The Two Cultures and the Scientific RevolutionCambridge University Press, 1959 - 51 pages |
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Page 11
... kind of joke which has gone sour . There are about fifty thousand working scientists in the country and about eighty ... number is large enough to give us a fair sample , though of the men we talked to most would still be under forty . We ...
... kind of joke which has gone sour . There are about fifty thousand working scientists in the country and about eighty ... number is large enough to give us a fair sample , though of the men we talked to most would still be under forty . We ...
Page 35
... kind and number of educated men and women 20 a country needs to come out top in the scientific revolution . I am going to oversimplify , but their estimate , and I believe it's pretty near right , is this . First of all , as many alpha ...
... kind and number of educated men and women 20 a country needs to come out top in the scientific revolution . I am going to oversimplify , but their estimate , and I believe it's pretty near right , is this . First of all , as many alpha ...
Page
Charles Percy Snow. 23 I have confined myself to the University population . The kind and number of technicians is ... amount of talent one requires for the primary tasks is greater than any country can com- fortably produce , and this ...
Charles Percy Snow. 23 I have confined myself to the University population . The kind and number of technicians is ... amount of talent one requires for the primary tasks is greater than any country can com- fortably produce , and this ...
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Americans applied science Asians and Africans asked atomic atomic bomb attitudes believe C. P. SNOW capital century Chelsea course creative crystallised deal educate ourselves England English educational experience fact feeling going gone grandfather human Imagine industrialisation intel intend something serious interest lectual LECTURE 1959 CAMBRIDGE less literary intellectuals literary persons Littlewood living look lucky major Mathematical Tripos mathematicians mathematics mean mechanical engineering Metrovick moral Neolithic non-scientists novelist number of engineers organisation passionate pattern perhaps physics plenty poor countries population practical problem pure science pure scientists reasons REDE LECTURE 1959 rest rich Russians have judged Ruther Rutherford school education scientific culture scientific revolution scientists and engineers seems sense slightly more scientists social specialisation stratum talent talk things thirty years ago thought tion tone-deaf traditional culture transformation Tripos true West western western world whole writers young scientists