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Oxford and theoretical
Deutsch is also a theoretical physicist at Oxford University.
A physical law or scientific law is, according to the Oxford English dictionary, " a theoretical principle deduced from particular facts, applicable to a defined group or class of phenomena, and expressible by the statement that a particular phenomenon always occurs if certain conditions be present.
William Blackstone became the first lecturer in English common law at the University of Oxford in 1753, but the university did not establish the program for the purpose of professional study, and the lectures were very philosophical and theoretical in nature.
Ambisonics was invented by Michael Gerzon of the Mathematical Institute, Oxford, who – with Professor Peter Fellgett of the University of Reading, David Brown, John Wright and John Hayes of the now defunct IMF Electronics, and building on the work of other researchers – developed the theoretical and practical aspects of the system in the early 1970s.
William Blackstone became the first lecturer in English common law at the University of Oxford in 1753, but the university did not establish the program for the purpose of professional study, and the lectures were very philosophical and theoretical in nature.
Orgel started his career as a theoretical inorganic chemist and continued his studies in this field at Oxford, the California Institute of Technology and the University of Chicago.
While studying at Oxford with Steven Lukes, author of Radical Power ( 1976 ), Gaventa developed a theoretical and methodological approach to the study of community power that has radically transformed community power studies in political sociology and opened a path for the legitimization of participatory research in mainstream sociology and political science.
Nevil Vincent Sidgwick FRS ( 8 May 1873, Oxford – 15 March 1952, Oxford ) was an English theoretical chemist who made significant contributions to the theory of valency and chemical bonding.
He converted in the 1960s from theoretical physics to the social sciences through research on the mathematical modelling of cities ( working in Oxford and London ).
William Blackstone became the first lecturer of law at Oxford in 1753, but the university did not establish the program for the purpose of professional study, and the lectures were very philosophical and theoretical in nature.
Pepper gained a doctorate in theoretical physics from St John's College, Oxford.

Oxford and physicist
The telescope design attracted the attention of several people in the scientific establishment such as Robert Hooke, the Oxford physicist who eventually built the telescope 10 years later, and Sir Robert Moray, polymath and founding member of the Royal Society.
* Wade Allison ( born 1941 ), British physicist and Oxford professor
* John Dalton, British chemist and physicist, taught mathematics at schools and colleges in Manchester, Oxford and York
He came under criticism from several fellow physicists including David Deutsch, a quantum physicist at Oxford University who stated: " It is utter rubbish.
He went to Oxford University and then moved to the United States to work as a nuclear physicist.
* William Mitchell ( physicist ) ( 1925 – 2002 ), Oxford physicist who helped pioneer neutron scattering
In 1986, Wilder-Smith and creationist physicist Edgar Andrews ( President of the Biblical Creation Society ) debated biologists Richard Dawkins and John Maynard Smith at the Oxford Union.
The physicist Sir Isaac Newton lodged at Cranbury House in his twilight years, and John Keble, a leader of the Oxford Movement, settled down as vicar of the parish church, St Matthew's, around 1838.
Dr. James C. Garland ( born August 11, 1942 ) is a physicist, author and professor, and the former 20th President of Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.
Professor Nicholas Kurti () FRS ( 14 May 1908-24 November 1998 ) was a Hungarian-born physicist who lived in Oxford, UK, for most of his life.
EPR was first observed in Kazan State University by Soviet physicist Yevgeny Zavoisky in 1944, and was developed independently at the same time by Brebis Bleaney at the University of Oxford.
He is the son of Neville Robinson, an Oxford physicist.
Francis Edwin Close OBE ( born 24 July 1945 ) is a noted particle physicist who is currently Professor of Physics at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford.
The term " molecular gastronomy " was coined in 1992 by late Oxford physicist Nicholas Kurti and the French INRA chemist Hervé This.
University of Oxford physicist Nicholas Kurti was an enthusiastic advocate of applying scientific knowledge to culinary problems.

Oxford and David
According to David Leeming, writing in The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, the harrowing of hell is an example of the motif of the hero's descent to the underworld, which is common in many mythologies.
In the article " Dying god " in The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, David Leeming notes that Christ can be seen as bringing fertility, though of a spiritual as opposed to physical kind.
In The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, David Leeming notes that, in the Bible story, as in other flood myths, the flood marks a new beginning and a second chance for creation and humanity.
In the Oxford Companion to World Mythology, David Leeming lists Moses, Jesus, and King Arthur as examples of the " heroic monomyth ", calling the Christ story " a particularly complete example of the heroic monomyth ".
In The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, David Leeming lists the story of Abraham and Isaac and the story of Christ's death as examples of this theme.
In The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, David Leeming claims that Judeo-Christian messianic ideas have influenced twentieth-century totalitarian systems, citing Soviet Communism as an example.
* Railways of the Caribbean by David Rollinson ( 2001, Macmillan, Oxford England ) ISBN 0-333-73042-9
In 1995, using Optical Luminescence Dating, David Miles and Simon Palmer of the Oxford Archaeological Unit assigned the Uffington White Horse to the late Bronze Age.
However, Oxford Brookes University historian David Nash says the removal of the scene represented " a form of self-censorship " and the Otto sequence " which involved a character representative of extreme forms of Zionism " was cut " in the interests of smoothing the way for the film's distribution in America.
* David Dunmur & Tim Sluckin ( 2011 ) Soap, Science, and Flat-screen TVs: a history of liquid crystals, Oxford University Press ISBN 978-0-19-954940-5.
* Inhuman Bondage: The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World by David Brion Davis 2006: Oxford University Press.
A Liberal up to this time, Foot was converted to socialism by Oxford University Labour Club president David Lewis and others: "...
* David Chalmers ( 1996 ) The Conscious Mind: In Search of a Fundamental Theory, Oxford University Press, New York, ISBN 0-19-511789-1 ( Pbk.
A recent example is The Faiths of the Founding Fathers by David L. Holmes ( New York, Oxford University Press USA, 2006 ), which examines the views of some early presidents as well as other political figures of the period.
*" The problem of slavery in Western culture ", David Brion Davis, Oxford University Press US, 1988, ISBN 0-19-505639-6
* Stannard, David E., Shrinking History, On Freud and the Failure of Psychohistory, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-503044-3 ( 1980 ).
It is, indeed, the cardinal weakness of this form of intuitionism that no satisfactory list can be given and that no moral principles have the " constant and never-failing entity ," or the definiteness, of the concepts of geometry ( these attacks are not uncontested — see, for example, the " Common Sense " tradition from Thomas Reid to James McCosh and the Oxford Realists Harold Prichard and Sir William David Ross ).
* Paley, William, Natural Theology, with an introduction and notes by Matthew D. Eddy and David M. Knight, Oxford University Press, 2006.
* Kennedy, David M., Over Here: The First World War and American Society ( New York: Oxford University Press, 1980 )
* Davis, David Brion, Inhuman Bondage: The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World Oxford, 2006.
The idea seems to have originated in a spoof history essay by Professor David Daube written for The Oxford Magazine in 1956, which was widely believed despite obvious improbabilities ( e. g., planning to cross River Severn by running the ram down a hill at speed, although the river is about 30 m ( 100 feet ) wide at this point ).
25 October 2011 < http :// www. oxfordreference. com. ezproxy. library. yorku. ca / views / ENTRY. html? subview = Main & entry = t98. e978 >.</ ref > It is usually on scripture or communicated by church authority .< ref >, Prof. David Berman " dogma " The Oxford Companion to Philosophy.
* Jones, David Wyn ( 2009 ) " Reception ," in David Wyn Jones, ed., Oxford Composer Companions: Haydn.
The suggestion that Humpty Dumpty was a " tortoise " siege engine, an armoured frame, used unsuccessfully to approach the walls of the Parliamentary held city of Gloucester in 1643 during the Siege of Gloucester in the English Civil War, was put forward in 1956 by Professor David Daube in The Oxford Magazine of February 16, 1956, on the basis of a contemporary account of the attack, but without evidence that the rhyme was connected.

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