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Michael S.Schneider

Michael S.SchneiderA Beginner's Guide to Constructing the Universe yazarı
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Dr. Schneider received his medical degree from the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in 1977 and completed his residency in Internal Medicine at Dartmouth's Hitchcock Medical Center in 1980. He additionally completed his Fellowship through Harvard University at Massachusetts General Hospital, specializing in Pulmonary Diseases and Exercise Physiology. Dr. Schneider is board certified in Internal Medicine and in Pulmonary Diseases. He currently serves as Professor of Clinical Medicine at the University of Rochester School of Medicine. Throughout his career, Dr. Schneider has held a variety of professional positions and appointments, and has received numerous honors and awards. Among his most recent honors, he was named as a Fellow of the American College of Physicians in 2000. Currently, in addition to his medical practice and teaching commitments, Dr. Schneider serves as the Administrative Site Medical Director for the Olsan Medical Group. He, additionally, chairs the Site Director's Council of the URMC Primary Care Network. He presently serves on the Alumni Council of the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. His community interests extend to chairing the Preferred Health Network of Preferred Care and as a board member of MVP Health Inc.
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For the nature of number is to be informative, guiding and instructive for anybody in everything that is subject to doubt and that is unknown. For nothing about things would be comprehensible to anybody, neither of things in themselves, nor of one in relation to the other, if number and its essence were nonexistent…The essence of number, like harmony, does not allow misunderstanding, for this is strange to it. Deception and envy are inherent to the unbounded, unknowable, and unreasonable…Truth, however, is inherent in the nature of number and inbred in it.
Sayfa 19 - Philolaus (Fifth century B.C., Greek Pythagorean philosopher
Plato wrote that all knowledge is already deep within us, so no one can really teach us anything new. But we can remind each other of the archetypal principles of number and nature we already know but may have forgotten.
Sayfa 15
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The One
Geometry is also the bridge between the One and the Many. When you draw one of its basic figures—a circle, say, or a triangle or regular polygon —you do not copy someone else’s drawing; your model is the abstract ideal of a circle or triangle. It is the perfect form, the unchanging, unmanifest One. Below it are the Many—the expressions of that figure in design, art, and architecture.
All things are full of signs, and it is a wise man who can learn about one thing from another.
Sayfa 17 - Plotinus (205–270, Roman Neoplatonic philosopher)

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