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The Nature of Scientific Inquiry How Science Works
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Foundations of Science Natural Cause: The universe behaves in a predictable way under “rules” that can be determined through observation and experimentation. Efficient Cause: effect follows cause (no Final Cause, no teleological)
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Foundations of Science Uniformity: The “rules” are constant through space and time. Parsimony: All other things being equal, the simplest explanation is the best. Objectivity: The scientist must set aside preconceived concepts that might prejudice investigation and interpretation.
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Foundations of Science Falsifiability (Popper) every hypothesis and theory is subject to being proven false at any time Paradigms (Kuhn) scientists operate under overarching ideas that determine the areas investigated and how the results are interpreted new ideas that vary significantly from the existing paradigm must overturn the existing paradigm in order to be taken seriously
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Scientific Investigation Characteristics objective systematic precise (of known precision) accurate (of known accuracy) creative insightful rational
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Scientific Investigation “Scientific Method” no single method a pattern for how to examine things unassailable proof and truth are very rare (if they exist at all) must document
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Scientific Method Observation Question Hypothesis Investigation observation experimentation Theory
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Theory & Hypothesis Hypothesis a working explanation or “educated guess” competing hypotheses are often investigated simultaneously Theory the best explanation supported by a preponderance of the evidence the best a scientist can hope for
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Scientific Explanations must be natural must be supported by available data must be testable & falsifiable subject to revision or refinement or negation should be predictive
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Scientific Explanations no arguments from or appeals to authority can & should build on published work of others must be prepared to defend previous work as well
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Scientific Uncertainty always present goal: known range < 1%: extremely unlikely 1-10%: little chance, very unlikely 10-33%: some chance, unlikely 33-66%: medium likelihood 66-90%: likely, probable 90-99%: very likely, very probable > 99%: virtual certainty (from: “Uncertain Science…Uncertain World,” Pollack, 2003)
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Scientific Publication Oral Presentation Poster Presentation Peer Reviewed Scientific Report Journal Text/Reference
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Why give science precedence? It works! Examples Germ theory: explains why we get sick Plate tectonics theory: explains earthquakes & volcanoes & predicts economic deposits Gravity theory: allows safe space travel & structure design Natural selection theory: agricultural development, improved medical practice (laboratory experimentation & germ control), enhanced pest control
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