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The Scientific Method

The Scientific Method. …and the Nature of Science. What is science?. Science is the total collection of knowledge gained by observation of the physical universe. It tries to answer the questions "how" and "why." It is a logical way of problem solving. It is basically common sense.

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The Scientific Method

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  1. The Scientific Method …and the Nature of Science

  2. What is science? • Science is the total collection of knowledge gained by observation of the physical universe. • It tries to answer the questions "how" and "why." • It is a logical way of problem solving. • It is basically common sense.

  3. The Scientific World View • The world is understandable - truth exists • Scientific theories are subject to change • Science cannot provide answers to all questions

  4. Characteristics of Science • Science is a process • Scientific theories must be falsifiable • Scientific theories must be able to predict • Scientific experiments must be repeatable • Confidence in theories is not absolute

  5. The Limitations of Science • Cannot make value judgments. • Cannot prove something doesn't exist (universal negative). • Scientific investigation is as limited as the instruments we use.

  6. Inductive and Deductive Approaches • Inductive Approach • Empirical data leads to generalization • Experiments or observations lead to predictions about the future • Used by scientists trying to discover or explain phenomena • Deductive Approach • Observations lead to explanations about past events or observed phenomena • Post-dictions can be tested with experiments • Used by Police and CSI specialists

  7. Inductive Approach Example • Empirical Data • The more times I water my grass during the week, the greener the grass becomes • Generalization • More water equals greener grass • This yields correlation only • not cause and effect

  8. Deductive Approach Example General idea More water equals greener grass Prediction The more I water, the greener the grass will become Experiment Vary the amount of water and measure how green the grass becomes

  9. Scientific Statements • Facts - things that are observable and indisputable. • Data - any piece of information; usually gained through experimentation. • Theories - explanations usually based on evidence (may be wrong). • Models - man-made ideas to help us visualize scientific concepts. • Laws - statements that describe patterns in nature with no known exceptions.

  10. The Scientific Method • Observe the situation • Ask a question • Turn that question into a testable idea • Predict the outcome of your experiment • Perform your experiment • Analyze the results • Evaluate your idea or hypothesis

  11. Systems of Measurement • English System of Measurement: is the one you use commonly, and includes pounds, feet, and gallons. • International System of Measurement or SI: is called the metric system in the US. It’s based on units of ten, and all science measurements use this system. • Know these SI units: • Meter - unit of length (about a yard) • Kilogram - unit of mass (about ½ a pound) • Liter - unit of volume (about a quart) • Celsius Degrees - temperature unit (about ½ degree F°) • Second - unit of time (same unit in metric, subdivides by tenths)

  12. It’s All Greek to Me! • Hex/Hexa - 6 • Hepta - 7 • Octa - 8 • Deca - 10 • Hecaton 100 • Mono - 1 • Duo/Di - 2 • Tri - 3 • Tetra - 4 • Penta - 5

  13. Friends, Romans, Countrymen! • 7 - septem • 8 - octo • 9 - novem • 10 - decem • 100 - centum • 1000 - mille • 1 - una • 2 - duo • 3 - tres, tria • 4 - quattuor • 5 - quinque • 6 - sex

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