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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page discussion of the evolution in the way we view science. The author presents a fictional scenario of a great scientist, an atomic physicists in fact, whose greatest revelation has been that man’s mutual respect for his environment and the organisms which live in it is really the lesson that science can, and does, smooth the rocky path of life. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPscienc.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Throughout the entirety of our reign on earth, mankind has thirsted for knowledge. That thirst ultimately resulted in the discipline that we refer to as science. Science
has inspired us to pick apart our world, to carefully examine, poke, prod and manipulate everything from the lowly turtle to man himself. Science is, in fact, the tool
against which we measure all of the phenomena of our world. Science has, in fact, even motivated us to doubt the existence of our own God. This aspect
of science, along with such facts as it has allowed us to create weapons of destruction which could wipe out the entire world, it has resulted in the rape and
destruction of our natural areas in preference of rabid development, and a variety of other negative manifestations, has cause some of us to doubt the value of science. Others, however,
continue to hail science as the solution to all the worlds problems. Our high regard for science has, in fact, led to numerous
world advances. Starting with the seventeenth century those advances have been particularly phenomenal. They led to changes in all aspects of our lives, even in the way we
viewed our role and that of Gods in the universe. During the first half of the seventeenth century Europeans viewed life as a constant. Every activity was controlled
by some sort of authoritarian regiment. As the Seventeenth Century progressed however, tremendous leaps would be made in technologies and the sciences. Hazard (1964) writes:
"One day, the French people were thinking like Bosseut. The day after they were thinking like Voltaire.
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