Sentence examples for division of sciences from inspiring English sources

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A century later, the division of sciences into descriptive and normative is no longer customary.

More than a century ago, Sabine wrote: "The general division of sciences into descriptive and normative has long been one of the commonest devices used in classification, so much that it has become almost traditional to refer to it even in the elementary text-books of logic and ethics" [ 1], page 433.

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A.: Like other important organs, teeth have nerves for sensation and protection, said Dr. Daniel M. Meyer, a dentist who heads the division of science of the American Dental Association.

In his first book, Gaia, he observed mildly that the difficulty of thinking about the nature of life was probably due to the division of science into separate disciplines, "with each specialist assuming that someone else has done the job".

(National Science Foundation, division of science resources statistics, Postdocs Participation in Science Engineering and Health Doctorate Recipients, 2008, www.nsf.gov/statistics/infbrief/nsf08307).

Hybridisation (see De et al. 2016), which is a biological concept, transferred to mathematical modelling of real-life problems, is a division of science that transfers down positive traits from individual components of the hybrid into a whole that is better than the characteristics of the individuals, separately.

For another example, a section on political science from Avicenna's division of the sciences follows the parallel discussion in Alfarabi, and provides the reader with the traditional Aristotelian division of practical science into governance of the city, governance of the household, and governance of oneself or ethics.

Is there a rationale for that level of contribution?" Mr Grunsfeld replied that it was not a valuable exercise to try to "trace the dollars" and that if different divisions of science at Nasa were to fight, "we all lose".

It is instructive to note that earlier periods of Aristotelian scholarship thought this controversial, so that, for instance, even something as innocuous-sounding as the question of the proper home of psychology in Aristotle's division of the sciences ignited a multi-decade debate in the Renaissance.[5] (ii) Practical sciences are less contentious, at least as regards their range.

In 1982 she earned a master's degree in computer science from Atlanta University, and that same year she became chair of Spelman's division of natural sciences, a post she held until 1990.

Dr. Galston was also a former director of the division of biological sciences at Yale.

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