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Great Idea #1

Great Idea #1. “ Science is a way of knowing about the natural world, based on reproducible observations, experiments and theory. ”. What is Science? An Overview. 1. Science as a way of knowing; how is it different from other ways of knowing? a. What is science?

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Great Idea #1

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  1. Great Idea #1 “Science is a way of knowing about the natural world, based on reproducible observations, experiments and theory.”

  2. What is Science? An Overview 1. Science as a way of knowing; how is it different from other ways of knowing? a. What is science? b. Why is science important? c. The syllabus d. BlackBoard e. i>Clickers f. Branches of science g. The sociology of science 2. The idealized scientific method a. The nature of scientific questions b. The 4-step scientific method c. Science as a social enterprise 3. Great Idea #1A: The universe is regular, predictable, quantifiable, and reproducible

  3. Science as a way of knowing • What do you do in a science class that’s different from philosophy or dance class? • Observations • Measurements • Experiments • Calculations • Reproducibility • Epistemology – how we know what we know. (The three umpires)

  4. Science as a way of knowing • “Science is the search for laws that describe the organization and evolution of the universe.” • Most of the really important questions cannot be answered by science, but science can help inform your decisions.

  5. Other Ways of Knowing • Art • A personal vision (Picasso story) • In art, each person brings his/her own truth.

  6. Other Ways of Knowing • Art • Political Science

  7. Other Ways of Knowing • Art • Political Science • Religion • Truth from revelation or sacred texts • Not in conflict with science

  8. Pseudoscience • Pseudoscience • Often based on belief, dogma • Ideas are not testable

  9. Pseudoscience • Pseudoscience • Often based on belief, dogma • Ideas are not testable • Evaluation of a claim • Are the ‘facts’ true as stated? • Is there an alternative explanation? • Is the claim falsifiable? • Has the claim been tested? • Does the claim require unreasonable changes in accepted ideas?

  10. Who Built Stonehenge?

  11. Who Built Stonehenge?

  12. Why is Science important? • Scientific principles are all around us, all the time (look at today’s newspaper!). • You’ll need science in your life: • As a professional (medicine, law, business) • As a consumer • As a parent • As a human being

  13. The Structure of Science • Disciplines • Historical (natural philosophy) • Modern (branches of science) • Different Approaches • Field researchers • Experimentalists • Theorists

  14. Branches of Science – Physics The study of matter in motion • Classical Physics • Mechanics • Gravity • Thermodynamics • Electricity and magnetism • Modern Physics • Nuclear & particle physics • Quantum mechanics • Relativity

  15. Branches of Science - Chemistry • The study of atoms and their interactions • Materials science • Organic chemistry (carbon) • Inorganic chemistry

  16. Branches of Science – Earth Science Study of the origin of Earth, its present state, the dynamics of Earth and other planets • Geology (rocks) • Geophysics (interior) • Oceanography (oceans) • Meteorology (atmosphere)

  17. Branches of Science –Life Sciences (Biology) • The study of living systems (at many scales) • Molecules • Cells • Organs • Organisms • Behavior • Ecosystems

  18. Hierarchy of Sciences Physics Chemistry Life Sciences Earth Science

  19. Mathematics: The Language of Science • Description of a tree • General • Poetic • Scientific • Mathematical • Size, height, diameter • Value of lumber

  20. The Role of Math in Science Linear Relationships Source: http://permanite.net/IRL/graph2.jpg

  21. The Role of Math in Science • Linear Relationships Source: http://permanite.net/IRL/graph2.jpg

  22. Distance vs. Time of Fall • Quadratic Relationships

  23. Science Organizations • AAAS = American Association for the Advancement of Science • Sigma Xi • The National Academies • Federal Funding Agencies: • NIH = National Institutes of Health • NASA = National Aeronautic and Space Administration • NSF = National Science Foundation • DOD = Department of Defense • DOE = Department of Energy

  24. Federal Spending for R & D

  25. Scientific Activities • Research • Publications (peer review) • Conferences • Grants • Education • Government policy • Business (R & D)

  26. Scientific Questions • Many important questions are beyond science • The meaning of life? • Is there a God? • Personal choices? • “Science is the art of substituting unimportant questions, which can be answered, for important question, which cannot.” Kenneth Boulding

  27. Scientific Questions 2. Scientific questions are varied in style • Existence questions: What’s out there? • Origin questions: How did they get there? • Process questions: How does it work? • Applied Questions: How can we use it?

  28. Scientific Questions (continued) • Answers to old questions often lead to new questions: • “To know anything well involves a profound sense of ignorance” John Ruskin • X-rays, tectonic plates, genetic code, buckeyballs • SETI

  29. Scientific Questions (continued) 4. Scientific questions are often interconnected: + Plate tectonics/evolution + Mass extinction/climate change 5. Some questions are not now scientific, but will be someday + Cosmology in 1908 + Consciousness today

  30. Scientific Questions (continued) • Most scientific questions cannot be answered completely: • Experimental error • Uncertainty principle • Chaos • Speed of light

  31. The Idealized Scientific Method

  32. Periodic Table of Elements Dimitri Mendelev (1834-1907)

  33. Periodic Table of Elements

  34. A Hierarchy of Scientific Ideas • Fact (a confirmed observation) • Hypothesis (an educated guess) • Law (a predictive mathematical description of nature) • Theory (a well established explanation of nature)

  35. What Motivates Scientists?(How do scientists measure success?) PERSONAL MOTIVES • Curiosity • Teaching & inspiring others • Peer recognition (publications, grants, awards) • Financial gain • Power and prestige Scientific fraud: Can you trust scientists?

  36. Dr. Albert Carl Koch

  37. Mastodon Source: http://www.nature.ca/exhibits/popups/images/mastodon.jpg Source: http://www.sdnhm.org/fieldguide/fossils/images/mastodon-melli.jpg

  38. Missouri Leviathan

  39. Basilosaurus Source: http://www.mheine.com/jpeg/basilo.jpg

  40. Albert Karl Koch’s Sea-Serpent

  41. The Nature of Science • Science works to defeat fraud and error • Bones = Data & observations • Assembled Skeletons = Hypothesis • Similar type bones = Prediction • Germans put together properly = Re-test • Science is self-correcting because new discoveries will be tested

  42. The universe is regular, predictable, quantifiable, and reproducible • What evidence might you offer that this statement is true? • What about 5,000 years ago?

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