he Analogical Teleological Argument of Paley: If I stumbled on a stone and asked how it came to be there, it would be difficult to show that the answer, it has lain there forever is absurd. Yet this is not true if the stone were to be a watch.
focus on characters' internal experience of reality
william scott
William R. Scott has written: 'Group theory' -- subject(s): Group theory
William Schultz developed the interpersonal need theory in 1977.
William Judson LeVeque has written: 'Fundamentals of number theory' -- subject(s): Number theory
William L. Brogan has written: 'Modern control theory' -- subject(s): Control theory
William Higgins has written: 'Experiments and observations on the atomic theory, and electrical phenomena' -- subject(s): Atomic theory
William E. Datig has written: 'The age of androids' -- subject(s): Androids, Knowledge, Theory of, Theory of Knowledge
William Paley's design argument, also known as the watchmaker analogy, posits that the complexity and purposeful design observed in the natural world imply the existence of an intelligent designer (God). Paley compared the universe to a watch, asserting that just as a watch's intricate design suggests a watchmaker, the intricacies of nature suggest a divine creator.
William Pingry Boynton has written: 'Applications of the kinetic theory to gases, vapors, pure liquids, and the theory of solutions' -- subject(s): Solution (Chemistry), Kinetic theory of gases
William G. Ouchi has written: 'Theory Z' 'A novel approach to organizational control' 'Theory Z' 'Making Schools Work'
Arthur William Brightmore has written: 'Structural engineering' -- subject(s): Structural analysis (Engineering), Structures, Theory of, Theory of Structures