Understanding the Language of Science

...humanity does not understand the language of science. Therefore it does not know that all that science has ever found out is that the physical Universe consists entirely of the most exquisitely interreciprocating technology. Ninety-nine percent of humanity thinks technology is a "new" phenomenon. The world populace identifies technology with (1) weapons and (2) machines that compete with them for their jobs. Most people therefore think they are against technology, not knowing that the technology they don't understand is their only means of exercising their option to "make it" on this planet and in this life.

Notes:

"...the physical Universe consists entirely of the most exquisitely interreciprocating technology"

Folksonomies: science technology understanding

Taxonomies:
/technology and computing (0.769451)
/science (0.628208)

Keywords:
exquisitely interreciprocating technology (0.999031 (positive:0.609066)), physical Universe (0.828918 (positive:0.609066)), world populace (0.564720 (neutral:0.000000)), science (0.500383 (positive:0.595253)), humanity (0.472040 (neutral:0.000000)), language (0.426791 (positive:0.559286)), percent (0.375275 (neutral:0.000000)), phenomenon (0.370884 (neutral:0.000000)), means (0.363193 (negative:-0.354917)), option (0.363081 (negative:-0.354917)), weapons (0.362288 (negative:-0.261135)), people (0.358647 (neutral:0.000000)), machines (0.357440 (positive:0.207547)), jobs (0.357080 (positive:0.207547)), planet (0.356952 (neutral:0.000000))

Entities:
Language of Science:PrintMedia (0.835400 (positive:0.559286)), Ninety-nine percent:Quantity (0.835400 (neutral:0.000000))

Concepts:
Universe (0.944389): dbpedia | freebase
World (0.818262): dbpedia | ciaFactbook | freebase
Cognition (0.718414): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Earth (0.710605): dbpedia | freebase
Technology (0.669408): dbpedia | freebase
Nature (0.616185): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Understanding (0.613615): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Physics (0.591362): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc

 Critical Path
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Fuller , R. Buckminster (1981), Critical Path, St. Martin's Griffin, Retrieved on 2013-03-16
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  • Folksonomies: philosophy technology humanism innovation