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  • ''BioOne'' is a global, not-for-profit collaboration bringing together scientific societies, publishers, and libraries to provide access to critical, peer-re ...nce, Castanea, Evolution, Journal of Herpetology, Journal of Parasitology, Journal of Wildlife Management, Southeastern Naturalist, Wetlands.
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  • ...an.com/school.htm Friesian School], this is a non-peer-reviewed electronic journal and archive of philosophy, inaugurated on line July 6, 1996, four years bef ...orientation and grounding, is acceptable and desired for submission to the journal.
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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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  • ...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journal_of_Scientific_Exploration Journal of Scientific Exploration].
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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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  • ...American magazine] is written by scientific experts but not primarily for scientific experts. ...ple are recruited to write entries. This is a common pattern for scholarly journal articles and reference works.
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  • ...the Law's claims are impossible, violating [[scientific]] principles and a scientific [[understanding]] of the [[universe]]. [3] Others have questioned the references to modern scientific theory, and have maintained, for example, that the Law of Attraction misrep
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  • ...//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_review peer reviewed] or made in a well-known journal or reputable publisher.
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  • ...nd ''[[Esoterica (journal)|Esoterica]]'', and on the advisory board of ''[[Journal of Contemporary Religion]]'' and ''[[Nova Religio]]''. ...ostdoctoral fellowship from the [https://www.nwo.nl/ Dutch Association for Scientific Research] (NWO), during which time he spent a period working in Paris. In 1
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  • ...ientific matters of our world and the [[universe]]. Research can use the [[scientific method]], but need not do so. ...ble organisations and by [[private]] [[groups]], including many companies. Scientific research can be subdivided into different classifications according to thei
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  • ...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. ...tellectual content, and approved the final version. The [[academic journal|journal]] ''Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences'' has an editorial poli
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  • ...rayer books, and some 200 academic [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journals journal]s. It has 25,000 authors in 116 countries and issues between 1,500 and 2,00
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  • ...leading academic journals including Kew Bulletin, Mycologia, International Journal of Plant Sciences, Science, PNAS, and others. * Foundational reference work
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  • ...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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  • In graphic representation, an artist uses [[intuition|intuitive]], artistic, scientific, or technical skills to represent the [[phenomenon]] of the visual [[percep #Burton, H. E. (1945). The optics of Euclid. Journal of the Optical Society of America, 35, 357-372.
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  • * Engineering analysis, the application of scientific analytic principles and processes to reveal the properties and state of the * ''Analysis'' is the name of a prominent journal in philosophy.
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  • ...nary defines this usage as "a philosophical and theoretical framework of a scientific school or discipline within which theories, laws, and generalizations and t ==Scientific paradigm==
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  • ...are a subset of periodicals, distinct from those periodicals produced by [[scientific]], [[artistic]], [[academic]] or special interest publishers which are subs ...les written in a more specialist register is usually called an "[[academic journal]]". Such publications typically carry little or no advertising. Articles ar
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  • ...c Medicine in [[practice]] and there exist large areas of overlap in the [[scientific]] [[research]]. ...), "Mental health in Islamic medical tradition", The International Medical Journal 4 (2), p. 76-79.
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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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  • ...n experiments.<ref name="ConsciousUniverse"> ''The Conscious Universe: The Scientific Truth of Psychic Phenomena'' by Dean I. Radin Harper Edge, ISBN 0-06-251502 ....pdf Criticism and Controversy in Parapsychology - An Overview]. European Journal of Parapsychology (1984), 5, 141-166. [https://www.psy.herts.ac.uk/wiseman
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  • ...t, J (1982) "Students' preconceptions in introductory mechanics", American Journal of Physics vol 50, pp 66–71 * McCloskey, M (1983) "Intuitive physics", Scientific American, April, pp 114–123
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  • ...pplied to conceptions without [[foundation]] in, or in contravention of, [[scientific]] and [[logical]] [[knowledge]].[4] ...ikipedia.org/wiki/B.F._Skinner B.F. Skinner] published an article in the ''Journal of Experimental Psychology'', in which he described his pigeons exhibiting
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  • ...versus intuition--a dichotomy in the reception of nonverbal communication Journal of General Psychology. 99:19-24, 1978. * [https://www.intuition-sciences.com/introduction A scientific research group on intuition]
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  • ...the transcendent or [[spiritual]] aspects of the human experience. The ''Journal of Transpersonal Psychology'' describes transpersonal psychology as "the st ...issue of the ''Journal of Transpersonal Psychology'', the leading academic journal in the field. This was soon to be followed by the founding of the Associati
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  • ...//www.sciam.com/ Scientific America] - An excellent website devoted to the scientific discoveries of our time. This particular link focuses on an article by one [https://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au/index.html Psyche] - An electronic journal supporting the interdisciplinary exploration of the nature of consciousness
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  • ...ht]], and asserts that "The failure of the print media to recognize social-scientific efforts in the area of religious movement organizations impels us to add ye ...sary for broad adoption by many people. Examples are Religious Naturalism, Scientific Pantheism, Religious Humanism and some liberal Unitarians, Quakers and Jews
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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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  • ...logy (from Greek: ἦθος, ethos, "[[character]]"; and -λογία, -logia) is the scientific study of [[Behavior|'''''animal behavior''''']], and a branch of [[zoology] ...journal, The Human Ethology Bulletin. In 2008, in a paper published in the journal Behaviour, ethologist Peter Verbeek introduced the term "Peace Ethology" as
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  • ...about life"), also referred to as the '''biological sciences''', is the [[scientific study]] of [[life]]. Biology examines the structure, function, growth, orig ...are published annually in a wide array of biology and medicine [[Academic journal|journals]]. Biology: A Functional Approach. Thomas Nelson and Sons ISBN 978
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  • ...orts of apparently successful tests were met with much skepticism from the scientific community. Later, in the 1930s, [[J. B. Rhine]] expanded the study of paran ...esearch funding, ensured that paranormal studies remained a fringe area of scientific exploration. However, by the 1960s, the countercultural attitudes of the ti
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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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  • # [https://www.pbs.org/saf/1504/resources/transcript.htm Scientific American Frontiers, Program#1504 "Chimp Minds]" transcript PBS.org Airdate ...one tools and associated bones from OGS-6 and OGS-7, Gona, Afar, Ethiopia. Journal of Human Evolution 45:169-177.
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  • ==Scientific and psychological views== A widely-publicized study from 2008 in the British Medical Journal reported that happiness in social networks may spread from person to person
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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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  • ...w this change occurred. The study of human [[evolution]] encompasses many scientific disciplines, most notably physical [[anthropology]], [[linguistics]] and [[ * Heizmann, Elmar P J, Begun, David R (2001). "The oldest Eurasian hominoid". Journal of Human Evolution 41 (5): 463. doi:10.1006/jhev.2001.0495.
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  • * [[Scientific computing]] enabled advanced study of the mind and mapping the human genome ...gist'' Communications of the ACM 1(4):p.6. Three months later in the same journal, ''comptologist'' was suggested, followed next year by ''hypologist'' Commu
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  • ...well, and a small number of reports of anti-gravity-like effects in the [[scientific]] [[literature]]. As of 2007 none of them are widely accepted by the physic # Forward, R. L. (1990, Jan.-Feb.). Negative matter propulsion. Journal of Propulsion and Power, 6(1), 28-37.
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  • *John McMurtry, "How Competition Goes Wrong." Journal of Applied Philosophy, 8(2): 200-210, 1991. * cooperation platform for transport research (scientific) [https://www.etra.cc more]
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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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  • ...humans]] and the [[universe]] by combining, among other things, [[science|scientific]] and [[spirituality|spiritual]] insights. ...e Synthesis of Yoga]]'', a book that first published in serial form in the journal ''Arya'' and was revised several times since.
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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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  • A new scientific usage developed out of Hans Seyle's reports of his laboratory experiments i ...l hypotheses. By the 1990s, "stress" had become an integral part of modern scientific understanding in all areas of physiology and human functioning, and one of
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  • ...cience on Intelligence] reprinted in Gottfredson (1997). ''[[Intelligence (journal)|Intelligence]]'' p. 13 ...s://www.debunker.com/texts/jensen.html Jensen, A. (1982). The debunking of scientific fossils and straw persons]</ref> He further replied that making conclusions
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  • ...clusive and integrated view of geologic events has developed, changing the scientific consensus to accept some catastrophic events in the geologic past. ...been discovered since then, explaining why the flood story was "stated in scientific methods with surprising frequency among the Greeks", an example being Pluta
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  • ..." can be used), decoration, and [[architecture]]. Mirrors are also used in scientific apparatus such as [[telescopes]] and [[lasers]], [[cameras]], and industria ...eda, S. R. J. Brueck (2006). "Ridged atomic mirrors and atomic nanoscope". Journal of Physics B 39: 1605–1623. doi:10.1088/0953-4075/39/7/005.
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  • ...prehensive understanding of humans and the universe by combining [[science|scientific]] and [[spirituality|spiritual]] insights. According to the [[Integral Tran ...a]]'', a book that first published in serial form in the journal ''[[Arya (journal)|Arya]]'' and was revised several times since <ref>: see Biographical Notes
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  • ...io4255b4bl7e2jk3&author=sigmund+freud&title=&datetype=&startyear=&endyear=&journal=&type=&sort=author,a&fulltext1=&zone1=paragraphs&fulltext2=&zone2=paragraph ...eighton.edu/JRS/2005/2005-11.html] An analysis published later in the same journal contends that a number of methodological problems undermine any findings or
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  • Many conservative religious believers hold that in the absence of a plausible scientific theory, the best explanation for these events is that they were performed b Fundamentally, no philosopher sticking to the scientific [[world view]] could explain the [[existence]] or not of miracles, since mi
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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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  • *Society for the Scientific Study of Religion ...vigilant against those who would use purportedly expert testimony lacking scientific and methodological rigor."
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  • Scientific studies regarding the use of prayer have mostly concentrated on its effect ...sly mentioned American Heart Journal study published in the American Heart Journal indicated that some of the intercessors who took part in it complained abou
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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 * ''Aries: Journal for the Study of Western Esotericism'', Brill, Leiden, since 2001.
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  • ...c philosopher Karl Popper's assertion that falsifiability was the basis of scientific knowledge: <blockquote>"One can sum up all this by saying that the ''criterion of the scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability, or refutability, or testability''
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  • ...or abstained". Researchers found that another study published in the same journal documented frequent intercourse as being associated with lower diastolic bl ...f getting prostate cancer later by a third. Another study, reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association, "found that frequent ejaculations, 21
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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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  • ..._Sociological_Association American Sociological Association] have found no scientific [[Value|merit]] in them.[2] ...[associations]] and of [[scientific]] [[communities]] that there exists no scientific [[theory]], generally accepted and based upon methodologically sound [[rese
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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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  • ...). The fear of death and religious attitudes and behavior, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 14, 379-382. ...f death? Religiousness, spirituality, and death anxiety in late adulthood. Journal of Religion, Spirituality, & Aging, 18, 93-110.
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  • ...[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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  • ...s were originally seen as a divine presence; as emissaries of the gods. As scientific knowledge improved, the human perception of the planets changed over time, ...name order. name="weekdays". Astronomical Names for the Days of the Week, Journal of the [[Royal Astronomical Society of Canada]]
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  • ....g., Michael S. Kogan, 'Toward a Jewish Theology of Christianity' in ''The Journal of Ecumenical Studies'' 32.1 (Winter 1995), 89-106; available online at [ht ...en Brent ‘John as theologos: the imperial mysteries and the Apocalypse’, ''Journal for the Study of the New Testament'' 75 (1999), 87-102.</ref>
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  • ...a member of the Advisory Editors Council of the Social Evolution & History Journal. In 2003 he received the Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award from the ....edu/archive/vol6/number2 Festschrift for Immanuel Wallerstein - Part I] ''Journal of World-Systems Research'', Vol. VI, Number 2, Summer/Fall 2000
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  • ...ing the Implicit Association Test to measure self-esteem and self-concept. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 79, 1022-1038. https://faculty.washin ...Wiley InterScience Journal. Online at https://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118855650/abstract? Retrieved 2008-9-15.
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  • ...g [[symbol]]ism is because modern [[human]]s as a [[group]], adhere to the scientific '''attitude''', eschew [[superstition]], and abhor ignorance, while as [[in ...trol, self-efficacy, locus of control, and the theory of planned behavior. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 32(4), 665–683.
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  • ...e small changes and reflect a lot on the effect of these changes. Be truly scientific. Stop using any concentrated substance for at least a month or so to see if ...This is why you were created, and why your Father enjoys so much making a journal, a living soul-reality of your experiences for the both of you. So it helps
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  • ...n contradictory. Two diets with different approaches and some support from scientific research are the Paleolithic diet and Caloric restriction.[5][6][7][8] ...ial [[DNA]] to the cellular [[nucleus]].[23] This proposal is said to lack scientific [[evidence]][4] and has been called [[pseudoscientific]] because its propos
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  • #Orgel, Leslie E.. "The Origin of Life on the Earth". Scientific American. [https://proxy.arts.uci.edu/~nideffer/Hawking/early_proto/orgel.h ...as host species for the Amazon molly: no evidence for sexual reproduction Journal of Fish Biology Volume 48 Issue 4 Page 792-795
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  • ...lowing the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11th, 2002. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 84(2), 365-376. ...fects of psychic trauma four years after a school-bus kidnapping. American Journal of Psychiatry, 140, 1543-1550., cited in Masten, et al., 1990.
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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. ...field with the first bibliography (1985) and the establishment of both the journal ''Oral Tradition'' and the founding of the ''Center for Studies in Oral Tra
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  • *Alfred, Jay, “Our Invisible Bodies: Scientific Evidence for Subtle Bodies”, Trafford Publishing, 2006, ISBN 1-412-06326- ...dgren (1995). A review of Aura imaging photography by Johannes Fisslinger. Journal of Religion and Psychical Research, Volume 18, Number 1:49-50.
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  • ...[focus]] on [[superstition]] and [[dogma]] rather than on reason and the [[scientific method]]. Secularism draws its [[intellectual]] roots from Greek and Roman ...e and Religion in the Development of Early Islamic Society", International Journal of Middle East Studies 6 (4), p. 363-385.
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  • ==Scientific perspectives== # Charles S. Prebish, and Damien Keown, Buddhism - the EBook. Journal of Buddhist Ethics Online Books, 2005, page 83.
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  • ...ideology, called [[scientism]]. Some scientists respond that, while the [[scientific method]] is itself an ideology, as it is a collection of ideas, there is no Some accuse ecological economics of likewise turning scientific theory into [[political economy]], although theses in that science can ofte
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  • ...on''' and '''gravity''' are mostly interchangeable in everyday use, but in scientific usage a distinction may be made. "Gravitation" is a general term describing ...nce, Written by 'Al-Khâzinî in the Twelfth Century", chap. 5, sect. 3.1, ''Journal of the American Oriental Society'' '''6''', p. 36. All these early attempt
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  • ...of the [[narrative]], its imaginary elements are largely possible within [[scientific]]ally-established or scientifically-postulated laws of [[nature]] (though s *Stories that involve [[technology]] or scientific principles that contradict known [[laws]] of [[nature]][4] (compare [[Mirac
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  • ...t of your own life in your meditations and prayers, if you want to, open a journal and invite Michael and Mother Spirit to express themselves through you. If you want to keep a journal by writing, or use a little recording devise, it’s simply a matter of not
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  • '''Academia''' is a collective term for the scientific and cultural community engaged in [[higher education]] and [[research]], ta Among the earliest [[research journal]]s were the Proceedings of meetings of the [[Royal Society]] in the 17th ce
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  • ...g new information. The findings appeared in the August 2004 edition of the journal Psychological Science. #Conrad, R. (1964). Acoustic Confusions in Immediate Memory. British Journal of Psychology, 55, 75-84.
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  • From a scientific point of view, the products of creative thought (sometimes referred to as c ...in the production of a creative work (for example, a new work of art or a scientific hypothesis) that is both ''original'' and ''useful''.
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  • ...k T. (October 2008). "The Science of Gossip: Why we can't stop ourselves". Scientific American. ...s of Gender Stereotyping in German Advertising Texts 1949-1959" in The Web Journal of Modern Language Linguistics, Issue 1, 1996. Retrieved from https://wjmll
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  • ...ble and valid extensions of mankind, especially in the recent times of the scientific revolution where larger and larger groups of men and women accepted the dis ...greater understanding, we want to share it with others. I wrote this in my journal: I want to share my love, share this essence, share God with others. If I d
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  • ...are in the mid-1970s when the Cognitive Science Society was formed and the journal Cognitive Science began. Since then, more than sixty universities in North ...[[consciousness]] and mental representations was banished from respectable scientific discussion. Especially in North America, behaviorism dominated the psycholo
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  • In several scientific fields, "complexity" has a specific meaning : Complexity has always been a part of our environment, and therefore many scientific fields have dealt with complex systems and phenomena. Indeed, some would sa
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  • of Nature, a prestigious top ranking British scientific journal. of the local scientific community. Her one desire seems to
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  • ..., held in Nancy, France. The event was organized by the Bourbaki, a French scientific society, and mathematician Szolem Mandelbrojt (1899-1983), uncle of the wor ...ted States, Wiener decided to introduce the neologism cybernetics into his scientific theory. The name cybernetics was coined to denote the study of "teleologica
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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 ...ho Is the Founder of Psychophysics and Experimental Psychology?". American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences 16 (2).
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  • ...[theoretical]], based on [[observation]] of people who are dying, not on [[scientific]] [[research]] into the [[experiences]] of people who have survived the dea ...anno began studying grief for the first time using rigorous, peer-reviewed scientific [[techniques]]. Until then, the field of grief was largely based on theoret
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  • ...and earlier. Aristotle regarded quantity as a fundamental ontological and scientific category. In Aristotle's [[ontology]], quantity or [[quantum]] was classifi ...Hölder’s German text "Die Axiome der Quantität und die Lehre vom Mass". ''Journal of Mathematical Psychology'', 40, 235-252.
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  • ==Scientific Materialists== ...nalism]] is the most commonly accepted theory of time among members of the scientific community. Critics of materialism could argue that it's impossible for our
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  • ...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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  • ...an important one because there is significant amount of public funding in scientific research. Many of the questions have yet to be answered - the balancing of ..., Yochai, “Coase's Penguin, or, Linux and The Nature of the Firm. Yale Law Journal 112.3 (Dec 2002): p367(78)] (in Adobe [[Portable Document Format|pdf]] form
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  • Whilst scientific reflection upon the natural world is a fundamental aspect of process though ...arnessing the illuminating power of scientific reason. However, once these scientific and mathematical principles had been objectified they could encompass all o
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  • ...ce the [[Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society]] is a scientific journal dating from [[1665]], the [[Doctor of Philosophy]] (Ph.D.) degree covers a ...nowledge, with classical certainties overthrown, and new social, economic, scientific and logical problems. 20th century philosophy was set for a series of attem
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  • ...ave a few questions. What are the key factors or features of the spiritual/scientific synthesis which will characterize the new era? ...to assure all seekers of truth there is absolutely no conflict between the scientific method and true spiritual seeking. They are just two different modes of dis
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  • ...h provide an appropriate threshold of action". Their approach is rooted in Scientific [[Community]] [[Metaphor]]. # Howard Bloom, The Lucifer Principle: A Scientific Expedition Into the Forces of History, 1995
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  • ...been a topic of speculation and interest throughout recorded history. The scientific study of dreams is known as ''Oneirology''. ...is final candidate pool was too small to satisfy the requirements of the [[scientific method]].
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  • :, "... we have scientific knowledge when we know the cause..." and "... to know a thing's nature is t Using the [[scientific method]], scientists set up [[experiment]]s to determine causality in the p
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  • ...tments/science/bio/evol_pop_dyn/does_race_exist.pdf "Does Race Exist?"], ''Scientific American Magazine''. ...by culture and over time, and are often [[Controversy|controversial]] for scientific as well as [[social identity|social]] and [[identity politics|political]] r
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  • ==Early Scientific Views== ...ot delve into the religious literature but look more toward the objective, scientific approach to the study of states of consciousness in the West, which they ma
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  • ...that individuals can be held morally accountable for their actions. In the scientific realm, it may imply that the actions of the body, including the brain and t ...on "ethical grounds," he did not believe that there was evidence for it on scientific grounds, nor did his own introspections support it. Moreover, he did not ac
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  • ...a medium. [8][9] The last physical medium to be tested by a committee from Scientific American was Mina Crandon in 1924. # Journal of the Society for Psychical Research January, 2001 - Vol. 65.1, Num. 862
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  • ...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 [[Philosophy]], [[history]], [[journalism]], and legal and scientific writings traditionally ranked as literature. They offer some of the oldest
    35 KB (5,154 words) - 01:39, 13 December 2020
  • ...P, Kinnison MT, An introduction to microevolution: rate, pattern, process |journal=Genetica |volume=112–113) Thus, the distinction between micro- and macroe ...ce and necessity: the evolution of morphological complexity and diversity |journal=Nature |volume=409 |issue=6823 |pages=1102-09 |year=2001 |pmid=11234024) Fo
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  • ...t commentary concerning Nicolas Tesla and his frustrated attempts to bring scientific discoveries to the masses. The singular one who blocked his efforts, J. Pie
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  • ...s and workshops before going back to writing. He also helped to launch the journal ''[[ReVision]]'' in 1978. ...ye of Spirit'' (1997) was a compilation of articles he had written for the journal ''ReVision'' on the relationship between science and religion. Throughout 1
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  • ...rical approach has been destabilised with the recent emergence of accurate scientific testing, particularly DNA testing. As a result, the [[law]] on fatherhood i ...Questioning the Father: From Darwin to Zola, Ibsen, Strindberg, and Hardy Journal of European Studies, December, 2000
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  • ..., one of the founders of scientific psychology. A principal, if strained, scientific conception was that of the artistic ideal of corporeal correspondence; i.e. ...930s with his essay ''[[Avant-Garde and Kitsch]]'', first published in the journal [[Partisan Review]] 1939.<ref>[[Clement Greenberg]], ''Art and Culture,'' B
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  • ...attempt at an explanatory theory was the then unpublished ''Project for a Scientific Psychology'' in 1895. In this work Freud attempted to develop a neurophysio ...ated local chapters. The European Psychoanalytical Federation (EPF) is the scientific organization that consolidates all European psychoanalytic societies. This
    81 KB (11,571 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...pted and increasingly practiced in [[Western world|Western]] culture. (The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology 22|pages=pp. 149-166) ...the Australian psychiatrist [[Ainslie Meares]], reported in the ''Medical Journal of Australia,'' the regression of cancer following intensive meditation. Me
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  • ...of study even though it was, in the early days, the subject of large scale scientific studies that produced reports described to follow.[1] Prior to August, 2008 ...y of study as any topic, and deserve case-by-case [[analysis]] using the [[scientific method]]. Debunkers include Philip Klass and Dr. Donald Menzel.
    46 KB (6,890 words) - 02:42, 13 December 2020
  • ...by the [https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_history_of_ideas/ <i>Journal of the History of Ideas</i>])
    16 KB (2,310 words) - 00:16, 13 December 2020
  • .....to identify and, thereby, attack the ”deceiving“ power of universalizing scientific [[epistemology|epistemologies]]." McGettigan, Timothy,[https://www.sociolog Epiphany as a Standard of Postmodern Truth], Electronic Journal of Sociology
    31 KB (4,578 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...losophical thought. The standard view of the rise of philosophical (and of scientific) thought is that it probably required a certain sort of social structure (o ...frican Philosophy And Religion'' In: African Studies Quarterly, The Online Journal for African Studies, Volume 1, Issue 4, 1998]
    19 KB (2,915 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • The anthropologist [[Eric Wolf]] once described anthropology as "the most scientific of the humanities, and the most humanistic of the [[sciences]]." Contempora ..., or eras. The ''[[social sciences]]'' have generally attempted to develop scientific methods to understand social phenomena in a generalizable way, though usual
    55 KB (7,711 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...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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  • ...ness to change, to try something new, to get beyond denial. You can keep a journal to help yourself understand the causes and effects involved, and remember w MICHAEL: Yes. This is being truly scientific. You make small changes and then stay open to note the effects. Don’t for
    24 KB (4,271 words) - 21:13, 26 December 2010
  • ...ief in conflict with established religion. With the spread of freethought, scientific skepticism, and criticism of [[religion]], the term began to gather a more ...m]]—the "tacit adoption or assumption of philosophical naturalism within [[scientific method]] with or without fully accepting or believing it."
    60 KB (8,700 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...of a transiting extrasolar planet, Nature, [https://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v448/n7150/abs/nature06002.html] The Earth formed about [[Age of the Earth| ...mpact near the end of the Earth's formation [https://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v412/n6848/abs/412708a0.html]. Some of this object's mass merged with the E
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  • ...ry "utopian socialism" while their own views as "scientific socialism" or "scientific communism".[9] ...ciety into an industrial state with a literate population and a remarkable scientific superstructure."[22] but at the expenses of forced collectivization, famine
    36 KB (5,353 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...f the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar is regarded as pseudoscience by the scientific community, and as misrepresentative of [[Maya]] history.[2][4] ...larly strong solar maximum sometime between 2010 and 2012,[43] there is no scientific evidence linking a solar maximum to a geomagnetic reversal.[44] A solar max
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  • ...s, religious idols to impress worshipers, or tools for demonstrating basic scientific principles, including those built by Hero of Alexandria (sometimes known as ...The Museum of Music: A History of Mechanical Instruments", Music Educators Journal 54 (2): 45–49, doi:10.2307/3391092
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  • paniscus). Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (12): 33-56. Bickerton, D. (1983). Pidgen and creole languages. Scientific American 249 (1): 116-122.
    55 KB (8,507 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • ...braic concepts. He worked in Baghdad at the time when it was the centre of scientific studies and trade. The word ''algorism'' originally referred only to the ru ...~gurevich/Opera/164.pdf|title=Algorithms: A Quest for Absolute Definitions|journal= Bulletin of European Association for Theoretical Computer Science|volume=
    49 KB (7,317 words) - 23:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...quered the Greek world, they made Arabic versions of its philosophical and scientific works. During the Middle Ages, some translations of these Arabic versions w #J.M. Cohen observes (p.14): "Scientific translation is the aim of an age that would reduce all activities to techni
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  • ...of the Ghanzi District, Republic of Botswana.' Journal, South West Africa Scientific Society, v30, 1975-76.</ref>
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  • ...eatment of humans. The practice was at the time generally accepted by both scientific and lay communities. ...pted use of racial inferiority claims to dehumanize some group. Claiming a scientific basis for negative evaluations can give greater credence to such an ideolog
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  • ...ogma]]" (as described by [[Stephen Hawking]]) is generally referred to as "scientific determinism" and predicated on the supposition that all events have a cause ...hypothesized that [[redshift]] shows the universe is expanding, prevailing scientific opinion has been that the current state of the universe is the result of a
    33 KB (5,170 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...of this process was the translation into Arabic of Greek philosophical and scientific works that had been preserved by Eastern Christians in Mesopatamia, Syria a *[https://cip.cornell.edu/mpat Medieval Philosophy and Theology journal]
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  • ...ere is no privileged position for any kind or form of knowledge (a priori, scientific, etc.) In Hamann's epistemology, the hard division between ‘knowledge’ ...1948, "‘Parva Hamanniana’: J. G. Hamann as Spokesman of the Middle Class", Journal of the History of Ideas, 9: 380-384.
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  • ...it is to be able to sleep on a problem. You’ve all heard stories of great scientific discoveries that seemed to come overnight, yet were truly the result of yea * Journaling (Keeping a spiritual journal)
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  • The scientific study of [[human]] [[evolution]] encompasses the development of the genus ' ..., which may indicate an earlier divergence. [https://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v418/n6894/full/nature00879.html]
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  • ...n|E]]. Hodge, A. Trevor. "The Mystery of Apollo's E at Delphi," ''American Journal of Archaeology'', Vol. 85, No. 1. (Jan., 1981), pp. 83-84. Among other thi ...turn out to be on better terms than scholars had originally thought", in ''Scientific American'' August 2003]
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  • [https://www.lightlink.com/vic/cosmo.html Spring: A Journal of Archetypes and Culture Fall and Winter], 1999, pp. 83-100 ...e [[illusion]] of a setting Sun or a rising Moon. This was the first major scientific [[revelation]] of the unreliability of [[appearances]].
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  • ...This is what you have to go on. This is how we encourage you to be truly scientific: know what you are looking for, what the experiment is, what the adventure ...someone you can have a conversation with in your own mind, and make into a journal. I’m afraid the implications of the adjudication are almost endless, but
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  • ...e]]s the concept of magic is under pressure from, and in competition with, scientific and religious conceptual systems. This is particularly the case in the Chri ...ly [[Gerbert d'Aurillac]] and [[Albertus Magnus]]: both men were active in scientific research of their day as well as in ecclesiastical matters, which was enoug
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  • ...ific, and express to yourself--you can write it down if you want, making a journal--in order to know to the best of your ability what you are trying to do. B
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  • ...of with your grandchild. It's not that they are so much interested in the scientific aspect of this human mechanism and what is transpiring, because they clearl ...thing...supposedly they think I'll get reelected...they like the Herald [a Journal]. Most people think I will be reelected. I may not be, in which case, I don
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  • #Avery Dulles, "The Deist Minimum" First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life Issue: 149. (January 2005) pp 25+ https://www.f ...drawings—a journal of plantation management recording his contributions to scientific agriculture, including an experimental farm implementing innovations such a
    84 KB (12,835 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...e novels. (The audience played its own game in identifying who was who). [[Journal]]s of little stories appeared — the ''[[Mercure Gallant]]'' became the mo ...ng ancient and medieval myths — just provide a substitute for better, more scientific knowledge, or did they add to the luxuries of life a particular culture enj
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  • .... "Internet Eavesdropping: A Brave New World of Wiretapping" (in English). Scientific American. https://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=internet-eavesdropping. Retr ..."U.S. to Expand Domestic Use Of Spy Satellites" (in English). Wall Street Journal. https://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB118714764716998275.html. Retrieved
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  • =="Beginnings: experiences of a transmitter" from Lisa's Journal== ...n, including a belief in the authenticity of The Urantia Book. Present-day scientific psychology still has no place for God.
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  • <blockquote>Any scientific theory must establish a postulate of psychophysical parallelism. ...3 August 1983, Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 11 (1984), Ireland: Elsevier Scientific Publishers, pp. 135-56.
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  • ...ed our world as well as six others that form our “solar system”. We have a scientific colony in the world occupying the fifth orbit around our stars. Our world o one of the scientific expedition craft
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  • ...incipalities and powers "out there" on cloud nine or onto equally nebulous scientific laws...we wander in a self-made hall of mirrors, overwhelmed by inaccessibl ...Acropolis. Freud's Relation to Mysticism and Anti-Semitism", International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, Volume 59 (1978): 199-208. ([[Jeffrey Masson]] and Terr
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