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What is Science? Human Biology 1/18/16
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… a tool that allows us to get and organize knowledge of the physical and natural world and society through a well-established method. - OSU grad student … anything we do that employs the scientific method… Thus, science could be used to describe anything, from experimenting which spice is best for the soup or theorizing how black holes function. -OSU grad student … a way of thinking; an analytical mindset. It is a systematic way to answer questions or solve problems. -OSU grad student
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A process whose essential characteristics are 1) guided by natural law; 2) is explanatory by natural law; 3) is testable against the empirical world; 4) is falsifiable. – William R. Overton, U.S. District Judge in a ruling prohibiting an AR law giving balanced time for creation-science and evolution, 1982 The observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of natural phenomena. – American Heritage Dictionary Above all it is a methodology for acquiring testable knowledge about the natural world. – Stephen Jay Gould
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A process: methodology for generating new knowledge based on cycling the following progression: observation, explanation, prediction, test, results, conclusion. A product: new knowledge with the following characteristics: it is cumulative, knowledge expanding, explanatory, predictive, systematic, testable, verifiable, tentative, self-correcting. -OSU professor OR… … a way of baffling the uninitiated with incomprehensible jargon. It is a way of obtaining fat government grants. It is a way of achieving mastery over the physical world by threatening it with chaos and destruction.
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Scientific Method Observation Hypothesis Prediction Test of prediction
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Scientific Method Test of prediction – Treatment versus control group Independent vs dependent variables “control” confounding variables – large sample size – Cause and effect conclusions
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Scientific Method Types of (dependent) variables 1.Categorical (color, sex) 2.Discrete (number of fingers or leaves) 3.Continuous (weight, height) Appropriate ways to graph the above?
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Scientific Method Test of prediction – Hypothesis vs null hypothesis – Statistics is a tool
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Scientific Method 3 Criteria of a good prediction 1.Improbability 2.Deducibility 3.Testable
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Scientific Method Prediction is true – reject the null hypothesis – Conclude: data are consistent with the hypothesis – NOT: data prove the hypothesis Or prediction is false
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Scientific Method Conclusions are published Conclusions are challenged by others
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Scientific Method Think about the Scientific Method Think about bacteria: what do you know about bacteria? Where does it occur? What does it do? What does it need to grow? In groups of 3-4, list some observations about bacteria Generate possible explanations (hypotheses) that could explain your observations
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Is Science Objective? “The objectivity of SCIENCE, imperfect as it is, is not a function of the objectivity of SCIENTISTS. It is a function of the “logical” rules of the game. These are embodied in the specification of a good test, and thus in Conditions 1 and 2. So there is no reason why scientists should not try to justify their hypotheses and be very disappointed if they are refuted. The rules of the game ensure that the harder one tries to get a good justification, the greater the risk of refutation – unless the hypothesis is indeed on the right track.” – R.N. Giere, 1984. Understanding Scientific Reasoning
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Science and Society What obligations does Science have towards Society? – Tax dollars support a lot of scientific research – Ethical questions
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Deductive Arguments Moves from the general to the specific If the premises are true, then it is impossible for the conclusion to be false (valid).
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Examples of Deductive Arguments All CU students are mammals. All mammals have lungs. Therefore, all CU students have lungs. Valid, true premises; sound If it is snowing, then CU cancels classes. It is snowing. Thus, CU cancels classes. Valid, false premise; unsound
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Inductive Arguments Move from the specific to the general Strong: if premises are true then it’s probable that the conclusion is true. Cogent: an inductive argument that is strong and has all true premises
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Examples of Inductive arguments Bill is a partier. Most business majors are partiers. Thus, Bill is probably a business major. Strong but not necessary support for conclusion
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Deductive vs Inductive Which tends to expand knowledge? Which tends to preserve truth? Which has valid, sound arguments? Which has cogent, strong arguments?
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Deductive vs Inductive Which tends to expand knowledge? – inductive Which tends to preserve truth? – deductive Which has valid, sound arguments? – deductive Which has cogent, strong arguments? – inductive
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3 Types of Scientific Inquiry 1. Discovery science – relies upon making observations and descriptions of nature – Gathers and catalogs facts via discovery and detection of patterns – Asks who, what, where and when
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3 Types of Scientific Inquiry 2. Hypothesis-based (theoretical) Science – Explains and predicts by generating and testing models – Involves the proposal of hypotheses or possible explanations – Asks why and how
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3 Types of Scientific Inquiry 3. Technological Science – New methodology or process – Problem solving
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Models Models are used to represent reality They are used to make predictions about reality
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Facts, Laws and Theories Observation – Example: it’s raining outside Law – Example: Dalton’s Law Theory – a “meta-hypothesis” that explains why an observation occurs
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“A theory is a metascientific elaboration, distinct from the results of observation but consistent with them. By means of it a series of independent data and facts can be related and interpreted in a unified explanation. A theory’s validity depends on whether or not it can be tested against the facts; wherever it can no longer explain the latter, it shows its limitations and unsuitability. It must then be rethought,” – John Paul II. 1997. The Pope’s Message on Evolution. Quarterly Review of Biology 72(4): 381-383
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Deformed and declining populations of amphibians
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Could a parasite be blamed?
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Observational study Johnson et al. (1999) surveyed ponds to determine that frogs with deformities were only present if the parasite’s intermediate host snail was also present
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Controlled lab experiment
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Field experiment
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