engineer
engineer
Although Jules Verne was not absolutely the earliest writer to make scientific speculation the theme of his writing, since Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is earlier, he did produce many more novels, with many more scientific speculations than Shelley did, and he played a greater role in making science fiction into a new genre of fiction. He was a thoughtful writer whose scientific speculations were based on real scientific knowledge.
In science, sifting means to separate smaller particles from larger ones by passing them through a sieve whose pore size is intermediate between the two particle sizes.
No. Pseudoscience is a belief or practice which claim to be scientific but have not yet proved it. For instance, some people consider Astrology or Psychic Powers to pseudoscience (personally, I feel astrology is not pseudo science). Physics IS a scientific practice and has been proved throughout history.
It is a falsifiable theory about some scientific aspect. Falsifiable means that it must be possible to devise a test whose outcome can prove the hypothesis is false.
engineer
albert Einstein
Interpreting "fictition" as "fiction", it is a genre of literary fiction whose main elements are revolving around scientific laws of nature, some of which are fictional for the sake of the story.
The noun scientist is a singular, common noun, a word for someone who is trained in science, especially someone whose job is to do scientific research; a word for a person.
Scientific is a word whose spelling ends in the letters "-ic".Specifically, the word is an adjective. It means "of or relating to science". Its meaning and use should not be confused with the common and proper noun Scientifics.
Although Jules Verne was not absolutely the earliest writer to make scientific speculation the theme of his writing, since Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is earlier, he did produce many more novels, with many more scientific speculations than Shelley did, and he played a greater role in making science fiction into a new genre of fiction. He was a thoughtful writer whose scientific speculations were based on real scientific knowledge.
The Discovery launched before 1602 was captained by Christopher Newport and whose voyage resulted in the founding of Jamestown in 1607
In science, sifting means to separate smaller particles from larger ones by passing them through a sieve whose pore size is intermediate between the two particle sizes.
DuPont
Jocelyn Bell
Roger Bacon (1220-1292), a philosopher, scientist, and Franciscan friar.
The utmost curiosity within ourselves helps us to learn about new things. Those whose brains activate in various spheres of science, innovative ideas generate from the special cell of the brain, facilitating in innovation/discovery of new things. The theory of Law of Gravitation was not within the apple but within the brain of Sir Issac Newton. Falling of the apple was a mere coincidence which helped him to invent Law of Gravitation that revolutionized the scientific world.