Science
in sentence
4134 examples of Science in a sentence
It's like, are
science
and plumbing compatible?
Science
is not a thing.
It's the beginning of the causal chain for
science.
On a more serious note, in all of
science
we're looking for a balance between data and theory.
But my friend, Simon Singh, the particle physicist now turned
science
educator, who wrote the book "The Big Bang," and so on, uses every chance he gets to promote good
science.
The 20th century was this time of huge optimism about what
science
could offer, but with all of the focus on life, death was forgotten, even as our approach to death changed dramatically.
That's the slice of their ecosystem that they can pick up on, and we have a word for this in
science.
So the opportunity of making a part in real time that has the properties to be a final part really opens up 3D manufacturing, and for us, this is very exciting, because this really is owning the intersection between hardware, software and molecular science, and I can't wait to see what designers and engineers around the world are going to be able to do with this great tool.
So I'm here today to give you a progress report on the latest advances in our research in computer vision, one of the most frontier and potentially revolutionary technologies in computer
science.
We have the benefits of all the
science
and technology that we talk about here.
Let me quickly take you through some of the
science
and the instruments.
This, for me, is one of the very best images of space
science
I have ever seen.
I'm brilliant at this. (Laughter) Now, in terms of the
science
of laughter, there isn't very much, but it does turn out that pretty much everything we think we know about laughter is wrong.
Science
is not a belief system.
Some people think that some of these things are sort of
science
fiction-y, far out there, crazy.
Think of all the crazy technologies that you could have imagined maybe humans could have developed in the fullness of time: cures for aging, space colonization, self-replicating nanobots or uploading of minds into computers, all kinds of
science
fiction-y stuff that's nevertheless consistent with the laws of physics.
SK: No. GG: I need you to stick out your arm for science, roll up your sleeve a bit, So what I'm going to do, I'm putting electrodes on your arm, and you're probably wondering, I just said I'm going to record from your brain, what am I doing with your arm?
I thought it was quite an interesting experiment in the principles of rocket
science.
As students of
science
and technology, many of them were computer majors but they did not know the existence of the Internet.
We know from anthropological
science
that race is fiction, even though racism is very, very real, and we now know from cultural studies that separate male or female genders is a constructed fiction.
It's actually not rocket
science.
But this is really a
science
talk, and it's really an engineering talk, and what was amazing to me about that experience is that Taber said, yes, I think we can build a stratospheric suit, and more than that, come down tomorrow and let's talk to the team that formed the core of the group that actually built it.
So actually,
science
fiction got some things right.
Well,
science
fiction got some things wrong.
It's not rocket
science.
Mark Twain summed up what I take to be one of the fundamental problems of cognitive
science
with a single witticism.
He said, "There's something fascinating about
science.
Twain meant it as a joke, of course, but he's right: There's something fascinating about
science.
Because, it turns out that the fascinating thing about
science
is also a fascinating thing about children, which, to put a gentler spin on Mark Twain, is precisely their ability to draw rich, abstract inferences rapidly and accurately from sparse, noisy data.
Generalizing from small samples of data is the bread and butter of
science.
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