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Yes, I do believe that they were his nephews.
Ooh, deep question! Technically, science is amoral, that is, scientific knowledge doesn't apply to moral considerations. However, inasmuch as scientists are also human beings, there is always some question on the applications of "forbidden knowledge."For example, a proof of Goldberg's Conjecture (something involving prime numbers) would not foreseeably have much impact on the way we live or daily lives. On the other hand, the synthesis of a virus than could selectively sterilize people with dark skin would be a BIG issue.A problem is the Law of Unintended Consequences and another is the Amorality of Political Action. Nuclear power has lots of uses, but one of them is to make bombs. Also, there are issues of pollution and disposal. Even relatively innocous advances can contribute to serious cultural impacts. Eli Whitney's cotton gin increased the economic value of a useful fiber, but it indirectly caused the country to rely on slavery (it make cotton seeds easy to separate, but cotton was still hard to harvest).It seems that moral science would be a good thing, except that we cannot tell with much accuracy what moral or immoral uses will be made of scientific discoveries.
His dads name was Eli Whitney
i think its helping with the cotton gin
Eli Whitney
A wide range of goods could be made more efficiently
A wide range of goods could be made more efficiently
The cotton gin
Elizabeth Fay was Eli Whitney's mother.
Elizabeth Fay
yess,Eli Whitney jr,elizabeth, susan,Frances
Yes, I do believe that they were his nephews.
Henrietta Edwards was married to Eli Whitney in January, 1817.
i know for fact it is classic music