Theory Of The Universe essay topics

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  • Belief In The Creation Of The Universe
    1,916 words
    The Creation of the Universe In my short life on this planet I have come to question things that many take upon blind faith. We all know that we must some day die; yet we continuously deny the forces at work inside ourselves, which want to search out the answers of what may or may not come after. It is far easier for humanity to accept that they will go to a safe haven and be rewarded for their lives with pleasures and fantasies of an unfathomable scale than to question the existence of a suppos...
  • Aristotles And Ptolemys Theories
    710 words
    Galileo was an Italian mathematician, astronomer, and physicist. He was born in Pisa, Italy on February 15, 1564. In the mid 1570's, he and his family moved to Florence and he started his formal education in a local monastery. He was sent to the University of Pisa in 1581. While there, he studied medicine and the philosophy of Aristotle until 1585. During these years at the university, he realized that he never really had any interest in medicine but that he had a talent for math. It was in 1585...
  • Model Of An Expanding Universe
    1,893 words
    In 1916, Albert Einstein made up his General Theory of Relativity without thinking of a cosmological constant. The view of that time was that the Universe had to be static. Yet, when he tried to model such an universe, he realized he cannot do it unless either he considers a negative pressure of matter (which is a totally unreasonable hypothesis) or he introduces a term (which he called cosmological constant), acting like a repulsive gravitational force. Some years later however, the Russian phy...
  • Danish Astronomer Tycho Brahe
    2,950 words
    Eight Scientist Research Since the dawn of time, man has yearned to know the origin of existence, how life was started, and the source of creation. Many scientists, from ancient Greece to modern civilization, began the search for answers by first studying our solar system, mapping the stars, trying to unlock their secrets. These eight scientists paved the way for any basic knowledge of the universe. Born in 270 BC, the Greek astronomer Aristarchus of Samos, was the first scientist known to sugge...
  • Wolfram
    702 words
    Life, the universe and a game of cheque rsA New Kind of Science Stephen Wolfram Wolfram Media Inc 40, pp 1,197 The tradition of scientists presenting their grand ideas in popular books rather than scientific papers has given us Darwin's Origin of Species, EO Wilson's sociobiology and Jim Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis. The attraction is that the author can expound the central idea at length without the burden of nitpicking detail that accumulates when one has to please one's peers. The disadvantage ...
  • Carl Sagans Research
    948 words
    November 9th, 1997, Carl Edward Sagan was born in Brooklyn, NY. He was the son of a Russian immigrant who worked as a theater usher and garment cutter. From an early age, Carl showed an interest in science. His childhood dream was astronomy. The first experience Sagan had with this science was when he began looking at the stars at age five. By age eight, Sagan was determined to visit the planets. His dreams led to a deserving set of degrees. He earned two undergraduate degrees in 1954, his Maste...
  • Vibrating Strings Of String Theory
    2,570 words
    Human beings have an unquenchable thirst for knowledge and an urgent drive for understanding. The further we go on our quest for absolute truth and the deeper we plunge into the heart of the ultimate reality, the more profound our questions become. Could there be something more to this world of ours than that which meets the eye? Is there some elaborate design behind the infinite galaxies, stars, and planets, or are we simply at the mercy of a chaotic and unordered universe? What is it that has ...
  • History Of The Universe In Imaginary Time
    1,657 words
    Stephen J. Hawking by Rachel Finck Stephen Hawking was born in January of 1942 in Oxford, England. He grew up near London and was educated at Oxford, from which he received his BA in 1962, and Cambridge, where he received his doctorate in theoretical physics. Stephen Hawking is a brilliant and highly productive researcher, and, since 1979, he has held the Luc asian professorship in mathematics at Cambridge, the very chair once held by Isaac Newton. Although still relatively young, Hawking is alr...
  • Relation Between Mental And Physical Characteristics
    372 words
    Cesare Lombroso was an Italian university professor and criminologist, born in Nov. 6, 1835, in Verona, who became worldwide renowned for his studies and theories in the field of character ology, or the relation between mental and physical characteristics. Lombroso tried to relate certain physical characteristics, such as jaw size, to criminal psychopathology, or the innate tendency of individuals toward sociopathy and criminal behavior. As such, Lombroso's approach is a direct descendant of phr...
  • Creations T Theory Of Life
    2,485 words
    What Came first the chicken or the egg? For centuries man has struggled with the question of our origin. Why are there so many distinctions in the creatures that inhabit this planet. Why are structures similar in a bird, a whale, a bat, and a human being creatures that seem to have no relation to one another. Although several theories have sprouted from different great thinkers of many cultures in many diverse parts of the world all of the theories seem to center around two main points divinity ...
  • Gottfried Von Leibniz
    678 words
    The Life and Works of Gottfried von Leibniz Gottfried von Leibniz, born on July 1st, 1646, was a German philosopher, as well as a mathematician, a universal genius, and a founder of modern science. He foresaw the development of symbolic logic and, unconnected with Isaac Newton, invented the calculus with a superior notation, including the symbols for integration and differentiation. He expressed a theory of substance based on monads, which were metaphysical and animistic ally bestowed points of ...
  • New Scientific Theories
    765 words
    Scientific Revolution and Political Ideas There are many people that did more than there share at finding out new scientific theories. Such as Copernicus, Columbus, Kepler, Galilei, Bacon, Descartes, Newton, Vesalius, Harvey, Hooke, Boyle, Priestley, A. Lavoisier, and M. Lavoisier are all people who helped with a scientific revolution. Yes, I know there are a lot of names but I will try to present most of their theories. Copernicus thought that the earth was round and that it rotated on its axis...
  • Nicolas Copernicus 1473 1543 Copernicus
    631 words
    Nicolas Copernicus 1473-1543 Copernicus was born in Poland in 1473, he started his education at Cracow University. There he studied mathematics and optics. From here he went to Italy, where he was appointed as a canon in the cathedral of Frauen burg, where he spent a comfortable academic life studding. Copernicus had some small hobbies while at the cathedral, he painted, and frequently translated Greek poetry into Latin. One other hobby that just wasn't small enough to be called a hobby to most ...
  • Copernicus And His Theories
    917 words
    Nicolas Copernicus (1473-1543) Copernicus is said to be the founder of modern astronomy. He was born in Poland, 1 and eventually was sent off to Cracow University, there to study mathematics and optics; at Bologna, cannon law. Returning from his studies in Italy, Copernicus, through the influence of his uncle, was appointed as a canon in the cathedral of Frauen burg where he spent a sheltered and academic life for the rest of his days. Because of his clerical position, Copernicus moved in the hi...
  • Copernicus Theory
    863 words
    Throughout history people have always looked up at the sky and wondered about the universe. Some just wonder while others attempt to solve this mystery. One of the people who had endeavored to solve it was Nicolaus Copernicus. Copernicus was born in the present day town of To run, Poland in February of 1473. While still a young boy, Copernicus was put in custody of his uncle when his father died. His uncle made sure that his nephew got the best education they could obtain. This is how Copernicus...
  • Density Functional Theory
    894 words
    Physicist Walter Kohn was born in Vienna, Austria, on March 9, 1923, into a middle class family. Kohn's family owned an art shop when he was a child, and they remained successful with the business until Hitler came to power. For five years before the rise of Hitler, Kohn attended the Akademische Gymnasium, which was an extremely reputable school. When Hitler came to power, he annexed Austria, and forced Kohn and his family to move from the home. They made for England. Upon arrival, Kohn had deci...

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