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  2. Contest competition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contest_competition

    Contest competition is the opposite of scramble competition, a situation in which available resources are shared equally among individuals. As contest competition allows the monopolization of resources, offspring will typically always be produced and survive until adulthood independent of the population size, resulting in stable population ...

  3. Unity of science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unity_of_science

    The unity of science is a thesis in philosophy of science that says that all the sciences form a unified whole. The variants of the thesis can be classified as ontological (giving a unified account of the structure of reality) and/or as epistemic/pragmatic (giving a unified account of how the activities and products of science work). [1]

  4. The Philosophy of Composition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Philosophy_of_Composition

    "The Philosophy of Composition" is an 1846 essay written by American writer Edgar Allan Poe that elucidates a theory about how good writers write when they write well. He concludes that length, "unity of effect" and a logical method are important considerations for good writing.

  5. Unified Science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_science

    "Unified Science" can refer to any of three related strands in contemporary thought.. Belief in the unity of science was a central tenet of logical positivism.Different logical positivists construed this doctrine in several different ways, e.g. as a reductionist thesis, that the objects investigated by the special sciences reduce to the objects of a common, putatively more basic domain of ...

  6. Philosophy of science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_science

    Nicholas Maxwell has argued for some decades that unity rather than simplicity is the key non-empirical factor in influencing the choice of theory in science, persistent preference for unified theories in effect committing science to the acceptance of a metaphysical thesis concerning unity in nature. In order to improve this problematic thesis ...

  7. Competition (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competition_(biology)

    Competition is an interaction between organisms or species in which both require one or more resources that are in limited supply (such as food, water, or territory). [1] Competition lowers the fitness of both organisms involved since the presence of one of the organisms always reduces the amount of the resource available to the other. [2]

  8. United States Academic Decathlon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Academic...

    The competition consists of seven objective multiple choice tests, two subjective performance events, and an essay. Academic Decathlon was created by Robert Peterson in 1968 for local schools in Orange County, California , and was expanded nationally in 1981 by Robert Peterson, William Patton, first President of the new USAD Board; and Phillip ...

  9. International Encyclopedia of Unified Science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Encyclopedia...

    "The unity of science as a historico-sociological goal: from the primacy of physics to the epistemological priority of sociology". Reflexive epistemology: the philosophical legacy of Otto Neurath . Boston studies in the philosophy of science.