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Words

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  • Reconciling 'instinct' with biological reality may require a recasting of evolutionary metaphors.

    • Barbara C. Scholz
    Words
  • Caloric, cathode, curium and quark — coinage from the mint of science.

    • J. L. Heilbron
    Words
  • The zoology created by our imagination is far outstripped by that of reality.

    • Sandra Knapp
    Words
  • Coding large numbers in synthetic words made them easier to memorize.

    • Roddam Narasimha
    Words
  • The Internet promises to revolutionize public engagement with science and technology.

    • David Dickson
    Words
  • Scientists' professional aims should benefit from embracing the 'what if' mentality of science fiction.

    • Gregory Benford
    Words
  • In both science and technology, metaphors direct the way we think, reason and hypothesize.

    • Douwe Draaisma
    Words
  • Could the prosaic vernacular of science benefit from a little enthusiasm for nature's beauty?

    • Matthew Cobb
    Words
  • By defining ideas precisely, as science does, fiction would deny its readers freedom of interpretation.

    • Alan Lightman
    Words
  • Scientists deal with the facts. But they wouldn't get anywhere without dreaming up stories first.

    • Jean-Marc Lévy-Leblond
    Words
  • Physics is crowded with evocative phrases, but these alone cannot show the whole picture.

    • Philip Morrison
    Words
  • Ideas that cross the border between scientists and non-scientists do not always survive the trip.

    • George
    • Eva Klein
    Words
  • Serious treatments of science in fiction can be illuminating for both scientists and non-scientists.

    • Susan Gaines
    Words
  • How can scientists use the media to give their side of the story to the public?

    • John Emsley
    Words
  • Could a change of nomenclature bring peace to biology's warring tribes?

    • Pier Luigi Nimis
    Words
  • The true message of Frankenstein is about morality, not mad science.

    • Howard P. Segal
    Words
  • The current state of language can make it difficult to discuss evolution in an accurate way.

    • Steve Blinkhorn
    Words
  • The tale of the epic voyage made to establish the metric system is an intriguing and exciting one.

    • Julyan Cartwright
    Words
  • Scientists sometimes use mathematics to give the illusion of certainty.

    • Sunetra Gupta
    Words
  • How do we cope with scientific terms that have two different definitions?

    • David M. Wilkinson
    Words

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