Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
schooldays 1
schoolfellows 1
schooling 1
science 39
sciences 4
scientific 25
scientist 15
Frequency    [«  »]
40 what
40 world
39 men
39 science
39 those
39 well
38 mind
Thomas H. Marshall
James Watt

IntraText - Concordances

science

   Art.
1 1| creation.~Those two forces were Science and Finance. If Nature was 2 1| in that study, which is Science, so civilisation grew under 3 1| product of the invention of Science, translated into matter 4 1| of our ancestors, had not Science furnished means for the 5 1| Nothing may be believed, says Science, until it has been proved. 6 1| The first great age of science in England is marked by 7 1| I698.~There had been men of science in the ancient world and 8 1| being done in the world of science. They would meet together 9 1| meteorology as aids to the science of navigation, and a lively 10 1| cooperation between the men of science and the men of business, 11 1| healthy young plant of English science languished in the sunless 12 1| successors revolutionised the science of chemistry as completely 13 1| effective co-operation between science and business, for new Societies 14 1| advancing along the path of science to meet these scientists 15 1| so much of the methods of science that he often became a valued 16 1| offspring of the union of science with craftsmanship in which 17 1| Priestley represented pure science. James Watt stood for the 18 1| stood for the craftsman whom science converts into a mechanical 19 2| to be attracted by every science in turn. Geometry and mechanics 20 3| impulse given to the study of Science by the Royal Society had 21 3| laboriously creating a school of Science for their own students, 22 3| proprietary about their science and resentful against trespassers.~ 23 3| study; everything became science in his hands."~Meanwhile 24 4| study everything became science in his hands." Well, he 25 4| the problem; it " became science in his hands." He saw that 26 4| stuck. If the oracle of science, when consulted by its most 27 4| steam-engine Watt created the science of mechanical engineering.~ 28 5| fertilised by wealth. If Science is the mother of invention, 29 5| Roebuck, after discussing the science of heat, concludes with 30 9| free to live as a man of science.~Many men suffer as they 31 9| celebrated the achievements of science in rhymed couplets. The 32 9| Grand Old Man of British science, a revered master to those 33 9| the learned about their science, to the student about his 34 9| belles-lettres all his life; of science it is unnecessary to speak 35 9| this was perfectly true. Science is logical, and each new 36 9| place in the vocabulary of science at the suggestion of C. 37 9| master mind in mechanical science, James Watt." When the hundredth 38 9| came round in 1919, the Science Museum in South Kensington 39 9| long life of service to science and to humanity. ~


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