Much has been made this week of the gap between what the public thinks about the consensus among climate
scientists over the human factor in global warming and the actual level of consensus.
Not exact matches
In a recent analysis of climate events from last year, 2016,
scientists determined three events — record - breaking global heat, a heat wave
over Asia, and a «blob» of unusually warm water in the Northern Pacific — could not have occurred without
human - induced climate change.
@Theo A 2009 poll by Pew Research Center found that «Nearly all
scientists (97 %) say
humans and other living things have evolved
over time».
Gods will is for us
humans today to evolved to a level of conciousness that will prepare us for the challenges of our future survival,
Scientists now predicts of hardships in the future due to
over population and changes to the natural environment.and that is happening now with activists through out the world are reminding us of protecting nature.That is why we need a phsychological revolution to hasten the evolution of consciousness that will address the problems.Ideological and philosophical enlightenment had the past great minds to develop ideas and belief because God sent them to reality in their times.Abraham, Jesus, Mohammad, Buddha, and many other religious leaders to teach humanity the doctrines that God willed to be appropriate and applicable in those periods of their existence, Also great philosophers in another dimension of social involvement were born to interprete and connect philosophically as the second element of our conscience, Kant, Marx and countless of them also were born.To complete the triangular structure or dimension of our conscience is knowledge.
As we read this history, the furor
over stem cells was fueled by numerous factors: the near - universal
human desire for magic; patients» desperation in the face of illness and their hope for cures; the belief that biology can now do anything; the reluctance of
scientists to accept any limits (particularly moral limits) on their research; the impact of big money from biotech stocks, patents, and federal funding; the willingness of America's elite class to use every means possible to discredit religion in general; and the need to protect the unlimited abortion license by accepting no protections of unborn
human life.
In 2009, a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found that «Nearly all
scientists (97 %) say
humans and other living things have evolved
over time.»
The strident attempt to silence the skeptics who question the popular thesis that
humans are adversely affecting the earth's climate hit a new high
over the past couple of weeks with the release of the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature Project (BEST) report from a group of
scientists centered....
During my studies I have found that in 1614
over 300
humans conspired to create these fake bones to fool
scientists, then used heavy earth moving machinery such as tractors to bury these fakes all
over the planet.
Over the years
scientists have identified a number of anti-infective substances in
human milk that may help fight respiratory and gastrointestinal infections, and such devastating conditions as acute inflammation of the intestines and colon, to which premature infants are particularly vulnerable.
Scientists continue to discover and characterise new components in
human milk, and the journey is far from
over.
When her appointment came to a close, a colleague rolled his chair
over to her one day and suggested her for a data
scientist job with the Stanford - based Data Coordination Center of the ENCODE (Encyclopedia of DNA Elements) Consortium, an international collaboration of research groups funded by the National
Human Genome Research Institute at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland.
Additionally, the webpage links to previous partnerships between
scientists and
human rights organizations, and to
over two dozen scientific societies engaged in
human rights.
Letter from AAAS CEO Rush Holt to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein Regarding Fingerprint Reporting Guidelines [March 28, 2018] AAAS Statement on FY 2018 Omnibus Bill Funds for Scientific Research [March 23, 2018] AAAS Statement on FY 2018 Omnibus Funding Bill [March 22, 2018] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement on Death of Rep. Louise Slaughter [March 16, 2018] AAAS CEO Urges U.S. President and Congress to Lift Funding Restrictions on Gun Violence Research [March 13, 2018] AAAS Statements on Elections and Paper Ballots [March 9, 2018] AAAS Statement on President's 2019 Budget Plan [February 12, 2018] AAAS Statement on FY 2018 Budget Deal and Continuing Resolution [February 9, 2018] AAAS Statement on President Trump's State of the Union Address [January 30, 2018] AAAS Statement on Continuing Resolution Urges FY 2018 Final Omnibus Bill [January 22, 2018] AAAS Statement on U.S. Government Shutdown [January 20, 2018] Community Statement to OMB on Science and Government [December 19, 2017] AAAS CEO Response to Media Report on Use of «Science - Based» at CDC [December 15, 2017] Letter from AAAS and the American Physical Society to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani Regarding
Scientist Ahmadreza Djalali [December 15, 2017] Multisociety Letter Conference Graduate Student Tax Provisions [December 7, 2017] Multisociety Letter Presses Senate to Preserve Higher Education Tax Benefits [November 29, 2017] AAAS Multisociety Letter on Tax Reform [November 15, 2017] AAAS Letter to U.S. House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee on Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (H.R. 1)[November 7, 2017] AAAS Statement on Release of National Climate Assessment Report [November 3, 2017] AAAS Statement on EPA Science Adviser Boards [October 31, 2017] AAAS Statement on EPA Restricting
Scientist Communication of Research Results [October 25, 2017] Statement of the Board of Directors of the American Association for the Advancement of Science on Scientific Freedom and Responsibility [October 18, 2017] Scientific Societies» Letter on President Trump's Visa and Immigration Proclamation [October 17, 2017] AAAS Statement on U.S. Withdrawal from UNESCO [October 12, 2017] AAAS Statement on White House Proclamation on Immigration and Visas [September 25, 2017] AAAS Statement from CEO Rush Holt on ARPA - E Reauthorization Act [September 8, 2017] AAAS Speaks Out Against Trump Administration Halt of Young Immigrant Program [September 6, 2017] AAAS Statement on Trump Administration Disbanding National Climate Assessment Advisory Committee [August 22, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Issues Statement On Death of Former Rep. Vern Ehlers [August 17, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt and 15 Other Science Society Leaders Request Climate Science Meeting with EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt [July 31, 2017] AAAS Encourages Congressional Appropriators to Invest in Research and Innovation [July 25, 2017] AAAS CEO Urges Secretary of State to Fill Post of Science and Technology Adviser [July 13, 2017] AAAS and ESA Urge Trump Administration to Protect Monuments [July 7, 2017] AAAS Statement on House Appropriations Bill for the Department of Energy [June 28, 2017] Scientific Organizations Statement on Science and Government [June 27, 2017] AAAS Statement on White House Executive Order on Cuba Relations [June 16, 2017] AAAS Statement on Paris Agreement on Climate Change [June 1, 2017] AAAS Statement from CEO Rush Holt on Fiscal Year 2018 Budget Proposal [May 23, 2017] AAAS thanks the Congress for prioritizing research and development funding in the FY 2017 omnibus appropriations [May 9, 2017] AAAS Statement on Dismissal of
Scientists on EPA Scientific Advisory Board [May 8, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement on FY 2017 Appropriations [May 1, 2017] AAAS CEO Statement on Executive Order on Climate Change [March 28, 2017] AAAS leads an intersociety letter on the HONEST Act [March 28, 2017] President's Budget Plan Would Cripple Science and Technology, AAAS Says [March 16, 2017] AAAS Responds to New Immigration Executive Order [March 6, 2017] AAAS CEO Responds to Trump Immigration and Visa Order [January 28, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement on Federal
Scientists and Public Communication [January 24, 2017] AAAS thanks leaders of the American Innovation and Competitiveness Act [December 21, 2016] AAAS CEO Rush Holt raises concern
over President - Elect Donald Trump's EPA Director Selection [December 15, 2016] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement Following the House Passage of 21st Century Cures Act [December 2, 2016] Letter from U.S. scientific, engineering, and higher education community leaders to President - elect Trump's transition team [November 23, 2016] Letter from AAAS CEO Rush Holt to Senate Leaders and Letter to House Leaders to pass a FY 2017 Omnibus Spending Bill [November 15, 2016] AAAS reaffirms the reality of
human - caused climate change [June 28, 2016]
13 — 14
Over the past three years IBM
scientists have developed a robot called Watson that can defeat
human contestants at Jeopardy! Watson's ability to decode puzzling questions depends on intricate computer algorithms that mimic how the
human brain processes language and information.
In addition to the
scientist, engineer, and health professional volunteers - who now number
over 1,200 in 65 countries —
human rights practitioners can now consult with a vanguard team of
scientists and engineers who are available to answer one - off questions quickly, in real time.
«Our results indicate that a wide range of POPs have been remobilized into the Arctic atmosphere
over the past two decades as a result of climate change, confirming that Arctic warming could undermine global efforts to reduce environmental and
human exposure to these toxic chemicals,» write the
scientists, whose analysis was published yesterday in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Other
scientists, led by Thomas Knutson, of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, looked at 2012's hot spring temperatures
over the eastern United States and also found that
human influences contributed about 35 percent to late spring heat that year.
Like many
scientists in Japan, Tamura is both anxious
over disrupted research plans and heartbroken at the
human toll of the earthquake and the ensuing tsunami, which killed thousands of people and left nearly half a million homeless.
An irony: amid all this highfalutin braggadocio of how close we are to computers taking
over the world and emulating
human thought, I had to give my talk on the «social singularity» (progress in political, economic and social systems
over the past 10,000 years) early because Rice University computer
scientist James McLurkin could not get his small swarm of robots to work.
Over the course of the two days, participants confirmed the need for a network of
scientists, engineers and health professionals engaged in
human rights, endorsed the formation of a Science and Human Rights Coalition, and affirmed AAAS as its natural
human rights, endorsed the formation of a Science and
Human Rights Coalition, and affirmed AAAS as its natural
Human Rights Coalition, and affirmed AAAS as its natural home.
Scientists poring
over the 3 - billion - letter - long genomes of
humans and mice made a host of new discoveries in 2005.
The degree of divergence between Neandertals and modern
humans over such a short period of time has surprised
scientists.
Balmford, a conservation
scientist, does not gloss
over the damage
humans have inflicted but reminds us that conservation can pay off.
By comparing our genetic make - up to the genomes of mice, chimps and a menagerie of other species (rats, chickens, dogs, pufferfish, the microscopic worm Caenorhabditis elegans, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster and many bacteria),
scientists have learned a great deal about how genes evolve
over time, and gained insights into
human diseases.
Contrary to popular belief,
scientists are normal, warm, and funny
human beings who bring in cakes just because it?s Thursday and agree to mind your experiments
over the weekend.
The
scientist from Tübingen reached the conclusion that, on the one hand, modern man was the cause of these giant terrestrial animals» extinction, and on the other hand,
humans took
over part of the animals» ecosystem functions.
As «man's best friend» and closest companion animal, the researchers believe that the latest results may offer a new piece of the puzzle
over the reported significant decline in
human semen quality — a controversial subject which
scientists continue to debate.
Over the past 100 million years, the
human lineage has lost one - fifth of its DNA, while an even greater amount was added, report
scientists at the University of Utah School of Medicine.
To understand why the long - spined urchins have not returned to the reef more than 30 years later, Scripps
scientists Katie Cramer and Dick Norris analyzed the amount of fossilized urchin spines that accumulated in reef sediment layers
over the past 3,000 years to paint a picture of life on the reef before it was altered from the disease outbreak and
human activities such as fishing and pollution.
In a study published last year in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, Hopkins and other
scientists measured the stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen in the hair and bone of Yosemite bears
over the past century and found that since 1999, the proportion of
human - derived food in bear diets has dramatically declined.
The
scientists looked at the so - called biogenic fluxes or flow of the three greenhouse gases on land that were caused by
human activities
over the last three decades and subtracted out emissions that existed «naturally» during pre-industrial times.
If the project moves forward (the script is still being written), the drama will center on a
scientist and her former mentor as they battle for control
over the
human genome, the culmination of which could mean life or death for the entire
human race.
Scientists can confidently say that Earth is warming due to greenhouse gas emissions caused by
humans, but data on climate trends
over the Antarctic and the surrounding Southern Ocean only go back to 1979 when regular satellite observations began.
Also, the country is opening up to the world, so we can cooperate with top
scientists all
over the world to make full use of the rare
human resources to better understand health and disease.
«The Lancet report underscores the terrible consequences for
human health if we don't start reducing the dangerous carbon pollution fueling climate change — and dramatic benefits for people the world
over from taking action now,» echoed Kim Knowlton, senior
scientist and deputy director of the Science Center at the Natural Resources Defense Council, in a release.
Both announcements, contained in a brief but passionate speech the president gave before an audience of lawmakers,
scientists, engineers, and businessmen at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, are intended to convince Congress that NASA is not handing
over the business of
human space exploration entirely to the private sector.
The finding could help resolve a controversy
over the continent where the ape and
human lineages first evolved, the
scientists added.
Before this study,
scientists debated how these immune genes can evolve rapidly (which is necessary to keep up with the fast - evolving parasites), whilst also showing little or no evolutionary change in their function
over millions of years, as observed between
humans and chimpanzees.
By analyzing the vivid colors in paintings by such artists as J.M.W. Turner, Claude Lorrain, Alexander Cozens, and Edgar Degas, some
scientists hope to say something significant about volcano - related cooling — and possibly
human - induced pollution —
over the past few centuries.
Ruina knew Papadopoulos was right, but he has conducted several experiments
over the years in which the «athlete is smarter than the natural
scientist,» where a
human did something that a hypothesis said was impossible.
By ignoring how the collection of data on political repression changes
over time,
human rights watchers may be misjudging reports that seem to show respect for
human rights has not been improving, according to a Penn State political
scientist.
Over many generations, some
scientists propose,
humans selected among themselves for tameness.
Scientists set up what amounted to seven archaeological digs on giant piles of surf clams created by
human inhabitants
over the past 10,000 years at several coastal locations in Peru.
Scientists published the first draft of the
human genome nearly a decade ago, but the hunt for disease genes is far from
over.
Over the last decade, political
scientists have debated whether or not
human rights practices have been stagnating, as the uncorrected data seem to indicate.
Over the years,
scientists have seen more instances of such curious behavior during DNA repair — one of life's most fundamental processes — but whether it also happened in
human cells was debated.
Over 41 attempted raids, tiger sounds deterred 90 % of elephants, whereas leopard and
human sounds deterred 73 % and 57 % of elephants, respectively,
scientists report online this month in Oryx.
Until
scientists understand more of the landscape of the
human genome, she says, she will have a hard time believing that adaptive genetic differences between ethnic groups have mushroomed
over the past 20,000 years.
An international team of researchers, led by
scientists at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of
Human History, have discovered that a language's grammatical structures change more quickly
over time than vocabulary, overturning a long - held assumption in the field.
Human pollutants — not natural nutrients — are what first set
scientists looking at the chemistry of fog, following fatal smog clouds that settled
over Donora, Pennsylvania, in 1948 and
over London in 1952.