Google
×
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
Índice: 1. The Foundations for a New Kind of Science -- 2. The Crucial Experiment -- 3. The World of Simple Programs -- 4. Systems Based on Numbers -- 5. Two Dimensions and Beyond -- 6. Starting from Randomness -- 7.
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
This book explains why the social character of scientific knowledge makes it trustworthy and why social character is its greatest strength--for example, why we should trust doctors on vaccine safety, or climate experts on the perils of ...
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
Presents Jean-Paul Sartre's existentialist novel, first published in 1938, in which Antoine Roquentin, a French writer, chronicles his reactions to the world and people around him, which combine to give him an overpowering feeling of nausea ...
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
Reprint of the 1987 original with a new introduction and preface. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
Reviews fads, hoaxes, and cults propagated under the guise of being scientifically founded and proven
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
While there are many biographies of JFK and accounts of the early years of US space efforts, this book uses primary source material and interviews with key participants to provide a comprehensive account of how the actions taken by JFK's ...
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
In this mind-expanding book, he shows how our understanding of reality has changed throughout centuries, from Democritus to loop quantum gravity.
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
Hofstadter has developed a sophisticated vision of the mind in which perception, at an abstract level, is the key.
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
Life on the Screen traces a set of boundary negotiations, telling the story of the changing impact of the computer on our psychological lives and our evolving ideas about minds, bodies, and machines.
subject:"Science General" from books.google.com
Lost in the raging debate over the validity of social construction is the question of what, precisely, is being constructed.