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Discover LudwigThe phrase "as regards science" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing or referring to a specific topic or aspect related to science.
Example: "As regards science, recent studies have shown significant advancements in renewable energy technologies."
Alternatives: "in terms of science" or "concerning science".
Exact(1)
While this image may make for great television drama, it is an incomplete picture, especially as regards science advocacy.
Similar(59)
Several archeologists I spoke with, pointing out that Odyssey, like Seahawk before it, has never published any of its findings in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, said that they were skeptical of the company's claim that it regards science as a priority.
The Chinese government regards science as an important solution to China's problems and an engine for the country's expansion.
"Two things that might gladden hearts of young scientists are that in this economic environment, the president of the European Commission appointed a chief scientific adviser, so he regards science as crucial for the future of Europe.
This group regards science as developing in an idealizational and dialectical manner, ideas that they trace back to Karl Marx's analysis of economics, inspired by his own study of Galileo's fruitful use of abstract, idealized models against the Aristotelians.
Of course, I suffer, as do so many, from neglect as a writer, not least because the Higher Snobbery of literature regards science fiction as somehow beyond the pale.
Methodological naturalism is the view that regards science and philosophy as continuous.
Some of this sounds familiar; for decades we have regarded science as crucial to global competitiveness, an idea invoked as recently as in Barack Obama's campaign.
In an eye-catching conclusion, he then takes issue with those who regard science as a vindication of atheism: God may have died as a supernatural being with a personal interest in our welfare, but we might as well resuscitate him, according to Du Sautoy, by equating him with "the abstract idea of the things we do not know".
From 1979 to 1997, the Conservative government regarded research as a tiresome formality, to be managed on the cheap or left to the Germans and the Japanese, and Thatcher herself seemed to regard science as an elitist luxury, like opera, or Royal Ascot.
The natural sciences and the human sciences bifurcated into different "cultures" only in the wake of the Enlightenment; early fellows of the Royal Society such as Christopher Wren, with their rapacious curiosity across what later became separate disciplines, would not see the distinction, regarding science as, simply, knowledge – from the Latin scire, to know.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com