Answer this question…Social Darwinism
Continental Drift Theory
No - you can use evidence from an experiment to support a theory, but they are not the same thing. A theory is an idea as to why something is, how it works, etc. that is strongly supported by evidence. An experiment is set up in order to gather information to support a theory or to help a hypothesis become a theory.
wzup dis timothy stokes email is lil_tim80@yahoo.com
scientific method used in the development of atomic theory
Real scientists do not "gather evidence in support of" any theory. The technical term for that kind of thing is "cherry-picking". Real scientists build a theory to explain the evidence that they have already gathered, and then test the theory to see whether it holds water. The easiest, fastest way to make sure that you are regarded as a wingnut by real scientists is to adopt or invent a theory, and then spend your time trying to prove it.
Answer this question…Social Darwinism
You are a fascists person
What kind of information or items, did he use to support his theory
Continental Drift Theory
his brain
hypothesis
science stuff and about soccer
No - you can use evidence from an experiment to support a theory, but they are not the same thing. A theory is an idea as to why something is, how it works, etc. that is strongly supported by evidence. An experiment is set up in order to gather information to support a theory or to help a hypothesis become a theory.
He used evidence from landform, climate, and fossils to support his theory of the continental drift.
You might have gotten the idea because some radical politicians tend to over-(ab)use their freedom of speech, but in general, the Dutch are not fascists.
he found fossles
Geology, Fossils, and Climate