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    Quintessential Paradigms

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    Quintessential Paradigms Ryan Malaty Revolutions In Science Quintessential Paradigms It is human nature to try to find meaning in everything‚ even if some parts need to be dreamed up. There always needs to be an answer‚ or a method of finding an answer‚ to all the questions that tickle Man’s spirit of inquiry. However‚ for every way of thinking there is a way to think otherwise. In Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions‚ the nature of the “paradigm” is discussed. A paradigm

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    because he is the only person that had an influence on the Scientific Revolution that was most interesting to me. He came up with the law of the pendulum. He is very different from any other person who had influence on the scientific revolution. Galileo’s theory instantly made him famous. Throughout my report I will inform about the significance and influence Galileo had on the Scientific Revolution. Galileo was the inventor of the scientific method. As well as studying the phases of Venus and discovering

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    Geocentric Model. Prior to the 17th Century the Catholic Church held onto and defended the Geocentric Model as the divine order of planetary alignment and man’s hierarchy in the universe. Nicolas Copernicus introduced the heliocentric model when most scientific minds believed the earth was the center of the universe. This presentation will articulate two main points: Copernicus’s heliocentric model impact to the Catholic Church and how it helped to revolutionize modern science. I. The Geocentric Model

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    During the 18th Century‚ precisely from the years 1754 to 1776‚ the colonists progressively became dissatisfied with the poor treatment that they were exposed to from Britain. When the colonies finally wrote the Declaration of Independence in 1776 as a reason for rebellion‚ they put the accusations for all they had complications with on King George III. However‚ the constant injuries and confiscations were sometimes the fault of Parliament‚ not King George III. The colonists’ assertions that blamed

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    Shaina Campbell 10/21/12 The American colonists were justified in waging war against Great Britain. In the late 1700’s conflicts between the Colonists and The British arose. The British were imposing taxes on the colonists. They attacked defenseless Colonists and the British wanted to have total control over the government of The Colonists. After the French and Indian war Britain was in financial debt. In order to pay off their debt they imposed many taxes‚ which seemed unfair to the

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    Sierra Gardner Professor Broxton European History 11/5/2014 Galileo Galilei and the Scientific Revolution Galileo Galilei‚ also referred to as the father of modern science‚ a man far beyond his years‚ only to become one of the world’s most renowned physicist‚ astronomer‚ and philosopher. An abundance of titles for a man who was born in a society of people who still believed that the heaver an object was the faster it would reach the ground‚ a world not yet in tune with modern science. Galileo’s

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    Archimedes 7

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    Archimedes was one of the greatest philosophers who lived from 287 BC to 211 BC in Syracuse. Archimedes was a physicist‚ astronomer‚ engineer and mathematician who discovered and invented machines such as the Archimedean screw‚ Archimedes principle‚ Archimedean spiral‚ Archimedes claw‚ planetarium‚ compound pulley system and many war machines. His greatest contributions were in geometry and his methods and ideas started the idea of calculus and finding the density of an object without damaging the

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    There are very many immigrants in our country. Many of those immigrants have done amazing things in their field that benefit us. Some of those people are Albert Einstein‚ Madeleine Albright‚ and Bob Hope. Immigrants have positively impacted science‚ politics‚ and entertainment in the United States. How Albert Einstein has influenced the field of science? He has developed the General Theory of Relativity‚ which is the geometric theory of gravitation. He established the concept of mass-energy equivalence

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    which many had been believed for all of time. For almost all of time‚ the geocentric theory was believed to be true. This theory suggested that all planets revolved around the Earth. In 1543‚ Polish scholar Nicolaus Copernicus published On the Revolutions of the Heavily Spheres. In this book‚ a new theory was proposed that all planets‚ including Earth‚ revolved around the sun. This was called the heliocentric theory. This theory went against religious beliefs and many peoples view of everyday life

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    Since the dawn of civilization‚ revolutionary advancements in cultural and technological development appear to erupt suddenly and seemingly without reason. For instance‚ Alexander the Great’s conquest of the Persian Empire inadvertently led to a golden age in many fields of art‚ literature‚ mathematics and science which lasted for centuries. A few hundred years later‚ Constantine’s Edict of Milan and his contributions to religious tolerance set forth the entrenchment of one of the largest and oldest

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