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Search results for: chemi* in all categories

740 results found.

74 pages of results.
161. Metamorphic Evolution [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... as an integrated whole, the difficulties of regulation were overlooked. This needlessness was intensified by selecting trivial instances, such as beak shape, and ignoring the complexities of body chemistry or organized form, to bring about even such a simple change as green colour in an insect demands many genes. (Eye colour in Drosophila depends on thirteen genes ... rearrangements' were sufficient to account for evolution. Meanwhile, their rivals, who by now had huge populations of fruit flies which they were subjecting to stress from heat, chemicals, and anything else they could think of, were beginning to map on the chromosomes the actual positions of some of the mutated genes. "The naive belief of ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 315  -  27 May 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/velikov/vol0402/01meta.htm
... 14 dates owing to this fact. The inventor of C14 dating, W. F. Libby, who refereed a recent paper by Anderson published in the Journal of Physical Chemistry, has seen the latter's researches as uncovering a potential "can of worms." In sum, those historians not by nature imbued with skepticism toward the claims of ... . Earl Milton, Chairman, Department of Physics (Prof. of Astronomy), University of Lethbridge; Dickson; Prof. D. G. Andrews, Department of Chemical Engineering (Professor of Nuclear Engineering), University of Toronto; Prof. J. Terasmae, Department of Geological Sciences, Brock University (Ontario); Ransom; ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 315  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/pensee/ivr08/37sympos.htm
... All-embracing conception of the Universe-Tree obtains-it is not too fanciful to suggest-a very striking illustration and support from the extraordinary number of products (now getting on for 200) which modern chemists keep on extracting from coaltar. These embrace a most extensive variety of the substances or elements in Nature, which must have been all assimilated in past times by the ... paste-diamonds, costs in or about £36, and the underclothing comes to a few livers for, you see, these dressed statues are outfitted like real women, muslin chemisettes, bodices, and a whole set of petticoats stiffly starched for the great feasts, in order to fill out the dress. Silk stockings and ball-slippers go with this ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 314  -  29 Sep 2002  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/night/vol-1/night-05.htm
... interest to note that after many centuries it was revived, and it "has developed", as Dr. Masson reminds us, "into that atomic theory of modern chemistry which has proved fruitful in so many fresh discoveries made both in chemistry and, in our own day, in molecular physics. . . The atom, as described ... Lucretius, in many respects closely resembles the modern chemical atom". It may be added that the "vortex", rejected by Epicurus and ignored by Lucretius, has also come again to its own in science. Democritus applied his theory of a vortex of atoms to astronomy. If he could rise again in these days of gigantic telescopes ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 313  -  29 Mar 2004  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/migration/2c.htm
... discussion. The participants in the phase of this debate here considered are qualified scientific workers in the fields of history, medicine, astronomy, sociology, philosophy, statistics, chemistry, engineering, and physics, and the author of this book is an economist. "There have been, and will be hereafter, many and various destructions of ... photo-dissociation with most of the hydrogen molecules escaping into space and most of the oxygen being recycled into the ongoing oxidation process). Of the remainder, part was converted by chemical, electrical, and possibly also biological processes into various organic compounds, while the residuum persists in the atmosphere of Venus as petroleum gases. This account is clearly consistent ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 313  -  08 Mar 2006  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/mage/index.htm
... interest to note that after many centuries it was revived, and it "has developed", as Dr. Masson reminds us, "into that atomic theory of modern chemistry which has proved fruitful in so many fresh discoveries made both in chemistry and, in our own day, in molecular physics. . . The atom, as described ... Lucretius, in many respects closely resembles the modern chemical atom". It may be added that the "vortex", rejected by Epicurus and ignored by Lucretius, has also come again to its own in science. Democritus applied his theory of a vortex of atoms to astronomy. If he could rise again in these days of gigantic telescopes ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 313  -  29 Mar 2004  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/symbols/2c.htm
167. The Moon [Journals] [Kronos]
... Man Walks on Moon") of July 21, 1969 (but omitted in the Late City Edition); a letter to Prof. A. W. Burgstahler, Chemistry Department, University of Kansas, postmarked July 23, 1969; and a transcript of a passage from a lecture at Guyot Hall, Princeton University, October 21, ... , chiefly because of the difficulty of accounting for extensive near-surface melting at a later time" (emphasis added).{29} The same team has also discussed the chemical content of the lunar rocks and a possible explanation for the distribution and percentage of the various components. It was duly noted, however, that their "solution of ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 313  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/kronos/vol0201/028moon.htm
168. Letters [Journals] [Pensee]
... To The Editor: In all endeavors of scholarship the multi-disciplinary approach becomes a necessity if useful knowledge is to be advanced. The art conservator or restorer must know history, chemistry and physics as well as art if he is to do his job appropriately and effectively. The pharmacologist might well utilize techniques of electron microscopy, neurochemistry, behaviorism and ... found to test the theory. Sometimes it is the other way around. I found in an issue of Chemtech two years ago that "there is a fair body of chemists who hold that you must not believe any data not confirmed by theory." This attitude is much more common than is generally recognized, and contributes greatly to retard ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 313  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/pensee/ivr05/36letter.htm
169. Thoth Vol I, No. 3: February 18, 1997 [Journals] [Thoth]
... 150X Magnification and thereby he is still reading & writing research papers). Cook received a special Gold Medal in Stockholm in 1968 for doing the best work on the physical chemistry of High Explosives since Alfred Nobel discovered dynamite in 1867. (This medal was awarded by Nobel's company, not the Nobel Foundation, and it was for, among ... BIOSPHERE By Dr. Robert W. Bass (rbrtbass@ix.netcom.com) Recently I spoke on the phone with my old friend, Nitro-Nobel Medalist & physical chemist, Dr. Melvin Cook, who is now 85 and "totally blind" (except that he can read a computer when it is set to 150X Magnification and ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 310  -  19 Mar 2004  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/thoth/thoth1-03.htm
170. The Genesis of the Jerusalem Scripta [Journals] [SIS Review]
... for syphilis, in his office at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Dahelm near Berlin. On the same visit I saw also Professor NEUBERG, who dominated the field of biological chemistry. Professor A. FODOR, of the University of Halle, felt and complained that Neuberg closed him the doors to scientific advance and publications. He was soon in ... . BERGMANN, D. Zieff Research Institute, Rehoboth, Palestine: Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons. 2) A. FODOR, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem: Researches on the Chemical Structure of Proteins and the Action of Proteinases. 3) IM. VELIKOVSKY, Tel-Aviv- New York: Thesis for the Reconstruction of Ancient History from the End of ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 310  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v0402to3/31script.htm
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