Although the interface looks basic, it does make up for being easy to use. If set up properly it may prove to be a useful tool for security in houses, workplaces and other such establishments. In this day and age where on-foot scammers and muggers are abound, security devices are a ’must-have’. Especially and specifically to identify such people who would storm in and perfectly ruin one’s day of either business or pleasure. Having software that you are able to manage your security system from the comfort of your own home or office is great. You can basically manage it by yourself and be comfortable with the settings you set it up with. Then be able to change it anytime you want. There may be other softwares like this out there, but this is one that’s easy to use. I believe this is one is probably worth the try.
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Computer Generated animations are more controllable
This software is used for creatind the animated images according to our desire it make the jpe image better to our desire . this is easy to run not getting any problem i like this software.Computer animation is essentially a digital successor to the stop motion techniques used in traditional animation with 3D models and frame-by-frame animation of 2D illustrations. Computer generated animations are more controllable than other more physically based processes, such as constructing miniatures for effects shots or hiring extras for crowd scenes, and because it allows the creation of images that would not be feasible using any other technology. It can also allow a single graphic artist to produce such content without the use of actors, expensive set pieces, or props.
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Monday, October 17, 2011
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Friday, October 14, 2011
Best software for All to take Snapshot.
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Wednesday, September 28, 2011
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Thursday, March 24, 2011
Some Famous Scientists
Some Famous Scientists
| John Philoponus | late 6th Century | Aristotle's early Christian critic | |
| Hugh of St. Victor | c. 1096-1141 | theologian of science | |
| Robert Grosseteste | c. 1168-1253 | reform-minded bishop-scientist | |
| Roger Bacon | c. 1220-1292 | Doctor Mirabiles | |
| Dietrich von Frieberg | c. 1250-c. 1310 | the priest who solved the mystery of the rainbow | |
| Thomas Bradwardine | c. 1290-1349 | student of motion | |
| Nicole Oresme | c. 1320-1382 | inventor of scientific graphic techniques | |
| Nicholas of Cusa | 1401-1464 | grappler with infinity | |
| Georgias Agricola | 1495-1555 | founder of metallurgy | |
| Johannes Kepler | 1571-1630 | discoverer of the laws of planetary motion | |
| Johannes Baptista van Helmont | 1579-1644 | founder of pneumatic chemistry and chemical physiology | |
| Francesco Maria Grimaldi | 1618-1663 | discoverer of the diffraction of light | Catholic |
| Blaise Pascal | 1623-1662 | mathematical prodigy and universal genius | |
| Robert Boyle | 1627-1691 | founder of modern chemistry | |
| John Ray | 1627-1705 | cataloger of British flora and fauna | Calvinist (denomination?) |
| Isaac Barrow | 1630-1677 | Newton's teacher | |
| Antonie van Leeuwenhoek | 1632-1723 | discoverer of bacteria | |
| Niels Seno | 1638-1686 | founder of geology | |
| James Bradley | 1693-1762 | discoverer of the aberration of starlight | |
| Ewald Georg von Kleist | c. 1700-1748 | inventor of the Leyden jar | |
| Carolus Linnaeus | 1707-1778 | classifer of all living things | |
| Leonhard Euler | 1707-1783 | the prolific mathematician | |
| John Dalton | 1766-1844 | founder of modern atomic theory | |
| Thomas Young | 1773-1829 | first to conduct a double-slit experiment with light | |
| David Brewster | 1781-1868 | researcher of polarized light | |
| William Buckland | 1784-1856 | geologist of the Noahic flood | |
| Adem Sedgwick | 1785-1873 | geologist of the Cambrian | |
| Augustin-Jean Fresnel | 1788-1827 | the physicist of light waves | |
| Augustin Louis Cauchy | 1789-1857 | soulwinning mathematician | |
| Michael Faraday | 1791-1867 | ||
| John Frederick William Herschel | 1792-1871 | cataloger of the Southern skies | |
| Matthew Fontaine Maury | 1806-1873 | pathfinder of the seas | |
| Philip Henry Gosse | 1810-1888 | popular naturalist | |
| Asa Gray | 1810-1888 | influential botanist | |
| James Dwight Dana | 1813-1895 | systematizer of minerology | |
| George Boole | 1815-1864 | discoverer of pure mathematics | |
| James Prescott Joule | 1818-1889 | originator of Joule's Law | |
| John Couch Adams | 1819-1892 | codiscoverer of Neptune | |
| George Gabriel Stokes | 1819-1903 | theorist of fluorescence | |
| Gregor Mendel | 1822-1884 | pioneer in genetics | |
| William Thomson, Lord Kelvin | 1824-1907 | physicist of thermodynammics | |
| Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann | 1829-1907 | the non-Euclidean geometer behind relativity theory | |
| James Clerk Maxwell | 1831-1879 | father of modern physics | |
| Edward William Morley | 1838-1923 | Michelson's partner in measuring the speed of light | |
| Pierre-Maurice-Marie Duhem | 1861-1923 | the physicist who recovered the science of the Middle Ages | |
| Georges Lemaitre | 1894-1966 | the prist who showed us the universe is expanding | |
| c. 1864-1943 | pioneer in chemurgy | ||
| 1882-1944 | the astronomer who ruled stellar theory |
100 Scientists Who Changed the World....................
100 Scientists Who Changed the World
The names in this list are listed in chronological order. This book does not purport to list the "most influential" scientists in history, although these are presumably among them. The back cover states:
"If I saw further than others," said Sir Isaac Newton, "it is because I was standing on the shoulders of giants." Science introduces one hundred of these giants and examines their achievements: the men and women who, often in the face of extreme scepticism or worse, have striven and succeeded in pushing back the boundaries of human knowledge. Ranging across the spectrum of scientific endeavour, from the cosmology of Copernicus and Galileo, through the medical revolutions of Hippocrates and Galen, it includes the fields of physics, biology, chemistry and genetics.
This is the story of the ideas that have shaped the world today, and the ideas that will shape the future.
| Anaximander | c. 611-547 B.C. | |
| Pythagoras | c. 581-497 B.C. | |
| Hippocrates of Cos | c. 460-377 B.C. | |
| Democritus of Abdera | c. 460-370 B.C. | |
| Plato | c. 427-347 B.C. | Platonism / Greek philosophy |
| Aristotle | c. 384-322 B.C. | Platonism / Greek philosophy |
| Euclid | c. 330-260 B.C. | Platonism / Greek philosophy |
| Archimedes | c. 287-212 B.C. | Greek philosophy |
| Hipparchus | c. 170-125 B.C. | |
| Zhang Heng | 78-139 A.D. | |
| Ptolemy | 90-168 A.D. | |
| Galen of Pergamum | 130-201 A.D. | |
| Al-Khwarizmi | 800-850 | Islam |
| Johannes Gutenberg | 1400-1468 | Catholic |
| Leonardo da Vinci | 1452-1519 | Catholic |
| Nicolas Copernicus | 1473-1543 | Catholic (priest) |
| Andreas Vesalius | 1514-1564 | Catholic |
| William Gilbert | 1540-1603 | |
| Francis Bacon | 1561-1626 | Anglican |
| Galileo Galileo | 1564-1642 | Catholic |
| Johannes Kepler | 1571-1630 | Lutheran |
| William Harvey | 1578-1657 | Anglican (nominal) |
| Johann van Helmont | 1579-1644 | |
| Rene Descartes | 1596-1650 | Catholic |
| Blaise Pascal | 1623-1662 | Jansenist |
| Robert Boyle | 1627-1691 | Anglican |
| Christiann Huygens | 1629-1695 | Calvinist |
| Anton van Leeuwenhoek | 1632-1723 | Dutch Reformed |
| Robert Hooke | 1635-1703 | Anglican |
| Sir Isaac Newton | 1642-1727 | Anglican (rejected Trinitarianism, i.e., Athanasianism; believed in the Arianism of the Primitive Church) |
| Edmund Halley | 1656-1742 | |
| Thomas Newcomen | 1663-1729 | Baptist |
| Daniel Fahrenheit | 1686-1736 | |
| Benjamin Franklin | 1706-1790 | Presbyterian; Deist |
| Joseph Black | 1728-1799 | |
| Henry Cavendish | 1731-1810 | |
| Joseph Priestley | 1733-1804 | Unitarian |
| James Watt | 1736-1819 | Presbyterian (lapsed) |
| Charles de Coulomb | 1736-1806 | |
| Joseph Montgolfier | 1740-1810 | |
| Karl Wilhelm Scheele | 1742-1786 | |
| Antoine Lavoisier | 1743-1794 | Catholic |
| Count Alessandro Volta | 1745-1827 | Catholic |
| Edward Jenner | 1749-1823 | Anglican |
| John Dalton | 1766-1844 | Quaker |
| Andre-Marie Ampere | 1755-1836 | |
| Amedo Avogadro | 1776-1856 | Catholic |
| Joseph Gay-Lussac | 1778-1850 | |
| Charles Babbage | 1791-1871 | Anglican |
| Michael Faraday | 1791-1867 | Sandemanian |
| Charles Darwin | 1809-1881 | Anglican (nominal); Unitarian |
| James Joule | 1818-1920 | |
| Louis Pasteur | 1822-1895 | Catholic |
| Johann Gregor Mendel | 1822-1884 | Catholic (Augustinian monk) |
| Jean-Joseph Lenoir | 1822-1900 | |
| Lord Kelvin | 1824-1907 | Anglican |
| James Clerk Maxwell | 1831-1879 | Presbyterian; Anglican; Baptist |
| Alfred Nobel | 1833-1896 | |
| Wilhelm Gottlieb Daimler | 1834-1900 | |
| Dmitri Mendeleev | 1834-1907 | |
| Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen | 1845-1923 | |
| Thomas Alva Edison | 1847-1931 | Congregationalist; agnostic |
| Alexander Graham Bell | 1847-1922 | Unitarian/Universalist |
| Antoine-Henri Becquerel | 1852-1908 | Catholic |
| Paul Ehrlich | 1854-1915 | Jewish |
| Nikola Tesla | 1856-1943 | |
| Sir John Joseph Thomson | 1856-1940 | |
| Sigmund Freud | 1856-1939 | Jewish; Atheist; Freudian psychoanalysis (Freudianism) |
| Heinrich Rudolf | 1857-1894 | Lutheran |
| Max Planck | 1858-1947 | Protestant |
| Leo Baekeland | 1863-1944 | |
| Thomas Hunt Morgan | 1866-1945 | |
| Marie Curie | 1867-1934 | Catholic (lapsed) |
| Ernest Rutherford | 1871-1937 | |
| The Wright Brothers | Wilbur: 1867-1912; Orville: 1871-1948 | United Brethren |
| Guglielmo Marconi | 1847-1937 | Catholic and Anglican |
| Frederick Soddy | 1877-1956 | |
| Albert Einstein | 1879-1955 | Jewish |
| Alexander Fleming | 1881-1955 | Catholic |
| Robert Goddard | 1882-1945 | |
| Neils Bohr | 1885-1962 | Jewish Lutheran |
| Erwin Schrodinger | 1887-1961 | Catholic |
| Henry Moseley | 1887-1915 | |
| Edwin Hubble | 1889-1953 | |
| Sir James Chadwick | 1891-1974 | |
| Frederick Banting | 1891-1941 | |
| Louis de Broglie | 1892-1987 | |
| Enrico Fermi | 1901-1954 | Catholic |
| Werner Heisenberg | 1901-1954 | Lutheran |
| Linus Carl Pauling | 1901-1994 | Lutheran |
| Robert Oppenheimer | 1904-1967 | Jewish |
| Sir Frank Whittle | 1907-1996 | |
| Edward Teller | 1908- | Jewish |
| William Shockley | 1910-1989 | |
| Alan Turing | 1912-1954 | Jewish |
| Jonas Salk | 1914-1995 | Jewish |
| Rosalind Franklin | 1920-1958 | Jewish |
| James Dewey Watson | 1928- | |
| Stephen Hawking | 1942- | atheist |
| Tim Berners-Lee | 1955- | Unitarian |
100 Scientists Who Shaped World History..........
100 Scientists Who Shaped World History
The names in this list are listed in chronological order. This book does not purport to list the "most influential" scientists in history, although these are presumably among them. The names listed are not ranked in any way relative to each other. The back cover states:
100 Scientists Who Shaped World History is a fascinating book about the men and women who made significant impacts upon our understanding of the world around us. This chronologically-organized book provides capsule biographies of important scientists and describes how their contributions have shaped the world in which we live.
| Pythagoras | c. 580 B.C.-C. 500 B.C. | |
| Hippocates | c. 460 B.C.-377 B.C. | |
| Aristotle | 384 B.C.-322 B.C. | Platonism / Greek philosophy |
| Euclid | c. 325 B.C.-270 B.C. | Platonism / Greek philosophy |
| Archimedes | c. 287-c. 212 B.C. | Greek philosophy |
| Eratosthenes | c. 276 B.C.-c. 196 B.C. | |
| Galen | c. A.D. 130-c. 216 | |
| Hakim Ibn-e-Sina | A.D. 980-1037 | Islam |
| Nicolaus Copernicus | 1473-1543 | Catholic (priest) |
| Andreas Vesalius | 1514-1564 | Catholic |
| Gallileo Galilei | 1564-1642 | Catholic |
| Johannes Kepler | 1571-1630 | Lutheran |
| William Harvey | 1578-1657 | Anglican (nominal) |
| Rene Descartes | 1596-1650 | Catholic |
| Blaise Pascal | 1623-1662 | Jansenist |
| Robert Boyle | 1627-1691 | Anglican |
| Christian Huygens | 1632-1695 | Calvinist |
| Anton van Leeuwenhoek | 1632-1723 | Dutch Reformed |
| Robert Hooke | 1635-1703 | Anglican |
| Isaac Newton | 1642-1727 | Anglican (rejected Trinitarianism, i.e., Athanasianism; believed in the Arianism of the Primitive Church) |
| Edmund Halley | 1656-1742 | |
| Daniel Bernoulli | 1700-1782 | Calvinist |
| Benjamin Franklin | 1706-1790 | Presbyterian; Deist |
| Leonard Euler | 1707-1783 | Calvinist |
| Carolus Linnaeus | 1707-1778 | Christianity |
| Henry Cavendish | 1731-1810 | |
| Joseph Priestley | 1733-1804 | Presbyterian; unitarian |
| William Herschel | 1738-1822 | Jewish |
| Antoine Laurent Lavoisier | 1743-1794 | Catholic |
| Alessandro Volta | 1746-1827 | Catholic |
| Edward Jenner | 1749-1823 | Anglican |
| John Dalton | 1766-1844 | Quaker |
| Georges Cuvier | 1769-1832 | Lutheran |
| Alexander von Humboldt | 1769-1859 | |
| Karl Friedrich Gauss | 1777-1855 | Lutheran |
| Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac | 1778-1850 | |
| Humphry Davy | 1778-1829 | |
| Jons Jakob Berzelius | 1779-1848 | |
| Michael Faraday | 1791-1867 | Sandemanian |
| Charles Babbage | 1792-1871 | Anglican |
| Joseph Henry | 1797-1878 | Presbyterian |
| Matthew Fontaine Maury | 1806-1873 | |
| Louis Agassiz | 1807-1873 | Lutheran |
| Charles Darwin | 1809-1882 | Anglican (nominal); Unitarian |
| Augusta Ada Byron | 1815-1852 | |
| James Prescott Joule | 1818-1868 | |
| Jean Bernard Leon Foucault | 1819-1868 | |
| Gregor Mendel | 1822-1884 | Catholic (Augustinian monk) |
| Louis Pasteur | 1822-1895 | Catholic |
| William Thomson, Lord Kelvin | 1824-1907 | Anglican |
| Joseph Lister | 1827-1912 | Quaker |
| Friedrich August Kekule | 1829-1896 | |
| James Clerk Maxwell | 1831-1879 | Presbyterian; Anglican; Baptist |
| Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleyev | 1834-1907 | |
| William Henry Perkin | 1838-1907 | |
| Wilhelm Konrad Roentgen | 1845-1923 | |
| Thomas Alva Edison | 1847-1931 | Congregationalist; agnostic |
| Luther Burbank | 1849-1923 | Unitarian |
| Ivan Petrovich Pavlov | 1849-1936 | |
| John Ambrose Fleming | 1849-1945 | |
| William Ramsay | 1852-1916 | |
| Antoine-Henri Becquerel | 1852-1908 | Catholic |
| Albert Abraham Michelson | 1852-1908 | Jewish |
| Sigmnd Freud | 1856-1939 | Jewish; Atheist; Freudian psychoanalysis (Freudianism) |
| Joseph John Thomson | 1856-1940 | |
| Nettie Marie Stevens | 1861-1912 | |
| 1864-1943 | Christianity | |
| Marie Sklodowska Curie | 1867-1934 | Catholic (lapsed) |
| Henrietta Swan Leavitt | 1868-1921 | Protestant |
| Ernst Rutherford | 1871-1937 | |
| Lise Meitner | 1878-1968 | Jewish-born Protestant |
| Albert Einstein | 1879-1955 | Jewish |
| Alexander Fleming | 1881-1955 | Catholic |
| Niels Bohr | 1885-1962 | Jewish Lutheran |
| Selman Abraham Waksman | 1888-1973 | Jewish |
| Edwin Powell Hubble | 1889-1953 | |
| Robert Alexander Watson-Watt | 1892-1973 | |
| 1892-1962 | Presbyterian | |
| Irene Joliot-Curie | 1897-1956 | |
| Linus Carl Pauling | 1901-1994 | Lutheran |
| Enrico Fermi | 1901-1954 | Catholic |
| Werner Heisenberg | 1901-1967 | Lutheran |
| 1901-1978 | Episcopalian | |
| 1902-1992 | ||
| Grace Brewster Murray Hopper | 1906-1992 | Jewish |
| Marie Goeppert-Mayer | 1906-1972 | |
| John Bardeen | 1908-1991 | |
| William Bradford Shockley | 1910-1989 | |
| Dorothy Crowfood Hodgkin | 1910-1994 | |
| Jaques Yves Cousteau | 1910-1997 | |
| Luis Walter Alvarez | 1911-1988 | |
| Charles Hard Townes | 1915- | |
| Richard Philipis Feynman | 1918-1988 | Jewish |
| Frederick Sanger | 1918- | |
| Rosalind Elsie Franklin | 1920-1958 | Jewish |
| Rosalyn Sussman Yalow | 1921- | Jewish |
| Har Gobind Khorana | 1922- | Hindu |
| Tsung-Dao Lee | 1926- | |
| James Dewey Watson | 1928- | |
| Stephen William Hawking | 1942- | atheist |
Most Influential Scientists
The list below is from the book The Scientific 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Scientists, Past and Present, Citadel Press (2000), written by John Galbraith Simmons.
| 1 | Isaac Newton | the Newtonian Revolution | Anglican (rejected Trinitarianism, i.e., Athanasianism; believed in the Arianism of the Primitive Church) |
| 2 | Albert Einstein | Twentieth-Century Science | Jewish |
| 3 | Neils Bohr | the Atom | Jewish Lutheran |
| 4 | Charles Darwin | Evolution | Anglican (nominal); Unitarian |
| 5 | Louis Pasteur | the Germ Theory of Disease | Catholic |
| 6 | Sigmund Freud | Psychology of the Unconscious | Jewish; Atheist; Freudian psychoanalysis (Freudianism) |
| 7 | Galileo Galilei | the New Science | Catholic |
| 8 | Antoine Laurent Lavoisier | the Revolution in Chemistry | Catholic |
| 9 | Johannes Kepler | Motion of the Planets | Lutheran |
| 10 | Nicolaus Copernicus | the Heliocentric Universe | Catholic (priest) |
| 11 | Michael Faraday | the Classical Field Theory | Sandemanian |
| 12 | James Clerk Maxwell | the Electromagnetic Field | Presbyterian; Anglican; Baptist |
| 13 | Claude Bernard | the Founding of Modern Physiology | |
| 14 | Franz Boas | Modern Anthropology | Jewish |
| 15 | Werner Heisenberg | Quantum Theory | Lutheran |
| 16 | Linus Pauling | Twentieth-Century Chemistry | Lutheran |
| 17 | Rudolf Virchow | the Cell Doctrine | |
| 18 | Erwin Schrodinger | Wave Mechanics | Catholic |
| 19 | Ernest Rutherford | the Structure of the Atom | |
| 20 | Paul Dirac | Quantum Electrodynamics | |
| 21 | Andreas Vesalius | the New Anatomy | Catholic |
| 22 | Tycho Brahe | the New Astronomy | Lutheran |
| 23 | Comte de Buffon | l'Histoire Naturelle | |
| 24 | Ludwig Boltzmann | Thermodynamics | |
| 25 | Max Planck | the Quanta | Protestant |
| 26 | Marie Curie | Radioactivity | Catholic (lapsed) |
| 27 | William Herschel | the Discovery of the Heavens | Jewish |
| 28 | Charles Lyell | Modern Geology | |
| 29 | Pierre Simon de Laplace | Newtonian Mechanics | atheist |
| 30 | Edwin Hubble | the Modern Telescope | |
| 31 | Joseph J. Thomson | the Discovery of the Electron | |
| 32 | Max Born | Quantum Mechanics | Jewish Lutheran |
| 33 | Francis Crick | Molecular Biology | atheist |
| 34 | Enrico Fermi | Atomic Physics | Catholic |
| 35 | Leonard Euler | Eighteenth-Century Mathematics | Calvinist |
| 36 | Justus Liebig | Nineteenth-Century Chemistry | |
| 37 | Modern Astronomy | Quaker | |
| 38 | William Harvey | Circulation of the Blood | Anglican (nominal) |
| 39 | Marcello Malpighi | Microscopic Anatomy | Catholic |
| 40 | Christiaan Huygens | the Wave Theory of Light | Calvinist |
| 41 | Carl Gauss (Karl Friedrich Gauss) | Mathematical Genius | Lutheran |
| 42 | Albrecht von Haller | Eighteenth-Century Medicine | |
| 43 | August Kekule | Chemical Structure | |
| 44 | Robert Koch | Bacteriology | |
| 45 | Murray Gell-Mann | the Eightfold Way | Jewish |
| 46 | Emil Fischer | Organic Chemistry | |
| 47 | Dmitri Mendeleev | the Periodic Table of Elements | |
| 48 | Sheldon Glashow | the Discovery of Charm | Jewish |
| 49 | James Watson | the Structure of DNA | atheist |
| 50 | John Bardeen | Superconductivity | |
| 51 | John von Neumann | the Modern Computer | Jewish Catholic |
| 52 | Richard Feynman | Quantum Electrodynamics | Jewish |
| 53 | Alfred Wegener | ||
| 54 | Stephen Hawking | Quantum Cosmology | atheist |
| 55 | Anton van Leeuwenhoek | the Simple Microscope | Dutch Reformed |
| 56 | Max von Laue | X-ray Crystallography | |
| 57 | Gustav Kirchhoff | Spectroscopy | |
| 58 | Hans Bethe | the Energy of the Sun | Jewish |
| 59 | Euclid | the Foundations of Mathematics | Platonism / Greek philosophy |
| 60 | Gregor Mendel | the Laws of Inheritance | Catholic (Augustinian monk) |
| 61 | Heike Kamerlingh Onnes | Superconductivity | |
| 62 | Thomas Hunt Morgan | the Chromosomal Theory of Heredity | |
| 63 | Hermann von Helmholtz | the Rise of German Science | |
| 64 | Paul Ehrlich | Chemotherapy | Jewish |
| 65 | Ernst Mayr | Evolutionary Theory | atheist |
| 66 | Charles Sherrington | Neurophysiology | |
| 67 | Theodosius Dobzhansky | the Modern Synthesis | Russian Orthodox |
| 68 | Max Delbruck | the Bacteriophage | |
| 69 | Jean Baptiste Lamarck | the Foundations of Biology | |
| 70 | William Bayliss | Modern Physiology | |
| 71 | Noam Chomsky | Twentieth-Century Linguistics | Jewish atheist |
| 72 | Frederick Sanger | the Genetic Code | |
| 73 | Lucretius | Scientific Thinking | Epicurean; atheist |
| 74 | John Dalton | the Theory of the Atom | Quaker |
| 75 | Louis Victor de Broglie | Wave/Particle Duality | |
| 76 | Carl Linnaeus | the Binomial Nomenclature | Christianity |
| 77 | Jean Piaget | Child Development | |
| 78 | George Gaylord Simpson | the Tempo of Evolution | |
| 79 | Claude Levi-Strauss | Structural Anthropology | Jewish |
| 80 | Lynn Margulis | Symbiosis Theory | Jewish |
| 81 | Karl Landsteiner | the Blood Groups | Jewish |
| 82 | Konrad Lorenz | Ethology | |
| 83 | Edward O. Wilson | Sociobiology | |
| 84 | Frederick Gowland Hopkins | Vitamins | |
| 85 | Gertrude Belle Elion | Pharmacology | |
| 86 | Hans Selye | the Stress Concept | |
| 87 | J. Robert Oppenheimer | the Atomic Era | Jewish |
| 88 | Edward Teller | the Bomb | Jewish |
| 89 | Willard Libby | Radioactive Dating | |
| 90 | Ernst Haeckel | the Biogenetic Principle | |
| 91 | Jonas Salk | Vaccination | Jewish |
| 92 | Emil Kraepelin | Twentieth-Century Psychiatry | |
| 93 | Trofim Lysenko | Soviet Genetics | Russian Orthodox; Communist |
| 94 | Francis Galton | Eugenics | |
| 95 | Alfred Binet | the I.Q. Test | |
| 96 | Alfred Kinsey | Human Sexuality | atheist |
| 97 | Alexander Fleming | Penicillin | Catholic |
| 98 | B. F. Skinner | Behaviorism | atheist |
| 99 | Wilhelm Wundt | the Founding of Psychology | atheist |
| 100 | Archimedes | the Beginning of Science | Greek philosophy |
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