Science
in sentence
4134 examples of Science in a sentence
Science
is about ignorance.
And one of the things I've been pushing on university presidents is we need every engineering and
science
and computer
science
student who is about to write the next line of code or design the next IoT device to actually have in them a sense of responsibility and stewardship towards what they're building.
So after returning home one summer in eighth grade, I decided that I wanted to combine my passion for solving the global water crisis with my interest in
science.
What started off as an eighth grade
science
fair project is now my photocatalytic composite for water purification.
And for that reason, I'm continuing to work on this
science
fair project from 2012 to bring it from the laboratory into the real world.
Good science, imagination and a leap of faith are the trifecta we use to raise the dead.
We are going to build with the TED Prize money an online, crowdsource, citizen
science
platform to allow anyone in the world to engage with discovering archaeological sites.
My team and I will have batch-processed large amounts of satellite data using algorithms in order for you to find things, so you'll be doing really good
science.
If you look at the etymology of the word statistics, it's the
science
of dealing with data about the state or the community that we live in.
So very often, we talk about statistics as being the
science
of uncertainty.
My parting thought for today is: actually, statistics is the
science
of us.
I was a surfer, a social
science
student, a friend to good people, a loved brother and son, an outdoor recreation guide, and eventually, a youth worker.
Another fascinating idea in the mission profile places humanoid robots on the surface of Mars before the humans themselves arrive, first to build facilities and later to serve as collaborative members of the
science
team.
The art and the
science
of computing have come a long way since HAL was onscreen, and I'd imagine if his inventor Dr. Chandra were here today, he'd have a whole lot of questions for us.
The whole
science
of memetics is much maligned, much misunderstood, much feared.
Researchers Nosek, Banaji and Greenwald have looked at data from millions of people, and what they've found is, for example, most white Americans can more quickly and easily associate white people and good things than black people and good things, and most men and women can more quickly and easily associate men and
science
than women and
science.
CA: Yuval, there's a belief among many technologists, certainly, that political concerns are kind of overblown, that actually, political leaders don't have that much influence in the world, that the real determination of humanity at this point is by science, by invention, by companies, by many things other than political leaders, and it's actually very hard for leaders to do much, so we're actually worrying about nothing here.
YNH: Well, I certainly think that the most interesting question today in
science
is the question of consciousness and the mind.
I studied cooking in school for four years, and in that experience, which was called "domestic science," it was a bit of a cheap trick for me to try and get a
science
qualification.
So, here comes a bit of science, and this is a bit of
science
I've done since "The Bottom Billion," so it's new.
My name is Ani, and I'm a designer and researcher at MIT Media Lab, where I'm part of a relatively new and unique group called Design Fiction, where we're wedged somewhere between
science
fiction and
science
fact.
What are the thresholds between
science
and its ability to shape our emotional landscape?
Well, now, wedged somewhere between science, design and art I get to ask, what if fiction informs fact?
They believed that every case of ghosts that they had investigated so far had been explained away by
science.
I would love to tell you that nine times out of 10,
science
wins, saves the day, it's all explained.
The truth is, 10 times out of 10,
science
wins, it saves the day.
It's symbolically important to me, and that metaphor is so meaningful, so purposeful to me, and I'm not going to try to persuade you of it," now you've moved it from outer truth to inner truth, from
science
to art.
Now, yes, most of these searches will come up empty, but that's how all of
science
works.
When I was an undergraduate at Georgia Tech studying computer science, I used to work on social robots, and one of my tasks was to get a robot to play peek-a-boo, a simple turn-taking game where partners cover their face and then uncover it saying, "Peek-a-boo!"
Bodies donated to
science
are brought here, and their decay is studied to benefit the future of forensics.
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