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I'm a chemist, and frankly even I've never heard anyone so biased as to make this claim.Physics, maybe (Ernest Rutherford once famously said "All science is either physics or stamp collecting"); math, sure, I've heard that too. Chemistry? Not so much.However, chemistry might be considered as the basis for all biological science.
this experiement is a category of physical science. i once did a project on this. it was with lemon and potatoes conducting electricity. well, somewhat like. becoming a doctor, training at calpoly.
The best subjects to take are science and mathematics. There are no classes specifically geared towards pyrotechnics. Continue on this track once you reach college by majoring in science (physics or chemistry) or engineering (mechanical, chemical, electrical or aerospace) if you want to fully understand what your dealing with.
Kenneth Robert Atkins has written: 'Physics--once over-lightly' -- subject(s): Physics 'Selected solutions for Physics'
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The German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss described mathematics one correctly as the quenn of all sciences. The German philosopher Immanuel Kant once remarked that one can only call a discipline a science as long as there is mathematics in it. Mathematics is the most basic science, because every other science (physics, chemistry, biology, geology, computer science) uses mathematical theorems to answer questions in this science. Mathematics does not depend on any other science. Mathematicians do mathematics for the sake of mathematics. That is why mathematics is the most fundamental science.
John Bardeen is the only person who has received the Nobel Prize in Physics twice. Marie Curie was awarded the Nobel Prize twice, once in Physics and once in Chemistry.
I have no idea if you will be okay or not, that is completely up to you. No, it is not required to take Physics in high school to major in Physics. It does help though. Some people take AP Physics in high school so they can skip Introductory Physics in college. This just gives them a step up on the rest of the students. It is completely possible to major in Physics without knowing ANYTHING about Physics. At most colleges you do your orientation and they ask you if there is anything you want to major in and you just tell them. It pretty much doesn't matter what happened in high school as long as you can get into the college or university. Once your in, you are free to major in anything you want!
Phrenology is a defunct field of study, once considered a science, in which the personality traits of a person were determined by "reading" bumps and fissures in the skull.
To find 30 examples, or more, of problems involving motion, go to WikiAnswers.com, then Browse Categories / Science / Physics. Once there, you can either skim all of the questions listed in Physics and select the motion problems that most interest you, or you can open the sub-category under Physics titled "Mechanics", and scan the questions there. You're sure to find enough motion problems to keep you mystified and intrigued for hours on end.
There was a time when science could not even approach what is commonly termed 'psychic phenomena'. The classical physics dictated that everything within the purview of science had to be testable and quantifiable. But so-called psychic phenomena are more qualitative and not as easily tested. Most scientists thought that the implications of psychic phenomena, if true, might even overturn science. There seemed to be so much of a disconnect that most scientists though these phenomena probably were not real or at least not physical. With the dawning of modern contemporary science based in quantum mechanics all of that changes. It is now well known that the world is not the material objective reality scientists once thought. This has been proven by experiments in quantum mechanics, which again is the basis of modern physics. Quantum physics is not pseudo-science. Parapsychology research has shown that there are abilties and phenomena that are real and cannot be explained using classical physics. However when the implications of quantum physics are applied to these parapsychology findings, there do appear to be intriguing similarities that are too striking to ignore. New theories of information ruling the structure of the universe, and of hyperdimensional realities are beginning to suggest that the apparently strange findings in parapsychology research may not only be one day explained by science but even are predictions from current theories.