Science Which Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Science Which
Science Which Quotes & Sayings
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The function of sociology, as of every science, is to reveal that which is hidden.
— Pierre Bourdieu
Computer Science is the only discipline in which we view adding a new wing to a building as being maintenance.
— Jim Horning
A prolonged war in which a nation takes part is bound to impoverish the breed, since the character of the breed depends on the men who are left.
— J. Arthur Thomson
Science is bound, by the everlasting vow of honour, to face fearlessly every problem which can be fairly presented to it.
— Lord Kelvin
Theology is the mistress-science, without which the whole educational structure will necessarily lack its final synthesis.
— Dorothy L. Sayers
Whether our work is art or science or the daily work of society, it is only the form in which we explore our experience which is different.
— Jacob Bronowski
If Christian scientists had more science and doctors more Christianity, it wouldn't make any difference which you called in - if you had a good nurse.
— Finley Peter Dunne
Which came first, the mind or the idea of the mind? Have you never wondered? They arrived together. The mind is an idea.
— Bernard Beckett
We have found that where science has progressed the farthest, the mind has but regained from nature that which the mind put into nature.
— Arthur Eddington
There are some things in science which should be brought to light. There are others, doctor, which should be left alone.
— Griffin Jay
Of all many-sided subjects, [education] is the one which has the greatest number of sides.
— John Stuart Mill
There is a fascinating entanglement of science and knowledge, which is expressed as scientific knowledge.
— Eraldo Banovac
How could history of science fail to be a source of phenomena to which theories about knowledge may legitimately be asked to apply?
— Thomas S. Kuhn
Philosophy, art, and science are not the mental objects of an objectified brain but the three aspects under which the brain becomes subject.
— Gilles Deleuze
I admired Bohr very much. We had long talks together, long talks in which Bohr did practically all the talking.
— Paul Dirac
Science is perhaps the only human activity in which errors are systematically criticized and, in time, corrected.
— Karl Popper
It is an extravagant gesture,' she said, turning to the torpedo, 'which is just the sort of gesture I like.
— Kamy Wicoff
There are trappings of science fiction which I kind of embrace, but there are also cliches which I run from.
— David Twohy
If science has no country, the scientist should have one, and ascribe to it the influence which his works may have in this world.
— Louis Pasteur
To one, science is an exalted goddess; to another it is a cow which provides him with butter.
— Friedrich Schiller
Knowledge is not happiness, and science
But an exchange of ignorance for that
Which is another kind of ignorance. — Lord Byron
But an exchange of ignorance for that
Which is another kind of ignorance. — Lord Byron
I wrote the very first stories in science fiction which dealt with homosexuality, The World Well Lost and Affair With a Green Monkey.
— Theodore Sturgeon
No science can be more secure than the unconscious metaphysics which tacitly it presupposes.
— Alfred North Whitehead
The problem with heroes and villains is that it's not always easy to tell which is which. Particularly when you are one.
— Jessica Meats
I think it was this curiosity about the natural world which awoke my early interest in science.
— Paul Nurse
The phrase 'popular science' has in itself a touch of absurdity. That knowledge which is popular is not scientific.
— Maria Mitchell
I have also a paper afloat, with an electromagnetic theory of light, which, till I am convinced to the contrary, I hold to be great guns.
— James Clerk Maxwell
One of the first and most difficult steps in a science is to conceive clearly the nature of the magnitudes about which we are arguing.
— William Stanley Jevons
O that the gods would bring to a miserable end such fictitious, crazy, deformed labours, with which the minds of the studious are blinded!
— William Gilbert
Science or research is always under pressure to deliver something which can be used immediately for society.
— Rolf-Dieter Heuer
It is necessary for the very existence of science that minds exist which do not allow that nature must satisfy some preconceived conditions.
— Richard P. Feynman
Good sense, which only is the gift of Heaven, And though no science, fairly worth the seven.
— Alexander Pope
My view is that science only has something to say about a very particular notion of God, which goes by the name of 'god of the gaps'.
— Brian Greene
[Audubon's works are] the most splendid monuments which art has erected in honor of ornithology.
— Georges Cuvier
A catalyst is a substance which alters the velocity of a chemical reaction without appearing in the final products.
— Wolfgang Ostwald
Aristotle discovered all the half-truths which were necessary to the creation of science.
— Alfred North Whitehead
Science, as a rule beneficent, has given birth to potentialities of crime which exceed the dreams of oriental romance.
— Robert Barr
Has there ever been a society which has died of dissent? Several have died of conformity in our lifetime. Jacob Bronowski in Science and Human Values
— Jacob Bronowski
When science advances religion goes along with it; science builds the altar at which religion prays.
— Joseph Parker
An organized product of nature is that in which all the parts are mutually ends and means.
— Immanuel Kant
The Divine is simply that which science has not yet explained. In effect, God = Infinity - Human Knowledge.
— Ashwin Sanghi
Civilization depends on our expanding ability to produce food efficiently, which has markedly accelerated thanks to science and technology.
— Nina Fedoroff
Science fiction films are not about science. They are about disaster, which is one of the oldest subjects of art.
— Susan Sontag
There is a chasm between knowledge and ignorance which the arches of science can never span.
— Henry David Thoreau
There was something built into the human brain by natural selection which was once useful, and which now manifests itself as religion.
— Richard Dawkins
Technology is that which separates us from our environment.
— Marshall McLuhan
Science and industry have in less than fifty years developed man's power of destruction to an extent which makes comparison with the past futile.
— Frederick Maurice
Life is perpetual. Though, it is ourselves which harvest these energies that perpetuate us in a positive direction.
— Robert Ogawa
A "simple aspect of science" may be defined as one which, through good fortune, I happen to understand.
— Isaac Asimov
Anthropology is the science which tells us that people are the same the whole world over - except when they are different.
— Nancy Banks-Smith
All through college, I had frequently been the only girl in a science class - which wasn't such a bad deal.
— Sylvia Earle
The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them.
— Albert Einstein
Software Engineering is that part of Computer Science which is too difficult for the Computer Scientist.
— Friedrich L. Bauer
No existing form of anthropoid ape is even remotely related to the stock which has given rise to man.
— Henry Fairfield Osborn
It is science, and not religion, which has taught men that things are complex and difficult to understand.
— Emile Durkheim
All our science calculates with abstracted individual external marks, which do not touch the inner existence of any single thing
— Johann Gottfried Herder
Anthropology was the science that gave her the platform from which she surveyed, scolded and beamed at the world.
— Jane Howard
Astrology is a sickness, not a science ... It is a tree under the shade of which all sorts of superstitions thrive.
— Maimonides
Big whorls have little whorls
Which feed on their velocity
And little whorls have lesser whorls,
And so on to viscosity. — Lewis Fry Richardson
Which feed on their velocity
And little whorls have lesser whorls,
And so on to viscosity. — Lewis Fry Richardson
Though many have tried, no one has ever yet explained away the decisive fact that science, which can do so much, cannot decide what it ought to do.
— Joseph Wood Krutch
[Science doesn't deal with facts; indeed] fact is an emotion-loaded word for which there is little place in scientific debate.
— Hermann Bondi
If the greenhouse effect is a blanket in which we wrap ourselves to keep warm, nuclear winter kicks the blanket off.
— Carl Sagan
The fundamental concept in social science is Power, in the same sense in which Energy is the fundamental concept in physics.
— Bertrand Russell
All of science is built on territory once occupied by gods. Is there some boundary at which science is supposed to stop?
— Robert L. Park
Common human experience alone is no guarantee with which we can build a science of psychology.
— Wolfgang Kohler
Without the ontological assumption which goes with it, what is called science, is nothing but the dreamer's well-ordered dream.
— George Trumbull Ladd
That which is provable, ought not to be believed in science without proof.
— Richard Dedekind
Color, which is the poet's wealth, is so expensive that most take to mere outline sketches and become men of science.
— Henry David Thoreau
As an anonymous wit is supposed to have put it: Hydrogen is a light, odorless gas which, given enough time, changes into people.
— David Christian
Metaphysics,
the science which determines what can and what cannot be known of being and the laws of being. — Samuel Taylor Coleridge
the science which determines what can and what cannot be known of being and the laws of being. — Samuel Taylor Coleridge
That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.
— Christopher Hitchens
Every new discovery of science is a further 'revelation' of the order which God has built into His universe.
— Warren Weaver
Science shows us truth and beauty and fills each day with a fresh wonder of the exquisite order which governs our world.
— Polykarp Kusch
Science fiction, outside of poetry, is the only literary field which has no limits, no parameters whatsoever.
— Theodore Sturgeon
Nature allows only experimental situations to occur which can be described within the framework of the formalism of quantum mechanics
— Werner Heisenberg