Sentences with phrase «nature over science»

Not exact matches

The design aims to highlight ApotheCARE Essentials» blending of nature and science and to attract the brand's target consumers, women who know what their look is and obsess over improving their hair and skin a little bit every day, Seal said.
But his less - known work, a trilogy of science fiction novels, contains some of his most profound, thrilling and decidedly adult notions of the universe we live in, the reality - shifting nature of grace and the Creator who rules over it all.
With science, we know see that homosexuality is natural since it occurs all over the place in nature and is not a choice.
For far from being a deviation from biblical truth, this setting of man over against the sum total of things, his subject - status and the object - status and mutual externality of things themselves, are posited in the very idea of creation and of man's position vis - a-vis nature determined by it: it is the condition of man meant in the Bible, imposed by his createdness, to be accepted, acted through... In short, there are degrees of objectification... the question is not how to devise an adequate language for theology, but how to keep its necessary inadequacy transparent for what is to be indicated by it...» Hans Jonas, Phenomenon of Life, pp. 258 - 59; cf. also Schubert Ogden's helpful discussion on «Theology and Objectivity,» Journal of Religion 45 (1965): 175 - 95; Ian G. Barbour, Issues in Science and Religion (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice - Hall, 1966), pp. 175 - 206; and Michael Polanyi, Personal Knowledge (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962).
Here and there it may be, we can catch a glimpse of the wonderful order in nature, the regularity of the stars, scattered over the wide spaces of the universe yet obedient to one law; the order to be found even in the microscopic world, as also within visible things concerning which science has given such amazing information in recent years; the order in the construction of a flower or of an animal, from the flea to the whale, a noteworthy obedience to law even in the life of man.
This fact must take precedence over the laws of nature of physical science in arriving at a unified philosophy of science, even though it must be largely ignored in science itself.
For over 100 years, the Chicago Academy of Sciences / Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum has provided Chicago area educators with tools and training to help them increase their comfort teaching science.
Reacting against this and other «science over nature» trends, the pioneers of the environmental movement in the late 1960s were quick to pick up on the negative aspects of factory farming, with books such as «Silent Spring» and «Animal Machines» generating considerable interest.
So say Avishay Gal - Yam of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, and his colleagues, who followed the afterglow of the explosion in a nearby dwarf galaxy over 18 months (Nature, DOI: 10.1038 / nature08579).
McFadden has over 90 publications (many invited) in journals such as Science, Nature, the Journal of Geophysical Research, and Geophysical Journal International, and he co-authored The Magnetic Field of the Earth and Paleomagnetism: Continents and Oceans.
By 1980, Science scored 15 and Nature over 25.
Cotter says that the paper is «a fairly moderate contribution» to science, but she doesn't know whether the paper would have survived Nature's stringent review process if it hadn't been for the struggle over the presidency.
According to a Nature News report, operations director Robert Kerr has resigned after a bitter dispute with the National Science Foundation over funding cuts.
He has published over 100 peer - reviewed articles in journals including Science, Nature Climate Change, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, PLoS ONE, American Journal of Public Health, Health Affairs, and Communication Research.
The combined research output of the Department of Molecular Oncology is represented by over 240 peer - reviewed papers, published in such high - impact journals as Cell, the New England Journal of Medicine, Nature, Science and Blood.
The Denver Museum of Nature & Science is the Rocky Mountain Region's leading resource for informal education seeking over 1.5 million visitors a year.
She has published over 60 papers in leading journals like Science, Nature, Nature Genetics, and her work has been featured by the New York Times, Australian Broadcasting Company and at the Smithsonian Human Genome Exhibit in Washington DC.
Dr. Owen has studied both healthy people and people with brain injuries for over 25 years, and published research in prestigious scientific journals such as The New England Journal of Medicine, Science, Nature, and The Lancet.
A new study published in npj Climate and Atmospheric Science (a Nature publication) shows that snowpack levels across the western U.S. have declined over the last 100 years.
Dr. Korlach is the recipient of multiple grants, an inventor on 70 issued U.S. patents and 61 international patents, and an author of over 70 scientific studies on the principles and applications of SMRT technology, including publications in Nature, Science, and PNAS.
For over one hundred and fifty years, psychiatry has promoted the idea that what is called schizophrenia is a progressive, deteriorative disease of the brain, and that science is on the horizon of finally discovering the biochemical nature of this debilitating mental disorder.
Instead, science students at Hollywood Elementary School, in Stevensville, Michigan, go outside into a 19,000 - square - foot garden to crawl around in the dirt and see how nature changes over time.
Over 8,700 different journals will have content included in the initiative, content that is published by ALPSP, Bloomsbury Publishing, Cambridge University Press, Dove Press, Elsevier, Emerald, IOP Publishing, Nature Publishing Group, Oxford University Press, Portland Press, SAGE Publications, Science Reviews 2000 Ltd., Springer, Taylor & Francis, Versita, Wiley, Wolters Kluwer Health.
Her nature picture books include Abayomi, the Brazilian Puma: The True Story of an Orphaned Cub (Mims House), an NSTA 2015 Outstanding Science Trade Book; Wisdom, the Midway Albatross: Surviving the Japanese Tsunami and Other Disasters for Over 60 Years (Mims House), a starred review in Publisher's Weekly; Desert Baths (Arbordale), an NSTA Outstanding Science Trade Book 2013; and, Prairie Storms (Arbordale).
The eleven artists juxtapose divergent approaches in conversation with each other, reflecting on primal questions consuming artists over the millennia: Elliot Arkin's conceptual use of web - based commerce spins an absurdist view on the commodification of artists; Babette Bloch's stainless steel reassessments of nature and artistic precedent limn positives and negatives through light; Christopher Carroll Calkins's street photography captures moments of under - the - radar narratives; Valentina DuBasky's acrylic and marble dust works on paper and plaster are a contemporary comment on the prehistory of art; Gabriel Ferrer's performance - like in - the - moment sumi - ink drawings on handmade paper reflect on memory and personal narrative; Christopher Gallego's realist, pure light - filled oil painting elevates the ordinariness of an artist's space to visual poetry; Ana Golici, in pergamano and collage, takes inspiration from 17th Century female naturalist, entomologist and botanical illustrator Maria Sibylla Merian to explore questions of science, nature and objective truth; Emilie Lemakis's monumental amplification of an ancient Greek krater employs scale to upend perceptions for the viewer's reconsideration; Mark Mellon's bronzes address the oppositions of movement and stillness; the alchemy of Michael Townsend's uncontrolled poured acrylic paintings equate the properties of materials with the turbulence of the universe; Jessica Daryl Winer's engagement with luminous color and choreographic line reflects in visual resonance the sonic history of a musical instrument.
It's been just over a year since the Perot Museum of Nature and Science opened its doors to the public on December 1, 2012 — and, nearly 1.4 million visitors later, it's time to celebrate!
i.e. no change over the last decade... (unfortunately these updates usually does not make a Science or Nature paper in particular if the bottom line of the argument has shifted...)
For more background, see Humans and Nature Duel Over the Next Decade's Climate, Richard A. Kerr, Science, Aug 10, 2007 — a generally sympathetic treatment of natural variations (including a review of Peter Baines and the AMO).
In this case the correct science is seen in nature now, look all over the world, its hot on planet earth... I'll repeat this until most people (without a bent agenda) make the connection.
2) Rapid warming over next decade, as recent Nature and Science article suggests is quite possible (posts here and here) 3) Continued (unexpected) surge in methane 4) A megadrought hitting the SW comparable to what has hit southern Australia.
But, within the media coverage of greenhouse gases and climate that has accumulated over the last half century, there's also a broad body of work that has clearly described the science and its significance for human affairs and the wider nature world.
In a more conventional field, in which highly technical papers were published in professional journals rather than Nature or Science, the paper would be read by the few experts, who over the next few years would try to understand what it all means, whether it is really new, what the weaknesses might be, do their own analyses to see how robust the results are, and ask if there are conflicting data sets.
«At least Mr. Grijalva's letters should help clarify for many the essentially political nature of the alarms over the climate, and the damage it is doing to science, the environment and the well - being of the world's poorest.»
Caroline Underwood has produced, directed and written over twenty award winning programs for the CBC's science series, The Nature of Things with David Suzuki, on natural history, conservation, and environmental subjects, since 1985.
Caroline Underwood has produced, directed and written over twenty award winning programs for the CBC's science series, The Nature of Things with David Suzuki... Read More
He has published over 100 scientific papers (30 of which in the leading Nature and Science journals and PNAS) and co-authored four books.
We've got a wrap - up from Kurt Kleiner of the top ten climate science stories of the past twelve months over on Nature Reports Climate Change.
Over time, the sustained funding of demonstrably pseudo-scientific research methods has subverted the self - correcting nature of science and suppressed skeptical scholarship.
As outlined over the past decade in articles at Science and Nature, and in reports such as the Hartwell paper and Climate Pragmatism, various experts have argued that political success will only come by pursuing a diverse portfolio of policy solutions and technologies, implemented across levels of government and through the private and nonprofit sectors.
Besides, I think Steve should know that over on Skeptical Science, it's been proven his work on figuring out «Mann's Nature trick» has been proven wrong.
He has published over 100 peer - reviewed articles in journals including Science, Nature Climate Change, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, PLoS ONE, American Journal of Public Health, Health Affairs, and Communication Research.
There have been numerous research papers and reviews published over the past 10 years, including several in prestigious journals such as Nature and Science, that conclude that the observed temperature changes over the past 100 years are consistent with the combined changes in atmospheric aerosols (volcanic and anthropogenic), land surface changes, variations in solar irradiance and increases in greenhouse gases.
There is, as Yuval Levin noted in his remarks on the encyclical, something paradoxical about the union of the left, which tends to see itself as the party of science, and the environmental movement, since the latter's holistic view of nature is at odds with modern science's ethic of human power over nature.
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