In education, schools refers to either a particular “school of thought”, a group of individuals focused on a particular subject or problem, and or universities associated with a particular branch of knowledge, or sometimes with a particular person’s theories and or philosophy.
Hmolscience | Physical humanities
The following are some of the noted hmolscience-themed schools, physical humanities, or two cultures schools or departments (see: two cultures department):
● American school of econophysics
● Chinese social physics school
● Harvard Pareto circle
● Indian school of econophysics (aka "Kolkata school" according to Victor Yakovenko)
● Lausanne school of physical economics
● Mechanistic school | Mechanistic school of social thermodynamics | Pitirim Sorokin (1928)
● Odum school
● Physiocrats | referred to as a "school" by Steve Keen (2017) (Ѻ)
● Princeton Department of Social Physics
● Roegen-Daly school
● Romanian school of physical socioeconomics
Thermodynamic schools
● Leiden University
● École Polytechnique
● Glasgow school of thermodynamics
● Berlin school of thermodynamics
● Edinburgh school of thermodynamics
● Gibbsian school
● Dutch school of thermodynamics
● “Osmotic school” of thermodynamics | See: Johannes van Laar [1]
● Dresden school of thermodynamics
● Energetics school
● Brussels school of thermodynamics
● Lewis school of thermodynamics
● MIT school of thermodynamics
Universities
The following are noted universities cited so repetitively, within Hmolpedia, that they have their own pages:
● University of California, Berkeley
● University of Chicago
See also
● Two cultures synergy
References
1. Kragh, Helge and Weininger, Stephen J. (1996). “Sooner Science than Confusion: the Tortuous Entry of Entropy into Chemist” (abs), Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences, 27(1): 91-130.
Hmolscience | Physical humanities
The following are some of the noted hmolscience-themed schools, physical humanities, or two cultures schools or departments (see: two cultures department):
● American school of econophysics
● Chinese social physics school
● Harvard Pareto circle
● Indian school of econophysics (aka "Kolkata school" according to Victor Yakovenko)
● Lausanne school of physical economics
● Mechanistic school | Mechanistic school of social thermodynamics | Pitirim Sorokin (1928)
● Odum school
● Physiocrats | referred to as a "school" by Steve Keen (2017) (Ѻ)
● Princeton Department of Social Physics
● Roegen-Daly school
● Romanian school of physical socioeconomics
Thermodynamic schools
See main: Schools of thermodynamicsThe following are some of the various historical schools of thermodynamics, generally listed chronologically:
● Leiden University
● École Polytechnique
● Glasgow school of thermodynamics
● Berlin school of thermodynamics
● Edinburgh school of thermodynamics
● Gibbsian school
● Dutch school of thermodynamics
● “Osmotic school” of thermodynamics | See: Johannes van Laar [1]
● Dresden school of thermodynamics
● Energetics school
● Brussels school of thermodynamics
● Lewis school of thermodynamics
● MIT school of thermodynamics
Universities
The following are noted universities cited so repetitively, within Hmolpedia, that they have their own pages:
● University of California, Berkeley
● University of Chicago
See also
● Two cultures synergy
References
1. Kragh, Helge and Weininger, Stephen J. (1996). “Sooner Science than Confusion: the Tortuous Entry of Entropy into Chemist” (abs), Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences, 27(1): 91-130.