Sentences with phrase «other nonscientists»

And then they have to turn around and communicate that information to career diplomats and other nonscientists.

Not exact matches

Scholnick also notes that his study and others in the Wastebook cover subjects that are easy for nonscientists to relate to.
Through popular books, lectures, CDs, and other activities related to this subject, she became widely known to nonscientists.
Yet Illes and Wassermann are enthusiastic about my investigation, seeing it as an opportunity for a nonscientist to describe what, if anything, MRIs and other emerging brain - reading technologies can tell us about the three pounds of mushy tissue between our ears, home organ to that mysterious realm called the «mind.»
And I think it's absolutely wonderful because when scientists let's say, tweet, or on Facebook chat with each other, there's a lot of nonscientists who are privy to their conversation and they find often the science stories fascinating.
HAZU officials and others have warned that such a council could be populated by nonscientists while the decision - making role of faculty heads would be much reduced.
Instead of peer review, for the most part, these other magazines hire nonscientists as gateway keepers who decide if a paper is trendy or not before it is peer - reviewed.
Here's a question I've raised before, only this time expressed in two new ways: * Whatever the errors of Crichton and Will, to what extent, if any, should nonscientist observers of human culture treat science uniquely — that is, in a way they treat no other aspect of culture — by abstaining from writing about it?
But [the researchers] provide more complete information about the geographical and geological provenance of their specimen than has accompanied other recent Chinese fossils collected by nonscientists... Moreover, they examined the specimen meticulously to be sure that none of its elements had been faked or restored.
Others whose skill is more in communication to the nonscientist can take it from here, but I found this a useful summary (PhD computer science, working with biologists, involved in Green politics — not illiterate but by no means an expert).
Here's a question I've raised before, only this time expressed in two new ways: * Whatever the errors of Crichton and Will, to what extent, if any, should nonscientist observers of human culture treat science uniquely — that is, in a way they treat no other aspect of culture — by abstaining from writing about it?
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