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How to use the word Scientists in a Sentence?

Sample usage from literary quotes and the newswire.

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Behe's concept of Irreducible Complexity sparks curiosity among scientists, caught between Darwinian theory and the possibility of Intelligent Design. Regardless of whether Irreducible Complexity will gain full scientific legitimacy, will be deemed a creationist theory, or will become a point of convergence between Science and Faith, it is interestingly an additional fuel to the scientific quest. - Aloo Denish

Aloo Denish

added by Aloo-Denish
11 months ago

One of the attributes of intelligence is the ability to think and solve problems. In the early 1960s, I was told that this was unique to humans, and only we could use and make tools, only we had language and culture, but more and more research has proved that many animals are excellent at solving problems. Many use tools, and many show cultural differences. Some scientists believe that whales and dolphins are communicating with what may be a real language.

Jane Goodall

Found on CNN
1 year ago

The challenges are that technology has been expensive and scientists don’t have a lot of money.

Alan Jamieson

Found on CNN
1 year ago

(He Jiankui) is not the only concern in this area. One of our big concerns I always have is the possibility that there will be rogue companies, rogue scientists setting up to do genome editing in an inappropriate way.

Robin Lovell-Badge

Found on CNN
1 year ago

Ultimately, what Ranjith Jayasena Scientists all seek is a species that lives in the wild( and is) playing their ecological role.

Ranjith Jayasena

Found on CNN
1 year ago

A key part of our vision is to develop OI in an ethical and socially responsible manner, for this reason, we have partnered with ethicists from the very beginning to establish an ‘embedded ethics’ approach. All ethical issues will be continuously assessed by teams made up of scientists, ethicists and the public, as the research evolves.

Thomas Hartung

Found on CNN
1 year ago

WITH THE EMBERS STILL BURNING: The scientific community has done a pronounced amount of hand-wringing about its involvement in the atomic bomb’s creation, and a disproportionately absent amount of the soul-searching with respects to its creation of the science of eugenics. The 450,000 deaths due to the bomb are relatively small in the shadow of the many millions dead as a result of National Socialism’s eugenic campaign. The casualties of The Holocaust are the casualties of the science of eugenics, which so many scientists had actively campaigned for leading up to World War II. Yet, the scientific community has confronted its complicity with collective silence and sometimes outright censorship.

A.E. Samaan

added by AlvaroSiman
1 year ago

More to the point, one cannot understand The Holocaust without understanding the intentions, ideology, and mechanisms that were put in place in 1933. The eugenics movement may have come to a catastrophic crescendo with the Hitler regime, but the political movement, the world-view, the ideology, and the science that aspired to breed humans like prized horses began almost 100 years earlier. More poignantly, the ideology and those legal and governmental mechanisms of a eugenic world-view inevitably lead back to the British and American counterparts that Hitler’s scientists collaborated with. Posterity must gain understanding of the players that made eugenics a respectable scientific and political movement, as Hitler’s regime was able to evade wholesale condemnation in those critical years between 1933 and 1943 precisely because eugenics had gained international acceptance. As this book will evidence, Hitler’s infamous 1933 laws mimicked those already in place in the United States, Britain, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Canada. So what is this scientific and political movement that for 100 years aspired to breed humans like dogs or horses? Eugenics is quite literally, as defined by its principal proponents, an attempt at “directing evolution” by controlling any aspect of human existence that affects human heredity. From its onset, Francis Galton, the cousin of Charles Darwin and the man credited with the creation of the science of eugenics, knew that the cause of eugenics had to be observed with religious fervor and dedication. As the quote on the opening pages of this book illustrates, a eugenicist must “intrude, intrude, intrude.” A vigilant control over anything and everything that affects the gene pool is essential to eugenics. The policies could not allow for the individual to enjoy self-government or self-determination any more than a horse breeder can allow the animals to determine whom to breed with. One simply cannot breed humans like horses without imbuing the state with the level of control a farmer has over its livestock, not only controlling procreation, but also the diet, access to medical services, and living conditions.

A.E. Samaan

added by AlvaroSiman
1 year ago

It has the structure that planetary scientists have been waiting for.

Baptiste Journaux

Found on CNN
1 year ago

It is, as a whole, a very powerful system of lobbying, of capturing scientists, of capturing health care providers and, at the end of the day, capturing families themselves with their products by really exploiting the fears of families and parents during a very vulnerable psychoemotional time.

Rafael Perez-Escamilla

Found on CNN
1 year ago

Dr. Ijeoma Opara, you have been a blessing, you are part of our testimonial and what it means to have a community of amazing, beautiful, Black, intelligent scientists and doctors, and more important than that is your heart and your passion for the work that you do.

Andrew Hurley/Yale Bobbi mother

Found on CNN
1 year ago

So if you go to one of these large conferences for earth scientists, routinely we'll be chatting over beers and things, and, you know, I'll ask folks like, 'you don't really believe that the planets gonna end in eight or 10 or 12 years or anything like that?' Of course not, i mean, I'll go to these talks by some of the most vocal climate alarmists out there and I notice that they're pushing a stroller with like a one or two-year-old in it. I'm like, wait a minute, do these people really believe that the planet is going to end in eight or 10 or 12 years? They clearly don't believe that.

Matthew Wielicki

Found on FOX News
1 year ago

I wanted to get into the heads of scientists who made great discoveries — to see their advances as they did and understand how they were received at the time, i was surprised that almost every time, the initial reaction to groundbreaking theories was skepticism and dismissal.

Author Levitt

Found on CNN
1 year ago

It has always been foreign scientists who have described species found in the Maldives without much involvement from local scientists, even those that are endemic to the Maldives, this time it is different and getting to be part of something for the first time has been really exciting, especially having the opportunity to work alongside top ichthyologists on such an elegant and beautiful species.

Ahmed Najeeb

Found on CNN
1 year ago

We keep a completely open mind as to what the origin is, having said that, if you look at the examination by highly qualified international scientists with no political agendas — they've published in peer-reviewed journals — that all accumulated evidence, particularly relating to the Chinese bringing into the Wuhan market animals from the wild that should not have been there … the evidence is quite strong that this is a natural occurrence.

Anthony Fauci

Found on FOX News
1 year ago

NASA has brought together some of the world's leading scientists, data and artificial intelligence practitioners, aerospace safety experts, all with a specific charge, which is to tell us how to apply the full focus of science and data to UAP, the findings will be released to the public in conjunction with NASA’s principles of transparency, openness, and scientific integrity.

Daniel Evans

Found on FOX News
1 year ago

Being able to work without dangerous solvents, opened many news doors — it enabled scientists to work on new types of reactions that actually take place within the human body.

Angela Wilson

Found on FOX News
1 year ago

economist can be a political scientist, but the opposite is difficult for political scientists

AMYNE E. QASEM

added by Aeqasem
1 year ago

The Washburn fire is a relatively small, very slow moving surface fire, burning mainly at low intensity in mild to moderate fire weather, including in dense forests with no forest management history and an abundance of live and dead trees, this underscores what John Muir Project and hundreds of scientists have been saying for years: it’s not primarily about the density of live or dead trees, it’s about the weather and climate, and climate change.

Scott Applewhite

Found on FOX News
1 year ago

When we go back and resurvey places [in Joshua Tree] that the early scientists at UC Berkeley visited a century ago, we find about half as many birds, and that's because it's warmed and dried so much, what we're seeing is a whole kind of change in a community; a collapse in the case of birds. For park managers, there's limits of what they can actually do to reverse this because of the climate change effects.

Steve Beissinger

Found on CNN
1 year ago

These are self-reported citizen scientists projects and we have now around 14,000 people in our app where you register yourself and report your microdose, i'm going to say something provocative, but I believe it to my core : Psilocybin makes nicer people.

Paul Stamets

Found on CNN
1 year ago

Since we set our seismometer down in December 2018, we've been waiting for' the big one,' this quake is sure to provide a view into the planet like no other. Scientists will be analyzing this data to learn new things about Mars for years to come.

Bruce Banerdt

Found on CNN
1 year ago

Climate change is here and it's been here across the American West, climate change is accelerating in alarming ways and faster than scientists predicted even 10 or 20 years ago and that means we have to move very quickly as governments, as water agencies, as communities.

Wade Crowfoot

Found on CNN
1 year ago

[ They ] are scientists, journalists, people from the IT sector. Those are the smartest people and they are all leaving because it's too dangerous to be here, i hope people will come back and build a new future for Vladimir Putin Russia.

Apollinaria Oleinikova

Found on CNN
2 years ago

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