Scientist
in sentence
1068 examples of Scientist in a sentence
Keep in mind, then, Wilson's Second Principle: For every scientist, whether researcher, technician, teacher, manager or businessman, working at any level of mathematical competence, there exists a discipline in science or medicine for which that level is enough to achieve excellence.
Normal technology or innovation happens like this: Somebody has an interesting idea, some other
scientist
or engineer, they take it to the next level, they make a theory about it and maybe they patent it, and then some industry will make a contract of exclusivity to manufacture and sell it, and then, eventually, a buyer will buy it, and we hope that they are going to use [it] for a good purpose.
In 2003, I started a project with computer
scientist
Adam Montandon, and the result, with further collaborations with Peter Kese from Slovenia and Matias Lizana from Barcelona, is this electronic eye.
Since 1992, Dr. Max Bothwell, a Government of Canada scientist, has been studying a type of algae that grows on rocks.
Well, I was a professor in my mid-20s when I first heard those shocking facts and the
scientist
in me wanted to know why and how.
After all, I was a scientist, I came from the world under attack, and I had personally felt the outrage.
One government scientist, a friend of mine, we'll call him McPherson, was concerned about the impact government policies were having on his research and the state of science deteriorating in Canada.
But like every scientist, she appreciated that to make her mark, what she needed to do was find a hard problem and solve it.
Alice's daughter told me that every time Alice went head-to-head with a fellow scientist, they made her think and think and think again.
Well, just seven years before Einstein's death, an American
scientist
called Warren Weaver made exactly this point.
And this is Goethe, who is neither Bulgarian nor a political scientist, some centuries ago he said, "There is a big shadow where there is much light."
I'm a
scientist
who thinks a lot about light and heat.
So, while I'm very excited about all we can do for cooling, and I think there's a lot yet to be done, as a scientist, I'm also drawn to a more profound opportunity that I believe this work highlights.
For what it's worth, Sir Isaac Newton, the greatest
scientist
who ever lived, he thought Jesus came to Earth specifically to operate the levers of gravity.
A computer
scientist
can't get access to it without filing paperwork.
Now if you look at these five ways of being, these are the exact same ways of being you need in order to be a good
scientist.
So armed with these two ideas, that science is a way of being and experiments are play, we asked, can anyone become a
scientist?
What good
scientist
says that, right?
The question of whether disgust ought to influence our moral and political judgments certainly has to be complex, and might depend on exactly what judgments we're talking about, and as a scientist, we have to conclude sometimes that the scientific method is just ill-equipped to answer these sorts of questions.
Well, since I'm a scientist, I'd like to try to resolve this debate with some data, and in particular I'd like to present some data to you from three questions that I ask with Track Your Happiness.
Well, as a social scientist, this is the most amazing thing I have ever even dreamed of.
Now, as I said, as a social scientist, this is wonderful.
I'm a brain scientist, and as a brain scientist, I'm actually interested in how the brain learns, and I'm especially interested in a possibility of making our brains smarter, better and faster.
In 2002, Nelson Otwoma, a Kenyan social scientist, discovered he had HIV and needed access to treatment.
This was an argument from the political
scientist
James Payne.
I'm the
scientist
who did the study.
A good reader has an artist's passion, a willingness to get caught up in the story, but just as importantly, the readers also needs the coolness of judgment of a scientist, which acts to temper and complicate the reader's intuitive reactions to the story.
But perhaps if they'd been able to read their fears more like a scientist, with more coolness of judgment, they would have listened instead to the less violent but the more likely tale, the story of starvation, and headed for Tahiti, just as Melville's sad commentary suggests.
So a friend of mine who's a political scientist, he told me several months ago exactly what this month would be like.
Last March, I went to the TED conference, and I saw Jim Hansen speak, the NASA
scientist
who first raised the alarm about global warming in the 1980s, and it seems that the predictions he made back then are coming true.
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