At the same time it must be admitted that the popularisation of science, whether by lecture or essay, has its drawbacks.
They will follow the lead of Byron, who, in his horror at the popularisation of the waltz, declared that Terpsichore was henceforth "the least a vestal virgin of the Nine.
Perhaps the popularisation of Italian art, as well as Dickens, has something to do with it.
For the popularisation of science, which was to be one of the features of the nineteenth century, was in fact a condition of the success of the idea of Progress.
It may be noticed that the self-complacency of the age was promoted by the popularisation of scientific knowledge.
We saw that the "solidarity" of the sciences was one of the conceptions associated with the theory of intellectual progress, and that the popularisation of knowledge was another.
The significance of the Plurality of Worlds is indeed much greater than that of a pioneer work in popularisation and a model in the art of making technical subjects interesting.
As a matter of fact, most works of popularisation do not conform to the modern ideal of historical exposition; we frequently find in them survivals of the ancient ideal, that of antiquity, the Renaissance, and the romantic school.
Signor Canestrini contributed to the Annuario Filosofico del Libero Pensiero, and is known for his popularisation of the works of Darwin, which he has translated into Italian.
There are certainly risks attached to the popularisation of the results of scientific research.
From the point of view of the history of European thought his importance lies in his popularisation in France of the Newtonian physics.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "popularisation" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.