Scientists are After the Adventure of Discovery

The creative scientist is in fact usually more concemed with the relations of things to one another than with the precise verbal analysis of what these things are. He seeks a representation of the world which continually grows by an extension or transformation of what is there akeady. Thus what many scientists are really after is the adventure of discovery itself.

Notes:

Folksonomies: discovery purpose

Taxonomies:
/business and industrial/aerospace and defense/space technology (0.289804)
/society/work/unemployment (0.180643)
/business and industrial/biomedical (0.175368)

Keywords:
precise verbal analysis (0.963311 (positive:0.866155)), creative scientist (0.814716 (positive:0.866155)), scientists (0.622594 (positive:0.699187)), things (0.622310 (positive:0.866155)), adventure (0.621696 (positive:0.699187)), discovery (0.621336 (positive:0.699187)), transformation (0.603217 (positive:0.203420)), fact (0.572840 (positive:0.866155)), relations (0.572214 (positive:0.866155)), representation (0.564995 (positive:0.203420)), world (0.564705 (positive:0.203420))

Entities:
scientist:JobTitle (0.849591 (positive:0.866155))

Concepts:
Science (0.919725): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc

 Address of the President Sir Cyril Hinshelwood, O. M., at the Anniversary Meeting, 30 November 1960
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Britain) , Royal Society (Great and Hinshelwood, Sir Cyril Norman (1961), Address of the President Sir Cyril Hinshelwood, O. M., at the Anniversary Meeting, 30 November 1960, Retrieved on 2014-06-21
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  • Folksonomies: science