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| Alphabetical [« »] schooling 1 science 39 sciences 4 scientific 25 scientist 15 scientists 15 scolds 1 | Frequency [« »] 25 may 25 nothing 25 often 25 scientific 25 set 25 she 25 until | Thomas H. Marshall James Watt IntraText - Concordances scientific |
Art.
1 1| ingenuity of the makers of scientific instruments was the admiration 2 1| changed from an impulse not scientific, yet they would play much 3 1| the very essence of the scientific outlook when he wrote, " 4 1| Universities introduced scientific subjects into their curricula, 5 1| Every step in advance made scientific work more complex and the 6 1| were formed, less purely scientific and more definitely industrial 7 1| of the exact methods of scientific experiment to the problems 8 1| contemporary writer the scientific spirit had spread even to 9 1| type of skill was turned to scientific use was that of mathematical 10 1| almost unconsciously, the scientific atmosphere that emanated 11 1| their trade was a highly scientific one and that most of its 12 1| inventing and manufacturing scientific instruments for use in surveying 13 2| to the development of his scientific instincts. In his father' 14 3| intellect and his superiors in scientific experience. And these men, 15 3| intricacies of apparatus but the scientific problems on which they were 16 3| John Robison. Black was a scientific genius of the first order. 17 3| touch with the most advanced scientific thought of the day. He realised 18 4| into a series of elaborate scientific experiments on the nature 19 4| conclusions were at fault. His scientific mind, aided by his mechanical 20 4| which Watt applied these scientific observations to the problem 21 5| results of his original scientific experiments. And Roebuck 22 5| with the host of little scientific problems that he explored 23 7| informs us, of " a Number of Scientific Gentlemen whose Curiosity 24 8| would be profitable; all his scientific instincts urged him to explore 25 8| but whereas work at his scientific experiments gave him a kind