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    A pseudoscience an idea that is an idea that is mistaken for being true or scientific fact. Because it cannot be explained does not mean that it is the supernatural. A pseudoscience topic that should be looked into ghosts and the idea of a life after we are dead. This is such a controversial topic that has left people confused for many centuries, but with the scientific advancements that we have today it’s safe to say there is no such thing. The idea of ghost has been very popular because there…

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    other. This demonstrates the section of quantum mechanics called complementarity. Complementarity is when a photon can behave in multiple ways at once, existing as both a wave and a particle simultaneously even though it should be impossible. The theory of complementarity was discovered by Niels Bohr in 1927, when he combined the ideologies of Heisenberg’s particle-based quantum mechanics with Erwin Schrodinger’s more wave-based approach…

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    Profit-Driven Problems

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    development is devoted to the problems that affect primarily the poorest 90 % of the world’s population” (Intemann & de Melo-Martín, 2014). Feminist philosophy of science deals with the effects of science on disadvantaged social groups. Feminist theories of science also seeks to explain how the exclusion of these disadvantaged groups from science has affected the practices and outcomes of science. Their accounts of objectivity are helpful in minimizing or preventing conflicts of interests such…

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    The Bermuda Triangle: Pseudoscience? Coined by philosopher, Karl Popper, ‘Pseudoscience’ is a term that is prevelant and used to describe theories or even fields of study that appear scientific but are not authentically so. Much like scientific claims or theories, pseudoscientific ideas also stem from curiosity of the humankind. They tend to use seemingly scientific jargon to rationalize concepts but are often scarcely refutable and are devoid of experimentation and evidence. This essay aims to…

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    ESSAY This essay will debate whether technology and nature are, in fact, binary opposites or if they have a more closely related relationship. I will discuss the various meanings of “nature” and “technology” by referring to Cox (1989:7-12), Arthur (2009:203-15), Dusek(2006:). I will also use other sources to argue their relationship. In conjunction, I will discuss an interactive art project and how it could suggest that technology can or cannot be an extension of us as humans. I will attempt to…

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    1. What were the theoretical propositions of this experiment? In what aspect(s) of human behavior were they interested? What question(s) were they seeking to answer? The researchers were interested in human’s visual ability and depth perception and those behaviors are innate or learned. Through this experiment, they were seeking to answer these questions: Are we born with or develop the skill to comprehend that some objects are more distant than others and interpret the world around us? When…

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    Stonehenge Theory

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    Stonehenge. There are many theories as to why Stonehenge was built but only some of them are actually believable. Stonehenge is one of England’s most puzzling structures, built on Salisbury plains in England; it has historians, researchers, Scientists and archaeologists very unsure of its actual purpose. Pearson (2012) think’s Stonehenge would have been built around 3100 BC and finished around 1100 BC in three stages; these dates aren’t 100% accurate. Some of these theories are very realistic.…

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    In this passage from John M. Barry’s book, The Great Influenza, an account of the 1918 flu epidemic, he writes about scientists and their research. Barry’s purpose is to have his reader question everything so that reality can be found in the end. He utilizes the use of anaphora, imagery, extended metaphor, and rhetorical questions to make the reader reflect in a scientific way. To set the stage, Barry starts off by structuring his first paragraph anaphorically to give the reader two…

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    The existence of God has been a question that has plagued mankind since the beginning of time and it is a question that has divided numerous philosophers throughout history. In this essay, I will critically evaluate Richard Swinburne’s cosmological argument which can be found in this book is there a god? Richard Swinburne states that his book is trying “To reach a conclusion about whether, on balance the arguments indicate that there is a God or that there is not." Richard Swinburne attempts to…

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    Humans are some of the most evolved species in the world who have several ways of communicating or expressing themselves to others. Some of these ways that humans use to express themselves can be a form of physical activity, writing, speaking or through art. Out of those four things art is the most complicated thing to understand because the individual is seeing an idea from the perspective of someone else and is attempting to understand what the creator was thinking or what message the artist…

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