1-20 of 64 Search Results for

newton

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2015) 21 (1): 124.
Published: 01 January 2015
...Oren Harman Buchwald Jed Z. and Feingold Mordechai , Newton and the Origin of Civilization . ( Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press , 2013 ), 528 pp. © 2014 by Duke University Press 2014...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2012) 18 (3): 569–581.
Published: 01 August 2012
.... catwalk the On cheering. Love ofmouths. red A line democracy. in thing latest The ofashawl grass. in wrapped Pneumonia of Armani. elegance casual The systems. debut atof the newpolitical I marvel 1 Newton’s Orange From Caravaggio’s Caravaggio’s garden. We amoderatelyhealthy leave...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2015) 21 (1): 124–125.
Published: 01 January 2015
..., NJ:PrincetonUniversity Press, 2013),528pp. Newton andtheOriginof Civilization Jed Z.Buchwald andMordechai Feingold, continue to wonder whether experimental results...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2017) 23 (3): 548.
Published: 01 September 2017
... –  Trinitarians (like Isaac Newton) and the Established Church, Church, Established the and Newton) Isaac (like ­Trinitarians...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2015) 21 (1): 121–122.
Published: 01 January 2015
..., NJ:PrincetonUniversity Press, 2013),528pp. Newton andtheOriginof Civilization Jed Z.Buchwald andMordechai Feingold, continue to wonder whether experimental results...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2020) 26 (3): 441–452.
Published: 01 August 2020
... of ancient Greek science and metaphysics, was, despite its eventual contradiction by Newtonian physics, substantially correct. Kuhn s experience was of a sudden, blinding, jaw- dropping communication between minds separated by millennia (and by the obstacle of Isaac Newton). But the conclusion that Kuhn drew...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2006) 12 (3): 349–353.
Published: 01 August 2006
... senseless.” In general, he criticized experimenters forto trying light ofeternal “Tounity Newton: the divide against still hedeclares, stanzas, phenomenon. luminous profoundlytrue the disturbed one In of subsequent the light, for instance, by passing it through a prism screws.” and levers...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2005) 11 (1): 126–135.
Published: 01 January 2005
... well? B well? man wouldtake so ph are there out, However, pointed Newton...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2015) 21 (2): 340.
Published: 01 April 2015
... act. to hardware the tell that programs like forus, are, of physics laws The program. computer agiant like working universe the sees era own Our pieces. locking inter exactly its with awatch used era his and Newton works. universe how the metaphor its for as device...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2015) 21 (2): 339–340.
Published: 01 April 2015
... act. to hardware the tell that programs like forus, are, of physics laws The program. computer agiant like working universe the sees era own Our pieces. locking inter exactly its with awatch used era his and Newton works. universe how the metaphor its for as device...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2021) 27 (1): 121–122.
Published: 01 January 2021
... to observe sunspots and to map the surface of the moon, beating out Galileo. Before Newton, he figured out how refraction works, unlocking the mystery of rainbows. Having trained Sir Walter Raleigh s captains to navigate, he sailed to the New World himself, learning the native Carolina Algonquin language...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2021) 27 (1): 120–121.
Published: 01 January 2021
... was the first to use a telescope to observe sunspots and to map the surface of the moon, beating out Galileo. Before Newton, he figured out how refraction works, unlocking the mystery of rainbows. Having trained Sir Walter Raleigh s captains to navigate, he sailed to the New World himself, learning the native...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2013) 19 (1): 88–95.
Published: 01 January 2013
..., ancients, for the that say to fair it seems essence, this idea persists in Newton’s aetherial...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2007) 13 (1): 188–190.
Published: 01 January 2007
... AvailableLight . He is the J. Newton Rayzor Professor of Religious Studies...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2012) 18 (1): 149–159.
Published: 01 January 2012
..., . . . . . C O MMO N KNOWL EDG E 150 McEwan, “Exhibitions as Morale Boosters.” Morale as “Exhibitions McEwan, The cities visited included Newton Abbot, Exeter, Liv Exeter, Abbot, Newton included visited...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2005) 11 (1): 136–159.
Published: 01 January 2005
... means of vacuum. Newton did so, in order to show that matte order toshow in that so, did Newton of vacuum. means...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2008) 14 (2): 291–295.
Published: 01 April 2008
... paradigms work in the natu- ral sciences, from which Kuhn drew his examples. Profound alterations in the landscape of the sciences are evident from Ptolemy to Galileo, Newton to Ein- stein. And once a paradigm shift has occurred, the littered debris of the previous paradigm floats like shipwrecked...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2009) 15 (3): 373–394.
Published: 01 August 2009
... In addition to Copernicus, Bacon, and Newton, Newton, and Bacon, Copernicus, to addition In examined in the light of whatEducation The when only evident fully becomes theory dynamic Adams’s of significance The 1 humanist nor posthumanist. these figures as a contributor to bringing...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2023) 29 (1): 86–101.
Published: 01 January 2023
... the observer and the observed. And short-term failures can succeed over the long term. Most of what Galileo said turned out to be literally false but contained enough “truthiness”—as we say in these “post-truth” times—to inspire others, notably Newton, to do the scientific, philosophical, and public relations...
Journal Article
Common Knowledge (2011) 17 (2): 205–220.
Published: 01 April 2011
... of human activities the so Surely, keen to ofwetheory?” be may social the ‘Newtons’ think, scientists social were Why biochemists? and physiologists than less no Science, to be emulated bysociologists, economists, and psychologists Serious a of example type the as seen dynamics...