Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nonscience> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 24 of
24
with 100 items per page.
- Nonscience abstract "Nonscience is a book which claims to have the longest and most complex title in publishing history.Its full title is Nonscience and the Pseudotransmogrificationalific Egocentrified Reorientational Proclivities Inherently Intracorporated In Expertistical Cerebrointellectualised Redeploymentation with Special Reference to Quasi-Notional Fashionistic Normativity, The Indoctrinationalistic Methodological Modalities and Scalar Socio-Economic Promulgationary Improvementalisationalism Predelineated Positotaxically Toward Individualistified Mass-Acceptance Gratificationalistic Securipermanentalisationary Professionism, or How To Rule The World, London: Wolfe Publishing (ISBN 0-7234-0449-6).Its author Brian J. Ford pokes fun at those who conceal their lack of real expertise by using long and complicated words, whilst making the serious point that many people are fooled by these so-called experts. Some consider the book prescient, thinking that modern society, where decisions are taken by unseen experts, is much as Ford predicted.".
- Nonscience wikiPageExternalLink wnonscia.htm.
- Nonscience wikiPageID "498928".
- Nonscience wikiPageRevisionID "577530191".
- Nonscience hasPhotoCollection Nonscience.
- Nonscience subject Category:1971_books.
- Nonscience type 1971Books.
- Nonscience type Artifact100021939.
- Nonscience type Book106410904.
- Nonscience type Creation103129123.
- Nonscience type Object100002684.
- Nonscience type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Nonscience type Product104007894.
- Nonscience type Publication106589574.
- Nonscience type Whole100003553.
- Nonscience type Work104599396.
- Nonscience comment "Nonscience is a book which claims to have the longest and most complex title in publishing history.Its full title is Nonscience and the Pseudotransmogrificationalific Egocentrified Reorientational Proclivities Inherently Intracorporated In Expertistical Cerebrointellectualised Redeploymentation with Special Reference to Quasi-Notional Fashionistic Normativity, The Indoctrinationalistic Methodological Modalities and Scalar Socio-Economic Promulgationary Improvementalisationalism Predelineated Positotaxically Toward Individualistified Mass-Acceptance Gratificationalistic Securipermanentalisationary Professionism, or How To Rule The World, London: Wolfe Publishing (ISBN 0-7234-0449-6).Its author Brian J. ".
- Nonscience label "Nonscience".
- Nonscience sameAs m.02hqq_.
- Nonscience sameAs Q7049578.
- Nonscience sameAs Q7049578.
- Nonscience sameAs Nonscience.
- Nonscience wasDerivedFrom Nonscience?oldid=577530191.
- Nonscience isPrimaryTopicOf Nonscience.