Not exact matches
The ability to
change ones
mind is the hallmark of a
scientist presented with data however
on the existence of God, and most things that are not
on the fringe of theoretical physics, I have not see Hawkings vascillate at all
New
Scientist broke the news
on 14 July that Hawking, at the University of Cambridge, had
changed his
mind about black holes after solving a long - standing paradox in physics.
First, there's Geoffrey (1938), a young and naïve schoolteacher who enlists during WWII -LRB-»... there would be, he imagined, an intense but brief struggle in Europe») only to find himself in Nazi - occupied Poland in an unspeakable situation; Billy (1859), an industrious Englishman who works his way out of poverty and gets caught in a love triangle; Elena (2029), an Italian
scientist whose ground - breaking work in the field of human consciousness doesn't seem to eliminate her loneliness; Jeanne (1822), a simple -
minded French servant who comes to know God and embraces
change; and Anya (1971), an American, Joplin-esque musician whose talent and thirst for freedom send her
on a glorious yet self - destructive path.
This free sampler contains the first 6 chapters of Credence Foundation (A Science Fiction Novel) A detective tasked with solving the seemingly impossible murder of an influential
scientist finds a clue that leads him to Credence, a corporation of the future that uses mass beliefs to
change reality and send spaceships
on the other side of the universe.Suspecting that the murderer had himself flushed in and out of the crime scene using Credence's technology, Detective Trumaine readies his trap.In a frantic chase through his
mind, long - forgotten memories from a tragic past, as well as virtual environments, he will finally put together the missing pieces of the most unbelievable plan ever to affect mankind.It's a novel of about 74,000 words...
Past warmings are not an analogue for our present situation, which to my
mind places a greater burden of proof
on climate
scientists regarding evidence for climate
change.
There's more in USA Today
on whether climate
scientists» concerns about their attackers are overblown, given other issues weighing
on peoples»
minds and blunting interest in climate
change.
Climate
change is
on the
mind of many in B.C. as residents swelter in record - breaking heat and bail out from destructive floods, but
scientists say it's not easy to connect extreme weather events to global warming.
«There is no doubt in my
mind that climate
change will have a major impact
on the spread of infectious diseases,» writes Edward Holmes, a
scientist whose work focuses
on emerging diseases at Sydney Medical School in Australia, in an email to Pacific Standard.
Deeply isolated in their own tiny academic bubble only talking to like
minded individuals also inside of that bubble where the real word rarely intrudes, I doubt that very many of these
scientists realise just how stupid and even imbecilic and disposable they are starting to appear to the ordinary citizen
on the street particularly when they try to sell a bill of goods like those adjusted and etc and etc temperatures from a half dozen or more decades past as the real temperatures of the times and then
change those same temperatures or remove then the next day or week or whatever and then
change then yet again and again.