| Preface |
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| 1 Science Matters: A Unified Perspective |
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1.3 The Origin and Nature of the Two Cultures |
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1.3.1 Emergence of the Two Cultures |
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1.4 Demarcation According to Human and Nonhuman Systems |
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1.5 Simple and Complex Systems |
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1.5.1 What It Means to be Complex |
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1.6.3 An Example: Histophysics |
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1.7 Implications of Science Matters |
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1.7.1 Clearing up Confusion in Terminology |
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1.7.2 The Science Matters Standard |
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1.7.3 There Is Always the Reality Check |
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1.7.4 The Needham Question |
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1.8 Discussion and Conclusion |
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| PART I ART AND CULTURE |
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2 Culture THROUGH Science: A New World of Images and Stories |
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2.1 The Science/Society Dialogue |
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2.2 The Media in between Science and Society |
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3 Physiognomy in Science and Art: Properties of a Natural Body Inferred from Its Appearance |
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3.1 What Physiognomy Means and Its Methodological Aims |
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3.2 Works of Fine Art Based on a Physiognomic Interpretation |
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3.3 Physiognomy in Science |
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3.3.1 Early Roots of Physiognomic Practice |
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3.3.2 The Fundamental Treatise of Aristotle and Its Legacy |
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3.3.3 The Impact of Aristotelian Physiognomy in Natural Science |
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3.3.4 The Renewal of Physiognomy for Characterizing a Human Being |
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3.3.5 The Physiognomy of Vegetation Characterizing a Landscape |
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4 Has Neuroscience Any Theological Consequence? |
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4.1.1 Religious Experience Is Individual and Private |
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4.1.2 Religious Experiences Are Basically Connected to Out-of-This-World Entities |
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4.1.3 Religious Experiences Are Basically Emotional and Positive |
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4.1.4 Causation and Correlation |
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4.2 Self, Soul and Human Immortality |
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4.3 Theological Consequences |
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5 SciComm, PopSci and The Real World |
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5.2 Science Communication |
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5.3 A New Concept for Science Museums |
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5.3.1 Possible Misconceptions Imparted to the Visitors |
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5.4 Science Popularization in China |
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5.4.1 The Importance of Popular-Science Books |
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5.4.2 Popular-Science Book Authors in China |
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5.5 Education Reform: A Personal Journey |
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Appendix 5.1: Popular-Science Books Selected in Classes |
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| PART II PHILOSOPHY AND HISTORY OF SCIENCE |
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6 The Tripod of Science: Communication, Philosophy and Education |
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6.2 Change Is Part of Science |
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6.7.3 Getting the Message Across |
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7 History and Philosophy of Science: Towards a New Epistemology |
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7.2 Perspectives of Science |
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7.3 History of Contemporary Chemistry |
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7.5 Philosophy of Chemistry |
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7.5.1 Transformation Reinforcement Provided by Improved Molecular Representation in Three Dimensions |
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7.5.2 Methodologies of Computational Chemistry Provided by Computer-Aided Ligand Design |
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7.6 A Case Study: Functional Selectivity |
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7.7 Philosophy of Science and Epistemology |
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8 Philosophy of Science and Chinese Sciences: The Multicultural View of Science and a Unified Ontological Perspective |
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8.1 Recent Debates on "Chinese Sciences" in China |
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8.2 The Multicultural View of Science |
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8.3 Lessons from the Study of Art and Science |
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8.4 An Ontological Perspective on the Multiple View of Science |
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9 Evolution of the Concept of Science Communication in China |
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9.2 Late Qing Dynasty and the New Culture Movement Period (Late 19th Century to Farly 20th Century) |
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9.3 Science Popularization by Science Organizations (1914-1949) |
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9.4 Science Popularization under the New Government of Modern China (1949-1994) |
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9.5 Boom of Science Popularization (1994-2006) |
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10 History of Science in Globalizing Time |
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10.1 Globalization Today and Globalization in History |
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10.2 History of Science as a Discipline and History of Science as Knowledge |
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10.3 History of Science in China |
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10.4 The Needham Question |
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10.5 The Snow Thesis and Conclusion |
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| PART III RAISING SCIENTIFIC LEVEL |
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11.1 The Neurochemistry of Trust |
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11.4 The Evolution of Trust and Trade |
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11.5 The Evolution of Fairness, or Why We Are Moral |
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12 Towards the Understanding of Human Dynamics |
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Tao Zhou, Xiao-Pu Han and Bing-Hong Wang |
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12.2 Non-Poisson Statistics of Human Dynamics |
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12.3 The Task-Driven Model |
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12.4 The Interest-Driven Model and Beyond |
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12.5 Discussion and Conclusion |
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13 Human History: A Science Matter |
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13.2 Methods to Study History |
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13.2.1 Statistical Analysis |
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13.2.3 Computer Simulation |
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13.3 History in the Future |
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| Contributors |
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| Index |
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