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         Jeffreys Sir Harold:     more books (37)
  1. Collected Papers of Sir Harold Jeffreys: Astronomy and Geophysics v. 5 by Sir Harold Jeffreys, Lady Jeffreys, 1976-05
  2. Collected Papers of the Sir Harold Jeffreys on Geophysics and Other Science , Astronomy and Geophysics Volume 5 by H.; Jeffreys, B. Jeffreys, 1976
  3. Collected Papers of Sir Harold Jeffreys on Geophysics and Other Sciences
  4. Collected Papers of Sir Harold Jeffreys on Geophysics and Other Sciences, Volume 4: Dissipation of Energy and Thermal History by Harold; Swirles, Bertha (Lady Jeffries) [Ed.] Jeffreys, 1975
  5. Theory of Probability (The International series of monographs on physics) by Sir Harold Jeffreys, 1984-05-10
  6. The Earth: Its Origin, History and Physical Constitution by Sir Harold Jeffreys, 1959
  7. Methods of Mathematical Analysis by Sir Harold & Swirles, Bertha (Lady Jeffreys) Jeffreys, 1956
  8. Methods of Mathematical Physics by Sir Harold and Bertha Swirles (Lady Jeffreys) Jeffreys, 1966
  9. Scientific Inference, Second Edition by Sir Harold Jeffreys, 1957
  10. The Earth: Its Origin, History and Physical Constitution, Fourth Edition by Sir Harold Jeffreys, 1962-01-01
  11. The Earth Today: a Collection of Papers Dedicated to Sir Harold Jeffreys by royal astronomical society, 1961-01-01
  12. COLLECTED PAPERS OF SIR HAROLD JEFFREYS ON GEOPHYSICS AND OTHER SCIENCES Volume I: Theoretical and Observational Seismology by Sir Harold Jeffreys, 1971
  13. The Earth Today: A Collection of Papers Dedicated to Sir Harold Jeffreys by Various, 1961-01-01
  14. Collected Papers of Sir Harold Jeffreys on Geophysics and Other Sciences, 6 Volume Set by H.; Jeffreys, B. Jeffreys, 1976

61. Appendix II: Honorary Fellows, 1870-1996
jeffreys, sir harold, (18911989), Cambridge, Astronomy, geophysics, 1943.Jenness, Dr Diamond, (1886-1969), Ottawa, Anthropology, 1941. Jones, Prof.
http://www.rsnz.org/directory/yearbooks/ybook96/20.html
Appendix II
Honorary Fellows, 1870-1996
Date of Name Place of residence Subject election Agardh, Dr J. G. Lund, Sweden Botany Agassiz, Prof. J. Louis R. Switzerland; Zoology Harvard Aitken, Prof. Alexander C. Edinburgh Mathematics Andrews, E. C. Sydney, NSW Geology Arber, Dr E. A.Newell Cambridge Paleobotany Armstrong, Prof. H. E. London Chemistry Ashcroft, Prof. N. W. Ithaca, USA Physics Avebury, Lord (Sir J . Lubbock) London Banking, zoology Axford, Sir W. Ian Lindau; Napier Astrophysics Baird, Prof. Spencer F. Washington, DC Zoology Balfour, Sir Isaac Bayley Edinburgh Botany Barrer, Prof. R. M. London Chemistry Bateson, Prof. W. Cambridge Genetics Beddard, Dr F. E. London Zoology Beneden, Prof. P.L. van Louvain, Belgium Zoology Berggren, Dr S. Lund, Sweden Botany Bledisloe, The Rt. Hon. Gloucester Agricultural science Viscount Bohr, Prof. Niels H. D. Copenhagen Physics Bowen, Sir George F. UK Colonial Admin. Brady, Prof. G. S. Newcastle, UK Biology Bragg, Sir Laurence London Physics Bragg, Sir William London Physics Bruce, Dr W. S. Edinburgh Polar exploration Brunn,Dr Anton Fr.

62. University Of Liverpool
1953 sir harold jeffreys, LLD 1978 Alan Woodworth Johnson, DSc 1931 sir BenjaminSands Johnson, LLD 1994 James Barry Johnson , DVSc
http://www.liv.ac.uk/commsec/calendar/hongrads1.htm
home www.liv.ac.uk COMMITTEE SECRETARIAT Academic Secretary's Office Committee Secretariat e-Calendar Preliminary Information
(Address, Dates of Terms and Semesters)
Section 1

(Charter, Statutes and Ordinances 1-34)
Section 2

(Programme Ordinances)
Section 3

(General information, Regulations, Fees, Awards)
Section 4

(Committees)
Section 5
(Staff and Honorary Graduates) Feedback: commsec@liverpool.ac.uk Last reviewed 26/08/2004
The University of Liverpool e-Calendar
Section 5: Honorary Graduates of the University: Degree of Doctor: Surnames A-L
( The names of graduates who are known to be deceased are printed in italics) Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, LLD His Royal Highness George Edward Alexander Edmund, Duke of Kent, LLD Her Royal Highness Princess Alexandra, LLD Sir (Leslie) Patrick Abercrombie, LLD ... Sir Arthur Armitage, LLD George Armstrong, DSc Sir Richard Harold Armstrong, LLD Eric Ashby, Baron Ashby of Brandon, LLD Sir John Audley Frederick Aspinall, DEng Professor Alan Astbury, DSc ... William Blair-Bell, LLD Frederick Blakemore, DVSc The Right Reverend and Right Honourable Stuart Yanworth Blanch, Baron Blanch of Bishopsthorpe, LLD

63. Constantin Roman | Continental Drift - Index Of People
jeffreys, sir harold 14 JOHNSON, Mr., Mayor of Cambridge 161K K ..KAPITSA, Pyotr Leonidovitch 82, 84, 85, 183 KAULA, Prof. WB 100
http://www.constantinroman.com/continentaldrift/english/index_people.html

home
culture continental drift english ... index of people
English Site Index
"Continental Drift - Colliding Continents, Converging Cultures"
Preface by
John F. Dewey, FRS. FGS

Foreword by
Prof. Sherban Veliciu

Sample Chapters
Chapter 1 (HTML)

Chapter 4 (PDF Format)
Reviews 11 Misc. Reviews ... ISIS Journal Prof. T. Gallagher Prof. Sherban Veliciu ... Times Higher Education Supplement Indices ... of people Purchase Online IOP - Bookmark Amazon dot co dot uk Amazon dot com Book Details ISBN # - 0750306866 Author - Constantin Roman Publisher - Institute of Physics Year - June 1, 2000 Index of People A Adam 1 ADRIAN, Lady 179 ADRIAN, Edgar Douglas, The Lord 66, 155, 178 ADRIAN, (the Hon) Richard Hume, Dr 66, 73, 155, 177, 178 AITKEN, Martin, Dr 17, 27 AMBRESEYS Dr 114 ANA of Transylvania (see HOLLO, Ana) ANNE, Queen 157 ASQUITH, Herbert Henry, Prime Minister 66 ASTON, Francis William, Professor 66

64. Evolutionary Claim
jeffreys, sir harold, The Earth Its Origin, History and PhysicalConstitution (Cambridge, England University Press, 1970), 525 pp. jeffreys haslong been
http://www.darwinisdead.com/Solar System.htm
Evolutionary Claim:
Long ago, gravity condensed the debris of exploded stars into a swirling nebula. 4.6 billion years ago, the nebula condensed into a new star, our Sun, and an accretion disc. Over many more millions of years, gravity condensed the accretion disc first into proto-planets, then into planets, planetoids, and moons.
REALITY CHECK: (Unless otherwise noted, quotations below are from the book by Henry Morris, That Their Words May Be Used Against Them available from the Institute for Creation Research Links are to articles and papers on the World Wide Web. As you visit the links below, please take time to tour the websites that host them and become familiar with the resources they offer. )

65. Important Geoscientists
James Hutton (17261797); sir harold jeffreys; Lord Kelvin (1824-1907) sir harold jeffreys. English Seismologist; Wrote The Earth
http://cgiss.boisestate.edu/~billc/geoscientists.html
Important Geoscientists
References
Dott, R. H. Jr., and D. R. Prothero, Evolution of the Earth , New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 569 pp., 1994.
Gohau, Gabriel, A History of Geology , New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 259 pp., 1990.
Hallam, A., Great Geological Controversies , Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 244 pp., 1983.
Rudwick, M. J. S., The Great Devonian Controversy , Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 494 pp., 1985. G. B. Airy
  • Surveyor
  • Formed the Airy theory of isostasy (see also Pratt
    • In 1855, suggested that higher elevations are caused by different crustal thicknesses. In his theory, the crust has the same density, so higher elevations are compensated at deeper depths than lower elevations, similar to floating logs or ice.
    Return to the list of people Florence Bascom
    • Second woman to earn Ph.D. in Geology, Johns Hopkins, 1893 (Mary Holmes was first, University of Michigan, 1888)
    • First woman hired by the U.S. Geological Survey (1896)
    • Bryn Mawr College faculty
    • Crystallography, mineralogy, and petrography

66. AAS-Interview With Anton Hales
got to know two great geophysicists, sir harold jeffreys and Keith Bullen . I knew Bullen well, even before I had much contact with harold jeffreys
http://www.science.org.au/scientists/hales.htm
Australian Academy of Science Science education
Interview with Professor Anton Hales
Teachers notes to accompany this transcript Contents Introduction
Lured to Australia

Recollections of some great Earth scientists

Fruitful links: reflection seismology, palaeomagnetism and continental drift
...
Speaking from experience
Professor Anton Hales, terrestrial and planetary scientist, was interviewed for the Australian Academy of Science's Interviews with Australian scientists program in 2002. The interview was conducted by Professor Kurt Lambeck. Here is an edited transcript. You can order the videotape from us for $65.50 (including GST). List of edited transcripts Introduction Professor Anton Hales is a scientist whose career has spanned three continents and covered nearly nine decades. He was born in South Africa in 1911, and his early career, with the exception of a few years in Britain and his war service in east and north Africa, was in South Africa. Then, in 1962, he moved to the United States, and in 1973 he moved to Australia. He would call himself a geophysicist, someone who uses physics and mathematics to understand the structure and workings of the Earth. But his contributions cover a broader spectrum of the Earth sciences. His legacy is that he has created vital research institutions on three continents, institutions that advanced Earth sciences in each of the three countries in which he worked. The last of these was the Research School of Earth Sciences at the Australian National University, where he was the foundation Director.

67. [13.0] The Exploration Of Saturn
was generally assumed that Saturn was a hot object, something like a smallstar, until the early 1920s, when sir harold jeffreys showed it to be cold.
http://www.vectorsite.net/taxpl_13.html

Index
Home SiteMap SiteSearch ... Email Comments
[13.0] The Exploration Of Saturn
v1.1.2 / chapter 13 of 18 / 01 aug 05 / greg goebel / public domain * Saturn is the most distant of the planets known to the ancients, and indeed had almost certainly been known as long as people had been watching the skies. At its brightest, it outshines all stars except Sirius and Canopus. The invention of the telescope showed Saturn to be surrounded by a neat system of concentric rings, and largely for this reason it has been a subject of particular interest for astronomy and space exploration. This chapter provides a short history of the exploration of Saturn. [13.1] THE DISCOVERY OF SATURN
[13.2] SATURN BEFORE THE SPACE AGE

[13.4] SATURN IN THE SPACE AGE

[13.5] SATURN STATISTICS
[13.1] THE DISCOVERY OF SATURN
* Nothing was known about Saturn in any detail until 1610, when Galileo Galilei pointed his crude telescope towards the planet. He was baffled by what he saw: a "triple planet", an object that seemed to consist of a large body, bracketed by two identical smaller bodies. Galileo was even more baffled when he observed the planet in 1612 and found that the two smaller bodies had disappeared. They subsequently reappeared. Other observers were similarly baffled, and produced a wide range of bizarre theories, for example that the planet had "handles". The Dutch astronomer Christiaan Huygens identified the first moon of Saturn in 1655, naming it "Titan". It would prove to be one of the biggest moons in the solar system. Huygens then went on to solve the puzzle of Saturn's mysterious appearance, publishing a book in 1659 that stated the planet was "surrounded by a thin flat ring, nowhere touching and inclined to the ecliptic."

68. Sir Harold Jeffreys Université Montpellier II
sir James Lighthill sir Michael Francis Atiyah sir harold jeffreys (1891-1989). Cette image et la biographie complète en
http://ens.math.univ-montp2.fr/SPIP/article.php3?id_article=1337

69. INFILTEC: HUMOR: Anecdotes About Mathematicians & Logicians
It is recorded in sir harold jeffreys Scientific Inference , in a note tochapter one. jeffreys remarks that the fact that everything followed from a
http://www.infiltec.com/j-logic.htm
This page was created by

70. PROBABILITY THEORY -- THE LOGIC OF SCIENCE
Dedicated to the Memory of sir harold jeffreys, who saw the truth and preserved it.First three chapters of the published version of the book in PDF or PS
http://www.nu.to.infn.it/pap/JaynesBook/
PROBABILITY THEORY:
THE LOGIC OF SCIENCE
by
E. T. Jaynes

Wayman Crow Professor of Physics
Washington University
St. Louis, MO 63130, U.S.A.
Dedicated to the Memory of Sir Harold Jeffreys, who saw the truth and preserved it. First three chapters of the published version of the book in PDF or PS from http://bayes.wustl.edu/
Fragmentary Edition of June 1994
SHORT CONTENTS
PREFACE
PART A - PRINCIPLES AND ELEMENTARY APPLICATIONS
Chapter 1 Plausible Reasoning Chapter 2 Quantitative Rules: The Cox Theorems Fig. 2-1 Chapter 3 Elementary Sampling Theory ... Chapter 11 The Entropy Principle Chapter 12 Ignorance Priors Transformation Groups Chapter 13 Decision Theory: Historical Survey Chapter 14 Simple Applications of Decision Theory Chapter 15 Paradoxes of Probability Theory Fig. 15-1 ... Chapter 18 The A Distribution and Rule of Succession
PART B ADVANCED APPLICATIONS
Chapter 19 Physical Measurements Chapter 20 Regression and Linear Models Chapter 21 Estimation with Cauchy and tDistributions Chapter 22 Time Series Analysis and Autoregressive Models Chapter 23 Spectrum / Shape Analysis Chapter 24 Model Comparison and Robustness Chapter 25 Image Reconstruction Chapter 26 Marginalization Theory Chapter 27 Communication Theory Chapter 28 Optimal Antenna and Filter Design Chapter 29 Statistical Mechanics Chapter 30 Conclusions
APPENDICES
Appendix A Other Approaches to Probability Theory Appendix B Formalities and Mathematical Style Appendix C Convolutions and Cumulants Appendix D Dirichlet Integrals and Generating Functions

71. Glossary Of Earthquake And Other Geological Terms
jeffreys, sir harold (18911989), English geophysicist and astronomer. First toclaim that the core of the Earth is liquid, but also insisted on solid
http://ve.ou.edu/weaver/jud_glossary.html
Glossary of Earthquake and other Geological Terms
ABC DEF GHI JKL ... VWXYZ Achondrite : A dark, mafic meteorite consisting of silicate minerals such as olivine. Composition is similar to peridotite composition of the Earth's mantle . Also referred to as stoney meteorites or just "stones." Achondrites may represent pieces of the mantle of a planet which disintegrated in the asteroid belt Aftershock : An earthquake which follows a larger earthquake or main shock and originates in or near the rupture zone of the larger earthquake. Generally, major earthquakes are followed by a larger number of aftershocks, decreasing in frequency with time. Amplitude : The maximum height of a wave crest or depth of a trough. Array : An ordered arrangement of seismometers or geophones, the data from which feeds into a central receiver. Arrival : The appearance of seismic energy on a seismic record. Arrival time : The time at which a particular wave phase arrives at a detector. Aseismic : Not associated with an earthquake, as in aseismic slip. Also used to indicate an area with no record of earthquakes; an aseismic zone.

72. Mike Cook's Canonical List Of Math Jokes, Part 3
It is recorded in sir harold jeffreys Scientific Inference, in a note to chapterone. jeffreys remarks that the fact that everything followed from a single
http://users.characterlink.net/The-Cookie-Jar/math_jokes_03.html
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Canonical List of Math Jokes - Part 3 of 10
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73. British Humanist Association
Professor sir Alex jeffreys FRS Professor Steve Jones Anish Kapoor Miriam Karlin Professor sir Hans Kornberg FRS Professor sir harold Kroto FRS
http://www.humanism.org.uk/site/cms/contentviewarticle.asp?article=1162

74. History Of Astronomy: Roughly Sorted Links - Biographies (1)
Jansky, Karl (Guthe) Janssen, Pierre (Jules-César) Jean De Meun Jeans,sir James jeffreys, sir harold Jordan, Pascual Josephus, Flavius
http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/unsorted/rough_bio_01.html
History of Astronomy Unsorted and roughly sorted links
Roughly sorted links - Biographies (1)
Please note that the links were found some time ago and may be outdated meanwhile. This list is not a permanent one. Any link may be moved or deleted without special announcement, and also this file may be deleted.
Alexander Friedmann
Jahrbuch fuer die Fortschritte der Mathematik
Dirk Frimout (in German)
Dirk Frimout (in French) ...
? Raleigh, Sir Walter
navigation
Ramsden, Jesse
Reber, Grote
Regiomontanus
Reichenbach, Georg von ...
Wolfgang R. Dick . Created: 20 Aug 2001. Latest update: 29 July 2002

75. Obituary Notes Of Astronomers
jeffreys, sir harold (1891 1989), Nature 339 (1989) 102, K. Runcorn, 49.007.014.jeffreys, sir harold (22 Apr 1891 - 18 Mar 1989), QJRAS 31 (1990) 267
http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/persons/obit/obit_j.html
History of Astronomy Persons List of Obituary Notes
Obituary Notes of Astronomers
Introduction
Name / Lifespan Reference Author AJB/AAA Entry Jaccia, Luigi G. (1911 - 8 May 1996) BAAS 28 (1996) No. 4, 1452 J. Cornell Jaccia, Luigi Guiseppe (4 Jun 1910 - 8 May 1996) G. Astron. 23 (1997) No. 1, 54 L. Rosino Jachontow, K.N. ( - 22 Aug 1963) AC 265 (1963) 3 K.A. Kulikow Jack, W. ( - 20 Mar 1924) JBAA 34 (1924) 247 Jackson, Cyril (5Dec 1903 - Feb 1988) MNASSA 48 (1989) 66 Jackson, C. (5 Dec 1903 - Feb 1988) QJRAS 32 (1991) 211 I.S. Glass Jackson, E.D. (29 Nov 1925 - 28 Jul 1978) Proc. Ninth Lunar Planet. Sci. Conf. (1978) 1 (012.023) Jackson, J. ( - 9 Dec 1958) Obs 78 (1958) 264 Jackson, J. (11 Feb 1887 - 9 Dec 1958) JBAA 69 (1959) 178 W.M. Witchell Jackson, J. (11 Feb 1887 - 9 Dec 1958) MN 119 (1959) 345 H. Spencer Jones Jackson, J. (11 Feb 1887 - 9 Dec 1958) Nature 183 (1959) 81 H. Spencer Jones Jackson, J. (11 Feb 1887 - 9 Dec 1958) PAT 40 (1959) 80 Jackson, J. (11 Feb 1887 - 9 Dec 1958) SaT 18 (1959) 308 Jacoby, H. (4 Mar 1865 - 20 Jul 1932) JRASC 26 (1932) 413 Jacoby, H. (4 Mar 1865 - 20 Jul 1932)

76. Encyclopedia: Harold Jeffreys
Other descriptions of harold jeffreys. sir harold jeffreys (22 April harold jeffreys Probabilistic Epistemology Between Logicism And Subjectivism .
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Harold-Jeffreys

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    Encyclopedia: Harold Jeffreys
    Updated 205 days 45 minutes ago. Other descriptions of Harold Jeffreys Sir Harold Jeffreys 22 April 18 March ) was a mathematician, statistician, geophysicist, and astronomer. He was born in Fatfield, County Durham England . He studied at Armstrong College in Newcastle-upon-Tyne , then part of the University of Durham but later to become the University of Newcastle . He then went to St John's College, Cambridge and became a fellow in . At Cambridge University he taught mathematics , then geophysics and finally became the Plumian Professor of Astronomy He married another mathematician and physicist, Bertha Swirles ), in

    77. Record Unit 7431 - Fred Lawrence Whipple Papers, Circa 1927-1983
    International Astronomical Union, 19551961; J, general; Jacchia, Luigi,1957-1961; jeffreys, sir harold, 1957-1961; Johnson, William W., 1956
    http://siarchives.si.edu/findingaids/FARU7431.htm
    Finding Aids to Personal Papers and
    Special Collections in the Smithsonian Institution Archives
    Record Unit 7431
    Fred Lawrence Whipple Papers,
    circa 1927-1983
    Introduction Historical Note Descriptive Entry Series Descriptions ... Series 1. GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE, 1943-1983. Series 2. STUDENT PAPERS, CLASS NOTES, AND PH.D. DISSERTATION, 1927-1931. Series 3. ARTICLES, LECTURES, REVIEWS, AND NOTES, C. 1931-1964. Series 4. NOTES ON COMETS, 1928-1968. Series 5. PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES, MEETINGS, AND COMMITTEES, C. 1946-1970. Series 6. MULTIPLE-MIRROR TELESCOPE, MOUNT HOPKINS, ARIZONA, 1966-1976. Series 7. FRED L. WHIPPLE PUBLICATIONS, 1928-1971.
    INTRODUCTION
    This finding aid was digitized with funds generously provided by the Smithsonian Institution Women's Committee.
    HISTORICAL NOTE
    Fred Lawrence Whipple (1906- ), an astronomer, received his B.A. degree from the University of California at Los Angeles in 1927, and his Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley in 1931. In 1932, he joined the staff of Harvard University as an instructor of astronomy. By 1950, Whipple had received the title of professor and chairman of the Department of Astronomy at Harvard. Whipple was appointed director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) when it moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1955. Since his retirement in 1973, Whipple has continued his research as a senior scientist at SAO.
    Fred Lawrence Whipple, 1982

    78. About IGPP: Door Photo Collection - Cecil H. And Ida M. Green Institute Of Geoph
    322, sir harold jeffreys. 323, Frank Press shaving. 324, William A. Fowler. 325,Cecil Green and the Green Scholars in Cabo San Lucas, 1995
    http://www.igpp.ucsd.edu/aboutigpp/doors.cfm
    @ import "/CSS/IGPP_plus.css";
    Date:
    Collection of Undistinguished Photographs on the Doors of IGPP
    Click on the room number to view the photo. Level 300 of the Judith and Walter Munk Laboratory, Top Floor Door Description Judith and Walter Munk Tapa cloth from Samoa that hangs in the Munk Lab Seminar Room Donal Hord, the artist who created "Spring Stirring" Lloyd Berkner, the "organization man" Lloyd Ruocco, the architect of the Judith and Walter Munk Laboratory of IGPP The Community House stood where the IGPP Munk Lab is today Architect's model of the new Revelle Laboratory of IGPP Panorama views of SIO in 1906 and 1965 Harald Sverdrup Avalon Harbor, Catalina Island, during a Southeaster Ben Green, former IGPP Custodian Marcia McNutt as a small child at the gates of SIO, inset of her after graduating from SIO 316-A Suess and Suess 316-B Elaine Blackmore cruising 316-C Holly Given, Dan Harkins, Frank Vernon, and others in the former USSR. 1987 Official TASS photo 317-A Bill Menard 317-B Jim Schneider, former IGPP custodian 317-C John Miles, Joe Watson, and Tom Hull in the Sierra Nevada, photo by Lea Rudee

    79. The Origin Of The Solar System
    sir James Jeans and sir harold jeffreys then revived a 1749 proposal of CountBuffon known as the collision hypothesis. A passing star was supposed to
    http://www.ldolphin.org/Solar.html
    The Origin of the Solar System by Lambert Dolphin Scientific textbooks are clearly written, lavishly illustrated, and they carry the full weight of the authors' beliefs and experience. Every generation of eager young students all too eagerly accepts the current scientific theories as gospel truth, not realizing that the text books of a previous generation proclaimed-with the same authority-models of the real world that have now been discarded. Such is the nature of "scientific progress!" "Science is the only self-correcting human institution, but it is also a process that progresses only by showing itself to be wrong." -Astronomer Allan Sandage. Theories for the origin of our solar system have come and gone, yet even today no satisfactory model exists that both explains all the facts and is consistent with the known laws of physics. As science in the western world began to abandon a Judeo-Christian view of creation, beginning about 200 years ago, the trend towards purely naturalistic explanations emerged. Today these views, known as "scientism" constitute the majority state-religion in our public school systems-if God exists at all He is uninvolved and irrelevant to a full understanding of the world we live in. (Ref. 1). German philosopher Immanuel Kant in 1755 hypothesized the origin of the solar system as beginning with a rotating gaseous nebula out of which condensed globular bodies that became the sun and planets-all revolving in the same direction. (Ref. 2). Essentially the same theory, now called "the nebular hypothesis" was proposed by the French mathematician Laplace in 1796. According to this model the hot rotating gas cloud began to cool and contract, and if this were to happen the law of conservation of angular momentum requires a more rapid rate of rotation. This speed up was supposed to have flung off rings which condensed into the planets.

    80. The Royal College Of Pathologists | The College
    1969 sir harold Himsworth. 1970 sir James Gowans. 1971 Professor CA Clarke 1991 Professor A jeffreys. 1992 Professor sir Aaron Klug
    http://www.rcpath.org/index.asp?PageID=737

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