Examples of using Pseudoscience in English and their translations into Arabic
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Every science has its corresponding pseudoscience.
Despite the reputation of pseudoscience, thalassotherapy is prescribed to their patients by European doctors.
How social networks help to spread pseudoscience.
Thankfully, survival trumps pseudoscience- and my mission church turned back the anti-GMO propaganda.
When you say fringe science, you mean pseudoscience.
Bourgeois Pseudoscience Suppressed research in the Soviet Union Censorship in the Soviet Union Soviet historiography.
And… occasionally… there is logic behind the pseudoscience that you practice.
Some approaches in the branch of historic metrology are highly speculative andcan be qualified as pseudoscience.
Physically, yeah. But not, according to my pseudoscience, psychologically.
I would point out thatevery major advance in the history of science was at first dismissed as fairy tale or pseudoscience.
You trot out this pseudoscience, but what you really want is for every other kid to be vaccinated so yours can be safe.
Wanna know why I don't go to group?'Cause it's self-indulgent pseudoscience bullshit.
The pseudoscience used to determine the"exact" time of Kyle's death isn't even validated yet, hasn't even been tested on humans yet.
Academic dishonesty List of topics characterized as pseudoscience Bogdanov affair.
Instead of using pseudoscience, marketing gimmicks and outrageous claims to sell their products, Transparent Labs relies on proven science and word-of-mouth advertising.
ABC-CLIO. Publisher's description of the book The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience Google Book's page.
Bourgeois pseudoscience(Russian: Буржуазная лженаука) was a term of condemnation in the Soviet Union for certain scientific disciplines that were deemed unacceptable from an ideological point of view.[1][2].
On the other hand,many serious doctors of medicine consider her a pseudoscience, equalizing her rights with homeopathy.
Now, neoliberal economic theory has sold itself to you as unchangeable natural law, when infact it's social norms and constructed narratives based on pseudoscience.
It encourages evidence-based inquiry into science, pseudoscience, medicine and health, religion, ethics, secularism and society.
Skeptoid Media has recently launched The Feeding Tube video series with food scientist, Tamara Robertson,to help answer the questions or counter misperceptions or pseudoscience on food issues.
Under Duschl's system,a fringe theory is a mix of legitimate new ideas and pseudoscience; it awaits analysis to determine whether it will pass into the"frontier" or be rejected entirely.[28].
Superstitions and pseudoscience Mars effect(astrology) claimed by Michel Gauquelin Parapsychology(e.g. Robert G. Jahn and Dean Radin) Placebos and alternative medicine Vitamin O Homeopathy water memory(proposed by Jacques Benveniste) Animal magnetism Magnet therapy Therapeutic touch(debunked by Emily Rosa at age nine).
In the 1990s the Witten/Herdecke University in Germany established a chair in anthroposophical medicine.The press described the appointment as a"death sentence" and the perception that pseudoscience was being taught damaged the university's reputation, bringing it close to financial collapse. It was ultimately saved by a cash injection from Software AG, a technology corporation with a history of funding anthroposophic projects.[12].
White genocide is a myth,[1][2] based on pseudoscience, pseudohistory, and hatred,[3] driven by a psychological panic often termed white extinction anxiety.[4][5] There is no evidence that white people are dying out or that they will die out, or that anyone is trying to exterminate them as a race.[6][7] The purpose of the conspiracy theory is to scare white people,[16] and justify a commitment to a white nationalist agenda[8] in support of increasingly successful calls to violence.[9].
In contrast to the mysticism of the early twentieth century, today quantum mysticism typically refers to its New Age incarnation that combines ancient mysticism with quantum mechanics.[1]Called a pseudoscience and a"hijacking" of quantum physics, it draws upon"coincidental similarities of language rather than genuine connections" to quantum mechanics.[2] Physicist Murray Gell-Mann coined the phrase"quantum flapdoodle" to refer to the misuse and misapplication of quantum physics to other topics.
The logic of racial antisemitism was extended in Nazi Germany, where racial antisemitic ideas were turned into laws, which looked at the"blood" or ethnicity of people, rather than their current religious affiliations, and their subsequent fate would be determined purely on that basis.When added to its views on the Jewish racial traits which Nazi pseudoscience devised, the logic of racial antisemitism led to the Holocaust as a way to eradicate conjured up"Jewish traits" from the world.
Esoteric notions entered Guido List's thoughts by 1899 at the latest.[2] In April 1903 he sent his manuscript,proposing what Goodrick-Clarke calls a"monumental pseudoscience" concerning the ancient German faith, to the Imperial Academy of Sciences in Vienna[3] onwards. These Ariosophic ideas(together with, and influenced by, Theosophy) contributed significantly to an occult counterculture in Germany and Austria. A historic interest in this topic has stemmed from the ideological relation of Ariosophy to Nazism, and is obvious in such book titles as.
In addition to national legislation, international treaties like the Council of Europe Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine(which the UK has not signed) specifically prohibit human germline genetic modification. The easy explanation for this prohibitionwould be moral aversion to eugenics, the pseudoscience of improving a population's genetic composition, which was popular in the West in the first half of the twentieth century, before being discredited by the example of the Nazis.
Bart Simon lists it amongpractices pretending to be science:"categories… such as… pseudoscience, amateur science, deviant or fraudulent science, bad science, junk science, and popular science… pathological science, cargo-cult science, and voodoo science."[6] Examples of pathological science may include Martian canals, N-rays, polywater, and cold fusion. The theories and conclusions behind all of these examples are currently rejected or disregarded by the majority of scientists.