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TOK II – Areas of Knowledge -

TOK II – Areas of Knowledge -. The Natural Sciences – Part I. Discussion Questions. Is science the only road to knowledge? Does science have a monopoly on truth? How far do the natural sciences give us certainty?. The Natural Sciences. Scientific Revolution – 17 th Century Galileo Galilei

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TOK II – Areas of Knowledge -

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  1. TOK II – Areas of Knowledge - The Natural Sciences – Part I

  2. Discussion Questions • Is science the only road to knowledge? • Does science have a monopoly on truth? • How far do the natural sciences give us certainty?

  3. The Natural Sciences • Scientific Revolution – 17th Century • Galileo Galilei • Sir Issac Newton • Discoveries of the Past 300 Years • Fundamental laws of physics • 92 Elements of the Periodic Table • DNA Decoding

  4. Natural Sciences • Natural Sciences include: • Physics • Chemistry • Biology

  5. The Natural Sciences • Some argue that science is the only road to knowledge • Natural Sciences are the dominant cognitive paradigm (model of knowledge) • Science is not God and has weaknesses and limitations • Scientific beliefs change over time.

  6. Discussion Questions • Give some examples of things that were believed to be true by 19th century scientists but which we now know to be false. • Are scientists playing God? How?

  7. Discussion Questions • What connotations does the word science have for you? Are they positive, negative, or mixed? • How are scientists viewed in popular culture, such as novels and movies? Are they generally seen as heroes or as villains?

  8. Natural Sciences • How have advertisers used the language of science to market products?

  9. Science & Marketing

  10. Science vs. Pseudo-Science • All of the following have been described as scientific: • Acupuncture – needles & pins • Astrology – the stars • Creationism – intelligent design • Crystology – rocks that heal • Feng shui – flow by organization • Graphology - handwriting • Homeopathy – natural herbs • Phrenology – skull study

  11. Pseudo-Science (Fake Science) • Some people are willing to subject their beliefs to scientific tests, others simply state their beliefs are scientific. • Racists often claim their beliefs on biological research. • Pseudo-science claims the status of science while lacking its substance.

  12. Discussion Questions • What is the difference between astronomy & astrology? • As a scientist, how would you go about trying to test the claims of astrology?

  13. Science & Pseudo-Science –The Differences • The main difference is that scientific hypotheses are testable – pseudo-science is not. • Two ways pseudo science is NOT testable: • Vagueness – a genuine scientific claim needs some kind of criteria (preferable measurable). • Ad hoc exceptions – a scientific hypothesis is general in nature – “All swans are white.”

  14. Science & Pseudo-Science –The Differences • It will be easy to test a hypothesis if the following are true: • It is clearly stated and makes precise rather than vague predictions. • It does not keep making ad hoc exceptions when it comes across counter-examples.

  15. Discussion Question • Which of the following statements makes scientifically testable claims? • In 2010 you may or may not win the lottery • It always rains on Tuesdays • We have all lived past lives, but most of us are too unenlightened to remember them • Real men don’t cry • Unlike magnetic poles attract each other • Everyone is selfish • Acid turns litmus paper red • Something surprising will happen to you next week

  16. The Scientific Method • What distinguishes science from non-science is a distinctive method. • Science is not so much a fixed body of knowledge as a way of thinking about the world.

  17. Discussion Question • How is each of the following similar to scientific activity and how is it different? • Baking a cake by following a recipe. • “Experimenting” with ingredients and making your own recipe. • Collecting and organizing stamps from around the world. • Repairing a car that has broken down.

  18. Inductivism • Inductivism is the traditional picture of the scientific method: • Observation • Hypothesis • Experiment • Law • Theory

  19. Inductivism • 1) Observation – observe and classify data • 2) Hypothesis – look for a pattern and make a guess • 3) Experiment – test the hypothesis • Controllability – vary only one factor at a time to determine the effect • Measurability – measure relevant variables • Repeatability – experiement can be repeated with same results.

  20. Inductivism cont… • 4) Law – if the experiment confirms the hypothesis and id is controllable, measurable, and repeatable. • 5) Theory – explains and unifies various laws and explains why laws are the way they are and provides focus for further research.

  21. The Copernican Revolution • Ptolemy (85-165) – Earth centered theory (geocentric) • Copernicus (1473-1543) – Sun centered theory (heliocentric) • How did each develop their theories?

  22. The Copernican Revolution • Observation: new and better observations made Ptolemy’s model more complicated. • Hypothesis: more elegant approach to make the sun the center. • Prediction: Copernicus theorized that Venus becomes a different size through observations at different times of year – Galileo (1564-1642) confirmed this theory.

  23. The Copernican Revolution • Law: Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) – developed laws of planetary motion based on Copernicus and Galileo. • Theory: Isaac Newton (1642-1727) – theory of gravity allowed explanation of a wide variety of phenomena

  24. The Copernican Revolution • Newtonian physics – there is a force of attraction between objects whose strength is directly proportional to their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them (if you double the distance between two objects, the gravitational attraction between them will be ¼ of its original strength)

  25. The Copernican Revolution • Newtonian physics thus explains many things: • Why an apple falls from a tree • Why people have weight • The movement of the tides • The orbit of the planets

  26. The Copernican Revolution • The following points are taken from the Copernican Revolution: • Scientific progress needs a background of careful observation • Technology can extend our powers of observation • Imagination plays a role in the development of new scientific ideas • Mathematics plays a central role in the development of scientific ideas. • Many scientific discoveries are counter-intuitive – go against common sense.

  27. Discussion • Try and explain the following to someone who does not know much about physics: • If the earth is round and rotating on its axis, how come it doesn’t feel like we are moving? • If the Earth is round, why don’t people fall off the bottom? • Since birds fly far slower than the Earth rotates, how come they don’t get left behind when they fly in the direction of the rotation (east to west)?

  28. Homework 1 • Research the placebo effect and give an explanation of it. What is its relevance when we evaluate the claims of alternative medicines?

  29. Homework - 2 • Each of the following elements below is relevant to the scientific method. Try to put them is sequential order and write a short description about how a scientist typically works. • Experiment, hypothesis, measurement, repeatability, induction, law, observation, theory.

  30. TOK II – Areas of Knowledge - The Natural Sciences – Part II

  31. 4 Problems with Observation • Relevance – you must begin with what is relevant and irrelevant to the problem. • Expectations – expectations can influence what we see • Expert Seeing – use of scientific equipment can often further complicate things • The Observer Effect – the act can affect the outcome.

  32. Problems with Observation • Relevance – it is always possible to overlook a factor • Expectations – overconfidence • Expert Seeing – observer is only as good as their equipment. • The Observer Effect – the observer changes the experiment – thermometer in the hot tea.

  33. Complications of Testing Hypotheses • Confirmation Bias – people look for evidence that confirms and ignore what goes against them. • A good scientist is aware of confirmation bias.

  34. Complications of Testing Hypotheses • Background assumptions – we make assumptions that at any time could be false. • Parallax – (ex. Stellar) relative position of stars changes as the earth moves around the sun.

  35. Complications of Testing Hypotheses • Many different hypotheses are consistent with a given set of data. • Principle of simplicity – when given two complicated theories which make exactly the same predictions the simpler theory is to be preferred.

  36. The Problem of Induction • Inductive reasoning goes from the particular to the general (all metals expand/all mammals are warm blooded)

  37. Practical Problems • How many observations should we make until we are entitled to make a generalization? • No “hard or fast rule about “how many?” • We have observed a minute fraction of the universe, yet we apply the laws we have learned to all of the universe.

  38. Theoretical Problems • Observation is supposed to be an empirical discipline which makes no claims past what is observed. • Observation is supposed to distinguish science from pseudoscience.

  39. Falsification • Karl Popper (1902-1994) – tried to distinguish science from pseudoscience (Marxism/psychoanalysis). • “A theory that explains everything explains nothing” – a scientific theory must put itself at risk to be disproven.

  40. Conjectures & Refutations • A conjecture is basically an imaginative hypothesis – no mechanical way of coming up with good hypotheses on the basis of observational data. • A scientific conjecture is testable • Refutation needs only find one instance to disprove a hypothesis.

  41. Conjectures & Refutations • Popper believed instead of trying to prove something true, try to find faults instead. • For science to progress it must constantly question shortcomings. • Popper believed that an established theory is the best we have for the time being.

  42. Criticisms of Popper • Falsification • Conclusive in theory but not in practice • No more conclusive than verification • Finding a single counter-example is not enough to overturn a law of nature. • When a conflict occurs between hypothesis and observation we have a choice to either reject the hypothesis, or we can reject the observation.

  43. Examples of Refused abandoned Theories • Newton’s theory of gravity – gravity would cause universe to crunch • Mendeleyev – some atomic weights did not quite fit his model • Darwin – Earth must be 100s of millions of years old to fit his theory even though science at the time put it about 100 million years old.

  44. Criticisms of Popper • Auxiliary hypotheses can rescue a falsified theory • Background assumptions could have been wrong or experimental error – hard to disprove hard facts • No such thing as a perfect theory – auxiliary hypothesis.

  45. Criticisms of Popper • The rationalist strand in scientific thinking • When there is a conflict between observation and hypothesis, there are 3 options: • Reject the hypothesis • Reject the observation • Accept both and form an auxiliary hypothesis • A rationalist sees reason as the main source of knowledge – order to things • An empiricist sees experience as the main source of knowledge.

  46. Summaryof Popper and Criticisms • Scientific theories can not be conclusively verified because of the problem of induction; and they cannot be conclusively verified because of the problem of induction. • The concept of proof only applies to math and logic. • Science cannot prove things in an absolute sense.

  47. Thomas Kuhn (1922-1996) • Historian/Philosopher of Science • Introduce the concept of the paradigm.

  48. Science & Society According to Kuhn • Paradigm – an overarching theory shared by a community of scientists, such as physicists, chemists, or biologists, which is used to make sense of some aspect of reality. • i.e. – Newtonian mechanics in physics, Atomic theory in chemistry, & Evolutionary theory in biology.

  49. Normal Science • The vast majority of scientists are so busy solving problems within a paradigm they take the actual paradigm for granted. • A scientist cannot endlessly question assumptions • Newton, Dalton, & Darwin were the architects – scientists today are the bricklayers.

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