Scientific
in sentence
2039 examples of Scientific in a sentence
But when I first learned that, I remember thinking, "OK, I could see all the
scientific
evidence, I read a huge number of studies, I interviewed a huge number of the experts who were explaining this," but I kept thinking, "How can we possibly do that?"
How do you prevent either the media's interpretation of your work or the
scientific
community's interpretation of the implications of your work, kind of like the Mozart metaphor, where, "Oh, MRIs show that play enhances your intelligence.
We could talk about government data, enterprise data is really important, there's
scientific
data, there's personal data, there's weather data, there's data about events, there's data about talks, and there's news and there's all kinds of stuff.
You can see all of the great
scientific
announcements that we've made, saying how much danger we face with climate change.
Accumulating
scientific
knowledge is giving us greater insights, greater clarity, into what our future might look like in a changing climate and what that could mean for our health.
While mind uploading is theoretically possible, we’re likely hundreds of years away from the technology and
scientific
understanding that would make it a reality.
If the unit of space-time is on this scale, we wouldn’t be able to look for it with our current
scientific
understanding.
The
scientific
community failed her.
The destruction of information would force us to rewrite some of our most fundamental
scientific
paradigms.
Because, for thousands of centuries, in the dark time before the
scientific
revolution and the Enlightenment, people had low expectations.
All of those people are between 20 and 30 years old, and they are the engine that drives
scientific
discovery in this country.
And to get there, we all need to reimagine marine conservation as a narrative of abundance and empowerment, not of austerity and alienation; a movement guided by the people who depend on healthy seas for their survival, not by abstract
scientific
values.
And while these space probes have been made for different
scientific
endeavors, they can also act like tiny cosmic meteorological stations and monitor the evolution of these space storms.
We're now going to move from real biological data to biogenerative algorithms that create artificial nature in our next artistic and
scientific
installation.
In this artistic and
scientific
installation, biogenerative algorithms are helping us to understand self-generation and growth: very important for simulation in the nanoscaled sciences.
Now, chocolate aside, every single one of those experiments enables yet one more
scientific
question answered that we can't do down here on Earth.
I was part of a collaborative
scientific
effort that spanned a dozen institutions across three continents that came together and solved this problem.
But actually in
scientific
community there is great debate about what percentage of flu transmission between people is from sneezing and coughing and what percentage is on your hands.
It means we made cultural impact as well as
scientific
impact.
On the other hand, try to say that this is not the case, because there is a
scientific
consensus about this pattern now.
Nature has evolved over 3.8 billion years to be able to do this, but now through the use of synthetic biology, an emerging
scientific
discipline that seeks to customize this functionality of living systems, we can now rapid prototype the assembly of DNA.
And that gets you all the
scientific
data that goes with it.
Now, I've spent about 500 days of my
scientific
life at sea, and a lot more in front of a computer or in the lab, so I feel compelled to tell you some of their stories.
But on the other hand, it was the
scientific
gold of the project, because we could really crank this baby up, as a
scientific
tool, and see if we could, in fact, find where those seven tons of oxygen had gone.
It's a
scientific
problem, if you will.
You can look to these innovators to help us especially with things that require technological or
scientific
solution.
Right now the Sloan Foundation has just funded a multi-institutional study on this, to work out what the risk and benefits to society are, and the rules that
scientific
teams such as my own should be using in this area, and we're trying to set good examples as we go forward.
And if you've got a
scientific
problem like that, you can't solve it by holding a head count, and saying, "More of us say yes than say no." (Laughter) Apart from that, some of the heads count more than others.
So I get the impression that some parts of the
scientific
establishment are morphing into a kind of priesthood.
So this was the state of London in 1854, and in the middle of all this carnage and offensive conditions, and in the midst of all this
scientific
confusion about what was actually killing people, it was a very talented classic 19th century multi-disciplinarian named John Snow, who was a local doctor in Soho in London, who had been arguing for about four or five years that cholera was, in fact, a waterborne disease, and had basically convinced nobody of this.
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