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  • Collection of free archival scientific research literature in PLos Journals via a nonprofit organization of scientists and physicians. Archival scientific literature.
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  • ...]], environmental issues, health care, hobbies, [[humanities]], [[law]], [[literature]] and [[art]], [[politics]], [[social science]], sports, and many general i Over 54,000 journals primarily from the scientific, technical, and medicals fields. Also includes journals from most other [[d
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  • ...ee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t275 '''''The New Oxford Dictionary for Scientific Writers and Editors'''''] ...cts widely accepted usage and follows the recommendations of international scientific bodies such as IUPAC and IUPAP. The dictionary gives clear guidance on such
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  • ...r object has a supernatural significance; specifically : the doctrine that scientific laws are adequate to account for all phenomena ...literature; specifically : a theory or practice in literature emphasizing scientific observation of life without idealization and often including elements of de
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  • ...sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t218 '''''The Oxford Dictionary of Scientific Quotations'''''] The original [[words]] announcing great scientific discoveries, from the first ‘Eureka! ’ to the cloning of Dolly the shee
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  • ...thoritative]] and up-to-date, it covers the most important [[business]], [[scientific]], and [[technical]] abbreviations, as well as those in everyday use. In ad [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...ki/Peer_review peer review] and then publication as part of the scientific literature. Other approaches include the [[collaborative]] assessment of a [[topic]] b .../wiki/Alternative_medicine alternative medicine], or those who dispute the scientific [[consensus]] on a topic, such as [[AIDS]] denialists.
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  • ...ies on matters such as, art, capital punishment, gambling, [[language]], [[literature]], military history, republicanism, and reconciliation.
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  • ...phrases, and definitions, providing meanings for everyday words including scientific and technical [[vocabulary]], as well as [[English]] from around the world. [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...rature of the sciences. Fully indexes over 6,650 major journals across 150 scientific disciplines and includes all cited references captured from indexed article
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  • ...dividually selected, relevant items from over 3,300 of the world's leading scientific and technical journals. Subjects covered include: Anthropology, History, In
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  • ...ence fiction]] and horror by the [[expectation]] that it steers clear of [[scientific]] and macabre themes, respectively, though there is a great deal of overlap ...y]] in a number of [[disciplines]] (English, cultural studies, comparative literature, [[history]], medieval studies). [[Work]] in this area ranges widely, from
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  • originally after German Realismus (1781 in Kant; 1798 with [[reference]] to [[literature]]) *3: the [[theory]] or practice of [[fidelity]] in [[art]] and [[literature]] to [[nature]] or to real life and to accurate [[representation]] without
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  • ...]], and [[Social Sciences]]." "Intelligent [[synthesis]] of the Scientific Literature."
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  • ...n, or a moan, a sigh is often an [[automatic]] and unintentional act. In [[literature]], a sigh is often used to signify that the person producing it is lovelorn Scientific studies show that [[babies]] sigh after 50 to 100 [[breaths]]. This serves
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  • ...usually confined to [[art]] and [[culture]], particularly [[Literary genre|literature]]. In [[genre studies]] the concept of genre is not compared to originality ...bgenres. [[Literature]], for example, is divided into three basic kinds of literature, classic genres of Ancient Greece, [[poetry]], [[drama]], and [[prose]]. Po
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  • ...surate [[fossil]] remains in Europe and adjacent areas. Current scientific literature prefers the term "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_modern_humans Europe ...ipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Paleolithic Upper Paleolithic]. Current scientific [[literature]] prefers the term European Early Modern Humans (EEMH), to the term 'Cro-Ma
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  • ==Literature== ...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journal_of_Scientific_Exploration Journal of Scientific Exploration]. Vol. 8, No. 3, 1994, pp. 381-397 ([https://www3.hi.is/~erlend
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  • Studies dealing with the [[language]]s, [[literature]], [[history]], [[art]], and all aspects of the ancient [[Mediterranean]] w === [[Literature]][https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Languages_and_Lit
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  • ...rapids, UTGPS), VLBI-based products, background information, technical and scientific publications and software. USNO's library holds one of the most complete collections of astronomical literature in the world.
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  • ...] has used the [[word]] to mean "not knowable". In technical and marketing literature, agnostic often has a meaning close to "[[independent]]"—for example, "pl
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  • ...ed especially in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_literature English literature] by sensibility and the use of [[autobiographical]] material, an exaltation ...ture]]. It was embodied most strongly in the visual arts, [[music]], and [[literature]], but had a major impact on historiography, [[education]] and the [[natura
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  • ...scientific]] evidence, as evidence that cannot be investigated using the [[scientific method]]. The problem with arguing based on anecdotal evidence is that anec [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...t when it is commonly asserted that Catholic principles are an obstacle to scientific research, it seems not only proper but needful to register what and how muc
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  • ...[[media]] accounts, although this term is discouraged in [[scientific]] [[literature]]. Wunderkind also is used to recognize those who achieve success and accla
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  • In [[scientific]] [[research]], explanation is one of the [[purposes]] of [[research]], e.g ...tries/scientific-explanation/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Scientific Explanation]
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  • ...[[literature]] encompasses a rich tradition of poetry and drama as well as scientific, technical, Hindu philosophical and Hindu religious [[text]]s. Today, Sansk ...that the oral transmission of the texts is reliable: they were ceremonial literature whose correct pronunciation was considered crucial to its religious efficac
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  • ...) "lizard". Through the first half of the twentieth century, most of the [[scientific]] [[community]] mistakenly believed dinosaurs to have been sluggish, uninte ...0s and 1890s, during which a pair of feuding paleontologists made enormous scientific contributions.
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  • ...hod]] is built on testing assertions which are [[logic]]al consequences of scientific theories. This is done through repeatable [[experiment]]s or observational ...ckly and easily confirmed or falsified (see predictive [[power]]). In many scientific fields, desirable theories are those which predict a large number of events
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  • ...The [[existence]] of subtle bodies is unconfirmed by the [[mainstream]] [[scientific]] [[community]].
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  • ::c. versed in [[literature]] or [[creative]] writing : literary The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization] (UNESCO) defines literacy as the "[[ability]] to
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  • ...m "theory" in academic [[literature]] or discourse is a [[reference]] to a scientific or empirically-based theory. Even so, since the use of the term theory in scientific or empirical [[inquiry]] is the more common one, it will be discussed first
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  • ...rial]] matters. A practitioner of astrology is called an astrologer. The [[scientific]] [[community]] considers astrology a [[pseudoscience]] or [[superstition]] ...ntil the 18th century. Eventually, astronomy distinguished itself as the [[scientific]] [[study]] of astronomical objects and [[phenomena]] without regard to the
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  • ...fiction]], [[adventures]], or their essays of [[political science]], of [[literature]] and of [[philosophy]]. There isn’t a hard and fast or rigid way to [[ex ...o [[stimulate]] your [[contemplation]] and [[creativity]]. These are the [[scientific]] [[minds]] among you, who are normally unwilling to [[adopt]] anything tha
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  • ...by [[students]] in some of the [[formal]] [[methods]] of scriptural and [[scientific]] [[study]] (Sanskrit: ''svādhyāya''). Since each line is highly condense One of the most famous [[definitions]] of a sutra in Indian literature is itself a sutra and comes from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vayu_Pu
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  • ...emotion]]al response to an absence of light has inspired [[metaphor]] in [[literature]], [[symbolism]] in [[art]], and emphasis. ==Scientific==
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  • ...r study [[relative]] to the [[scientific method]]. This is why scholarly [[literature]] often includes a section on the methodology of the [[research]]ers. This
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  • ...d non-polluting [[electromagnetic]] and electro-gravitic systems. The open literature is replete with well-documented technologies that have surfaced, only to la ...e [[maze]] of regulatory, patenting, rogue national security, financial, [[scientific]] and [[media]] [[barriers]] that confront the inventor or small company.[h
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  • ...r study [[relative]] to the [[scientific method]]. This is why scholarly [[literature]] often includes a section on the methodology of the [[research]]ers. This
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  • ...student has incorporated copyrighted materials in the thesis). Many large scientific publishing houses (e.g. Taylor & Francis, Elsevier) use copyright agreement [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...gual dictionaries), the systematic [[study]] of dictionaries as objects of scientific interest themselves is a 20th century enterprise, called [https://en.wikipe [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...]] τόπος (topos, place) and γραφία (graphia, writing). In [[classical]] [[literature]] this refers to [[writing]] about a place or places, what is now largely c ...e 20th century as generic for topographic surveys and maps. The earliest [[scientific]] surveys in France were called the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassini
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  • ...field of study in the humanities. The word "Classics" also refers to the literature of that period. ...for imitation, which would all lie unseen in darkness without the light of literature."
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  • ...SM-IV DSM-IV] or ICD-10, and are nearly absent from current [[scientific]] literature regarding mental illness. Although "nervous breakdown" does not necessarily
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  • ...hich [[police]]s degenerates out of [[existence]] with the assistance of [[scientific]] [[identification]]. ...egeneration'' attempted to explain all [[modern]] [[art]], [[music]] and [[literature]] by pointing out the degenerate characteristics of the artists involved. I
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  • ...port the results (see [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_publishing scientific publishing]). Client and consultant combine their expertise and, through di [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...to differentiate it from [[applied science]], which is the application of scientific research to specific human needs. ..."science" is generally limited to [[empirical]] study involving use of the scientific method.<ref>See, e.g. [https://www.thefreedictionary.com/science]. The firs
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  • ...luding [[art]], [[music]], [[film]], theatre or [[drama]], restaurant, and scientific publication critics. ...tic," used without qualification, most frequently refers to a [[scholar of literature|Philology]] or another [[art]] form. In other contexts, the term describes
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  • ...in the condition described. Consequently the proper object of unqualified scientific knowledge is something which cannot be other than it is.|[[Aristotle]]|''[[ In ''An Introduction to Logic and Scientific Method'' (1934), Morris R. Cohen and Ernest Nagel reviewed the pursuit of t
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  • ...th meetings in 1912 in London, and in 1921 and 1932 in New York. Eugenics' scientific reputation started to tumble in the 1930s, a time when [[Ernst Rüdin]] beg Since the second World War, both the public and the scientific communities have associated eugenics with Nazi abuses, such as enforced rac
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  • ...to differentiate it from [[applied science]], which is the application of scientific research to specific human needs. ..."science" is generally limited to [[empirical]] study involving use of the scientific method. See, e.g. [https://www.thefreedictionary.com/science]. The first us
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  • Many [[scientific]] [[concepts]] are of [[necessity]] vague, for instance species in [[biolog [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...ors has a single distinct author function. In the wake of [[postmodern]] [[literature]], [[Roland Barthes]] in his seminal essay [[Death of the Author]] (1968) a ...dersen, D., Dahiquist, G., Sarvas, M., and Aakvaag, A. (1999) Handling of scientific dishonesty in the Nordic countries. ''The Lancet'' 354: 11-18 [https://www.
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  • ...easurement or result is a single ''datum''. Many (perhaps most) academic, scientific, and professional [[style guides]] (e.g., see page 43 of the [https://whqli ...These three concepts are ill- or ambiguously defined in the subject matter literature <!--Anyone know what subject matter this is referring to? It may need clar
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  • ...ridical type, typically counterintuitive outcomes of economic theory. In [[literature]] a paradox can be any contradictory or obviously untrue statement, which r ==Paradox in literature==
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  • ...nt method for testing claims. A characteristic example is the post-Gettier literature concerning the [[analysis]] of [[knowledge]]. A philosopher proposes a def * [https://www.intuition-sciences.com/introduction A scientific research group on intuition]
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  • ...the world and which has hundreds of songs sung in it, and a vast amount of literature written in it. [[The Stone City]], for example, was originally written in E ...existence of "[[mirror cells]]" in [[primate]]s. This, however, is still a scientific question. What exactly is the definition of the word "language"? Most resea
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  • ...gradual deprecation of the Latin style of oration. With the rise of the [[scientific method]] and the emphasis on a "plain" style of speaking and [[writing]], e [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...onsciousness or sensation. [[Cognitive psychology]] accepts the use of the scientific method, but rejects introspection as a valid method of investigation for th ...hand, introspection can be considered a valid tool for the development of scientific hypotheses and theoretical models, in particular in cognitive sciences and
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  • # The Science of God: The Convergence of Scientific and Biblical Wisdom by Gerald L. Schroeder ...W. A: Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature. 3d ed. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.
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  • ...the field of [[scientific method|scientific]] [[hypothesis]]. Progress in scientific research is due largely to provisional explanations which are constructed b [[Category: Languages and Literature]]
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  • ...ional and non-scientific belief systems, typically as contrasted with the "scientific" or "traditional religious" beliefs of the society without or "at large". I ...uted its own esoteric imagery, notably the [[Holy Grail]] from [[Arthurian literature]].
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  • ...ly the humanities include [[Languages|ancient and modern languages]] and [[literature]], [[history]], [[philosophy]], [[religion]], [[visual arts|visual]] and ...ure]], as well as performing arts such as [[theatre]] and [[dance]], and [[literature]]. Other humanities such as language are sometimes considered to be part o
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  • ...nce]]s is the [[tradition]]al [[purpose]] of science fiction, making it a "literature of [[ideas]]".[1] Science fiction is largely based on writing entertainingl *Stories that involve [[technology]] or scientific principles that contradict known [[laws]] of [[nature]][4] (compare [[Mirac
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  • ...classical certainties thought to be overthrown, and new social, economic, scientific, ethical, and logical problems, '''20th-century philosophy''' was set for a ...e]], [[cybernetics]], [[genetics]], and [[generative linguistics]], rich [[literature|literary]] output, and the emergence of the [[Film|motion picture]] as an a
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  • ...all number of reports of anti-gravity-like effects in the [[scientific]] [[literature]]. As of 2007 none of them are widely accepted by the physics community. ...of the Laws of Physics, by Daniel Z. Freedman and Peter van Nieuwenhuizen, Scientific American, February 1978
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  • .../en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deconstruction deconstruction] movement in modern [[literature]] (and [[art]] and [[music]]). It is not a book that many scientists would that Steiner feels deeply in the face of modern deconstructive movements in literature, with their
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  • ...ty Northwestern University] where he received his Ph.D. in the History and Literature of Religions in 1975. His doctoral dissertation surveyed some 800 religious *Society for the Scientific Study of Religion
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  • ...ceful and prosperous kingdom. Encourages [[Anglo-Saxon]] [[culture]] and [[literature]]. Even marries Aethelred's widow Emma, brought over from Normandy ...ter a while, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is no longer kept up. Authors write literature in French, not English. For all practical purposes English is no longer a w
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  • ...by all folklorists). As an [[academic discipline]], it refers both to a [[Scientific method|method]] and the objects studied by the method. ...ith immediate resistance, because it seemed to make the fount of [[Western literature|Western literary]] eloquence the slave of a system of [[cliché]]s, but it
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  • ...ly the humanities include [[Languages|ancient and modern languages]] and [[literature]], [[history]], [[philosophy]], [[religion]], [[visual arts|visual]] and ...ess, the influence of classical ideas in humanities such as philosophy and literature remain strong.
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  • ...oped into the disciplines of the natural sciences over the course of the [[scientific revolution]]. Today, philosophical questions are usually explicitly disting ...iplines become particularly hot topics and can occupy so much space in the literature that they almost seem like major branches in their own right. (Over the pas
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  • ===Literature=== ...n experiments.<ref name="ConsciousUniverse"> ''The Conscious Universe: The Scientific Truth of Psychic Phenomena'' by Dean I. Radin Harper Edge, ISBN 0-06-251502
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  • ==Literature== ...kly seminars on the issue of trust in the personal, religious, social, and scientific realms as part of the Templeton Foundation's Research Lecture series and al
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  • ...the term "philology" describes the study of a language together with its [[literature]] and the historical and cultural contexts that are indispensable for an un ...[[historical linguistics]]," philology was one of the 19th century's first scientific approaches to human language but gave way to the modern science of [[lingui
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  • '''Voice''' as in a "writer's voice" is a [[Literature|literary]] term used to describe the [[individual]] writing style of an [[a ...ment, improvement, intensification, and prolongation, although in strictly scientific usage acoustic authorities would question most of them. The main point to b
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  • ...diverse]] emotions and [[behaviors]], which makes it difficult to form a [[scientific]] definition of jealousy. Scientists still do not have a [[universally]] ag ...viors. These themes form the [[essential]] [[meaning]] of jealousy in most scientific studies.
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  • ...ome cases, this involves disentangling folk uses of the term language from scientific uses. ..., but they (usually) cannot explain how or why they say what they say. The scientific description and explanation of this knowledge, as possessed by a language's
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  • ...sues of ‘‘[[Philosophical Transactions]],’’ generally considered the first scientific journal, in [[1665]] by the Royal Society (London). ...] ([[London]]), was founded in Philadelphia in [[1743]]. As numerous other scientific journals and societies are founded, Alois Senefelder develops the concept o
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  • ==Scientific Opinion== # Tucker, Jim B. (2005). Life Before Life: A Scientific Investigation of Children's Memories of Previous Lives, p.186.
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  • ==Scientific views== ...ucydides]] (ca. 460 BC – ca. 400 BC) who is credited with having begun the scientific approach to history in his work the [[History of the Peloponnesian War]].
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  • ...e, 1978, p. 147). As we shall see presently, the alchemist's quest was not scientific but spiritual. ...noninitiate becomes almost a cliché in Western post-Renaissance alchemical literature. An author quoted by the fifteenth-century Rosarium philosophorum declares
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  • ...d in various ways, such as attacks on the merits of science, education, or literature. ...itary]] group as their position depended on their knowledge of writing and literature. After 200 B.C. the system of selection of candidates was influenced by [[C
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  • '''Scientific method''' is a body of techniques for investigating [[phenomenon|phenomena] [https://www.m-w.com/dictionary/scientific%20method scientific method], ''[[Merriam-Webster|Merriam-Webster Dictionary]]''.
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  • ==Scientific perspectives== ...e Subversion of the English Novel in E.M. Forster's Fiction (Sexuality and Literature) by Parminder Kaur Bakshi
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  • According to the literature of [[Theosophy]], [[Anthroposophy]], and [[Archeosophy]], each [[color]] of *Alfred, Jay, “Our Invisible Bodies: Scientific Evidence for Subtle Bodies”, Trafford Publishing, 2006, ISBN 1-412-06326-
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  • ...ity]], but the existence of the paranormal is not widely accepted by the [[scientific]] community. ...to appreciate the base rate of [[chance]] occurrences. For example, in a [[scientific]] [[experiment]] of clairvoyance, a purported clairvoyant participant will
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  • ...umanities]] in that the social sciences tend to emphasize the use of the [[scientific method]] in the study of humanity, including [[quantitative method|quantita ...proach. Conversely, the interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary nature of scientific inquiry into human behavior and social and environmental factors affecting
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  • .../ref> Whereas the analysis of historical trends in, for example, politics, literature, and the sciences, benefits from the clarity and portability of the written ..., one of the founders of scientific psychology. A principal, if strained, scientific conception was that of the artistic ideal of corporeal correspondence; i.e.
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  • Scientific studies regarding the use of prayer have mostly concentrated on its effect ...ble]], the [[New Testament]], most of the Church writings, and in rabbinic literature such as the [[Talmud]].
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  • From a scientific point of view, the products of creative thought (sometimes referred to as c Although popularly associated with [[art]] and [[literature]], it is also an essential part of innovation and invention and is importan
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  • ...tural buildings [''aménagements architecturaux''], reglementary decisions, scientific statements, philosophical, moral, philanthropic propositions, in one word: * [[Postcolonial literature]]
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  • ...and reflective human [[descriptions]] of love from all of your planetary [[literature]], from all your personal [[expressions]] of love to each other, you would ...understanding of the [[perfection]] of creation. In all of your world's [[literature]], you have had many [[seekers]] and philosophers taking a stab at describi
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  • ...eviewed forty definitions of transpersonal psychology that had appeared in literature over the period 1969 to 1991. They found that five key themes in particular ...ology the "spiritual". While parapsychology leans more towards traditional scientific epistemology (laboratory experiments, statistics, research on cognitive sta
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  • of Nature, a prestigious top ranking British scientific journal. be found in literature and art, such as Australian aboriginal art
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  • ...le used to believe in productive forces. There is a certain hagiographical literature on the steam hammer. One cannot imagine much on the electric toothbrush. Th ...archy of capitalism and bureaucracy could make a vital contribution to the scientific struggle against death. But above all because it is in the vast laboratory
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  • ...ed: why the moose was indoors was not specified.(Tycho Brahe: A Picture of Scientific Life and Work in the Sixteenth Century) ...annes Kepler, Tycho Brahe, and the Murder Behind One of History's Greatest Scientific Discoveries, ISBN 978-1-4000-3176-4 ) According to the Gilders, they find
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  • In the scientific literature, the degree of religiosity is generally found to be associated with higher ...tion of an attitude-behavior contingent consistency model. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 16, 263-274.
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  • ...re not the first humans. Whenever you read literature, dear friends, read literature with a mind to internal consistency. Apply a discerning quality, this disc ...ask of any piece of literature, so you must ask the same questions of this literature. Ask those questions of the author. Of course, when you read this careful
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  • ...ive [[experiment]]ation in order to prove this. He pioneered the [[Science|scientific]] study of the [[psychology]] of visual perception, being the first scienti For religious visions as a literary form, see [[apocalyptic literature]].
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