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Social Science & Scientific Inquiry What makes social science “scientific?”
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What is Science?
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“Pre-reqs” for Scientific Thinking Curiosity: Desire to know WHY? And HOW? Scepticism: Re-examine past explanations and re-evaluate evidence Objectivity: Try to not let personal preconceptions, prejudices, or desires influence interpretation of facts
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Science Not just what we know, but how we know What we know: Scientific Knowledge – Body of knowledge that has been systematically gathered, classified, related, and interpreted How we know: Scientific Method – Method of acquiring knowledge through systematic observation, measurement, and/or experiment Goal: Discover rules that explain natural or social phenomena
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Two Pillars of Scientific Knowledge Logic Evidence
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Scientific Method: Steps The “rules” for building scientific knowledge Make Observations and Ask a Question Do Background Research Construct a Hypothesis (“Educated Guess”) to Explain Observations Collect Evidence through More Observation to Test the Hypothesis Analyze or Interpret the Data and Draw a Conclusion
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Scientific Method: Criteria The “rules” for building scientific knowledge Reliability: Other researchers can independently repeat the study and obtain similar results Precision: Concepts must be defined with enough precision that other researchers can use those definitions to measure or study them too Falsifiability: A theory must be able to be tested Parsimony: When there is more than one explanation for a phenomena, accept the most simple explanation
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“Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.” Carl Sagan American Scientist & Writer, 1934 – 1996
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Film: Myth Busters - Penny Drop
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Film: Myth Busters Penny Drop Is it scientific? Why or why not?
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Critical Response Paragraphs! See hand-out for guidelines First Assignment: How does “Myth Busters – Lights On or Off?” demonstrate the scientific method? DUE: Thursday, September 5, In-class OR by e-mail by midnight
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Film: Myth Busters – Lights On or Off
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Scientific Knowledge: Two Categories Natural Sciences “Hard Sciences” Examples: Biology Chemistry Physics Geology Social Sciences “Soft Sciences” Examples: Sociology Psychology Economics Political Science
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What’s the difference? Some Challenges for SOCIAL Science Ambiguity: Social sciences deals with concepts hard to define and measure; Natural sciences tend to be more precise, accurate, specific – Need to provide very clear definitions for what we observe and measure
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What’s the difference? Some Challenges for SOCIAL Science Ambiguity: Social sciences deals with concepts hard to define and measure; Natural sciences tend to be more precise, accurate, specific – Need to provide very clear definitions for what we observe and measure Human element: Sometimes more difficult to set aside personal biases when studying other people – Try to recognize all your own personal biases that might influence your findings
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Do Opposites Attract? Read the two articles What variables are they looking at to determine if opposites attract? Are the articles in total disagreement? Do you think the headlines are misleading or not?
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Summary Science is not just a body of knowledge, but also the way we acquire the knowledge Another way to say it: Science is not just a product, but a process Social science is scientific because it uses evidence and logic to explain social phenomena
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