfer, industrial designer, wetsuit designer, and in fact the guy that designed the original Quiksilver logo, to come over and sit with the
science
team and interpret that
science
into aesthetic wetsuits that people might actually wear.
So we knew that we had some really solid
science
here.
It's so important that this concept is led with the
science.
Well, to my mind, rather than take a blank sheet and use
science
as a tool for invention, we've paid attention to the biological evidence, we've put importance to the human anecdotal evidence, and we've used
science
as a tool for translation, translation of something that was already there into something that we can use for the benefit of mankind.
And it strikes me that this idea of
science
as a tool for translation rather than invention is one that we can apply much more widely than this in the pursuit of innovation.
But whether that's 15 years away, or 150 years away, depends not just on the science, but on what we as a society choose to do with it.
And the museum noticed that people were spending a lot of time with this exhibit, and a researcher from a
science
education center in Australia decided to study this exhibit and try to figure out what was going on.
There's a great phrase that Sherwood Rowland, who won the Nobel Prize for the chemistry that led to ozone depletion, when he was accepting his Nobel Prize, he asked this question: "What is the use of having developed a
science
well enough to make predictions if, in the end, all we're willing to do is stand around and wait for them to come true?"
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