You are hereBiblio
Biblio
Bockris, J. O'M.; Issue Info: Sep2000, Vol. 8 Issue 1/2, p103; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: COLD fusion; Subject Term: EDUCATIONAL accountability; Subject Term: NUCLEAR fusion; Subject: TEXAS; Subject: COLLEGE Station (Tex.); Subject: UNITED States ; Company/Entity: TEXAS A & M University; Number of Pages: 17p; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 6428
Martin, Brian; Issue Info: Jul99, Vol. 6 Issue 4, p333; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: SCIENCE; Number of Pages: 40p; Illustrations: 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 14698
Bockris, J. O'M.; Issue Info: Sep2000, Vol. 8 Issue 1/2, p103; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: COLD fusion; Subject Term: EDUCATIONAL accountability; Subject Term: NUCLEAR fusion; Subject: TEXAS; Subject: COLLEGE Station (Tex.); Subject: UNITED States ; Company/Entity: TEXAS A & M University; Number of Pages: 17p; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 6428
Cross, Tom; Email Address: tom@memestreams.net; Issue Info: Jun2006, Vol. 49 Issue 6, p37; Thesaurus Term: HACKING (Computer security); Thesaurus Term: COMPUTER networks -- Security measures; Thesaurus Term: COMPUTER security; Thesaurus Term: DATA protection; Thesaurus Term: COMPUTERS; Subject Term: STUDY & teaching; Subject Term: TECHNOLOGY & state; Subject Term: INTELLECTUAL freedom; NAICS/Industry Codes: 611420 Computer Training; People: FUKUYAMA, Francis; Number of Pages: 4p; Document Type: Article
24 cm.Should peer review dominate decision making about science? -- Is science a faith? -- Should creationism and evolution get equal time in schools? -- Do we face a population problem? -- Are human activities significantly changing the global climate? -- Are environmental regulations too restrictive? -- Do cell phones cause cancer? -- Is irradiated food safe to eat? -- Can humans go to Mars now? -- Is it worthwhile to continue the search for extraterrestrial life? -- Should the Internet be censored? -- Does law enforcement technology threaten the fourth amendment? -- Will screens replace pages? -- Will it be possible to build a computer that can think? -- Is the use of animals in research justified? -- Should genetically modified foods be banned? -- Is it ethical to sell human tissue? -- Is it ethically permissable to clone human beings?Includes bibliographical references and index.Clashing views on controversial issues in science, technology, and societyselected, edited and with introductions by Thomas A. Easton.Book
20080059102835785Hal Abelson, Ken Ledeen, Harry Lewis.ill. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references and index.Digital explosion: why is it happening, and what is at stake? -- Naked in the sunlight: privacy lost, privacy abandoned -- Ghosts in the machine: secrets and surprises of electronic documents -- Needles in the haystack: Google and other brokers in the bits bazaar -- Secret bits: how codes became unbreakable -- Balance toppled: who owns the bits? -- You can't say that on the Internet: guarding the frontiers of digital expression -- Bits in the air: old metaphors, new technologies, and free speech.
Cross, Tom; Email Address: tom@memestreams.net; Issue Info: Jun2006, Vol. 49 Issue 6, p37; Thesaurus Term: HACKING (Computer security); Thesaurus Term: COMPUTER networks -- Security measures; Thesaurus Term: COMPUTER security; Thesaurus Term: DATA protection; Thesaurus Term: COMPUTERS; Subject Term: STUDY & teaching; Subject Term: TECHNOLOGY & state; Subject Term: INTELLECTUAL freedom; NAICS/Industry Codes: 611420 Computer Training; People: FUKUYAMA, Francis; Number of Pages: 4p; Document Type: Article
20080059102835785Hal Abelson, Ken Ledeen, Harry Lewis.ill. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references and index.Digital explosion: why is it happening, and what is at stake? -- Naked in the sunlight: privacy lost, privacy abandoned -- Ghosts in the machine: secrets and surprises of electronic documents -- Needles in the haystack: Google and other brokers in the bits bazaar -- Secret bits: how codes became unbreakable -- Balance toppled: who owns the bits? -- You can't say that on the Internet: guarding the frontiers of digital expression -- Bits in the air: old metaphors, new technologies, and free speech.
24 cm.Should peer review dominate decision making about science? -- Is science a faith? -- Should creationism and evolution get equal time in schools? -- Do we face a population problem? -- Are human activities significantly changing the global climate? -- Are environmental regulations too restrictive? -- Do cell phones cause cancer? -- Is irradiated food safe to eat? -- Can humans go to Mars now? -- Is it worthwhile to continue the search for extraterrestrial life? -- Should the Internet be censored? -- Does law enforcement technology threaten the fourth amendment? -- Will screens replace pages? -- Will it be possible to build a computer that can think? -- Is the use of animals in research justified? -- Should genetically modified foods be banned? -- Is it ethical to sell human tissue? -- Is it ethically permissable to clone human beings?Includes bibliographical references and index.Clashing views on controversial issues in science, technology, and societyselected, edited and with introductions by Thomas A. Easton.Book
Case from the 2005 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2005. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
24 cm.Should peer review dominate decision making about science? -- Is science a faith? -- Should creationism and evolution get equal time in schools? -- Do we face a population problem? -- Are human activities significantly changing the global climate? -- Are environmental regulations too restrictive? -- Do cell phones cause cancer? -- Is irradiated food safe to eat? -- Can humans go to Mars now? -- Is it worthwhile to continue the search for extraterrestrial life? -- Should the Internet be censored? -- Does law enforcement technology threaten the fourth amendment? -- Will screens replace pages? -- Will it be possible to build a computer that can think? -- Is the use of animals in research justified? -- Should genetically modified foods be banned? -- Is it ethical to sell human tissue? -- Is it ethically permissable to clone human beings?Includes bibliographical references and index.Clashing views on controversial issues in science, technology, and societyselected, edited and with introductions by Thomas A. Easton.Book
Martin, Brian; Issue Info: Jul99, Vol. 6 Issue 4, p333; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: SCIENCE; Number of Pages: 40p; Illustrations: 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 14698
Martin, Brian; Issue Info: Jul99, Vol. 6 Issue 4, p333; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: SCIENCE; Number of Pages: 40p; Illustrations: 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 14698
Bockris, J. O'M.; Issue Info: Sep2000, Vol. 8 Issue 1/2, p103; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: COLD fusion; Subject Term: EDUCATIONAL accountability; Subject Term: NUCLEAR fusion; Subject: TEXAS; Subject: COLLEGE Station (Tex.); Subject: UNITED States ; Company/Entity: TEXAS A & M University; Number of Pages: 17p; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 6428
Case from the 2005 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2005. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case from the 2005 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2005. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case from the 2004 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2004. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
20080059102835785Hal Abelson, Ken Ledeen, Harry Lewis.ill. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references and index.Digital explosion: why is it happening, and what is at stake? -- Naked in the sunlight: privacy lost, privacy abandoned -- Ghosts in the machine: secrets and surprises of electronic documents -- Needles in the haystack: Google and other brokers in the bits bazaar -- Secret bits: how codes became unbreakable -- Balance toppled: who owns the bits? -- You can't say that on the Internet: guarding the frontiers of digital expression -- Bits in the air: old metaphors, new technologies, and free speech.
Bockris, J. O'M.; Issue Info: Sep2000, Vol. 8 Issue 1/2, p103; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: COLD fusion; Subject Term: EDUCATIONAL accountability; Subject Term: NUCLEAR fusion; Subject: TEXAS; Subject: COLLEGE Station (Tex.); Subject: UNITED States ; Company/Entity: TEXAS A & M University; Number of Pages: 17p; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 6428
20080059102835785Hal Abelson, Ken Ledeen, Harry Lewis.ill. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references and index.Digital explosion: why is it happening, and what is at stake? -- Naked in the sunlight: privacy lost, privacy abandoned -- Ghosts in the machine: secrets and surprises of electronic documents -- Needles in the haystack: Google and other brokers in the bits bazaar -- Secret bits: how codes became unbreakable -- Balance toppled: who owns the bits? -- You can't say that on the Internet: guarding the frontiers of digital expression -- Bits in the air: old metaphors, new technologies, and free speech.
Bockris, J. O'M.; Issue Info: Sep2000, Vol. 8 Issue 1/2, p103; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: COLD fusion; Subject Term: EDUCATIONAL accountability; Subject Term: NUCLEAR fusion; Subject: TEXAS; Subject: COLLEGE Station (Tex.); Subject: UNITED States ; Company/Entity: TEXAS A & M University; Number of Pages: 17p; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 6428
Martin, Brian; Issue Info: Jul99, Vol. 6 Issue 4, p333; Thesaurus Term: RESEARCH; Subject Term: SCIENCE; Number of Pages: 40p; Illustrations: 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart; Document Type: Article; Full Text Word Count: 14698


