Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Week 4: Complete Chapter 3 The Science of Astronomy How do humans employ scientific thinking? • Scientific thinking is based on everyday ideas of observation and trial trial-and-error and error experiments. • But science adds the requirement for an explanation of mechanisms – Observation alone is not enough 3.4 The Nature of Science Our goals for learning: • How can we distinguish science from nonscience? • What is a scientific theory? Idealized scientific method • Based on proposing and d ttesting ti hypotheses • hypothesis = educated guess Caveat • We see what we are looking for • e.g. Where are your keys when you finally find them? Science rarely proceeds in this idealized way… • Sometimes we start by “just looking” then coming up with possible explanations. • Sometimes we follow our intuition rather than a particular line of evidence. 1 Hallmarks of Science: #1 Hallmarks of Science: #2 Modern science seeks explanations for observed phenomena that rely solely on natural causes. Science progresses through the creation and testing of models of nature that explain p the observations as simply as possible. (A scientific model cannot include divine intervention) Hallmarks of Science: #3 A scientific model must make testable predictions about natural phenomena that would force us to revise or abandon the model if the predictions do not agree with observations. 3.5 Astrology Our goals for learning: How is astrology different from Astronomy? Does astrology have any scientific validity? (Is “Occam’s razor” our own “perfect spheres”?) Scientific theory? The word theory has a different meaning in science than in everyday life. In science, a theory is NOT the same as a hypothesis rather: hypothesis, A scientific theory must: —Explain a wide variety of observations with a few simple principles, AND —Must be supported by a large, compelling body of evidence. —Must NOT have failed any crucial test of its validity. How is astrology different from Astronomy? Astronomy is a science focused on learning about how stars, planets, and other celestial objects j work. astrology is a search for hidden influences on human lives based on the positions of planets and stars in the sky. 2 Does astrology have any scientific validity? What have we learned? Scientific tests have shown that astrological predictions are no more accurate than we should expect from pure chance. Science or Technology? Science is the process of inquiry Science seeks to understand HOW nature operates by using observation, reasoning, theory. Science can use technology (better thermometers), but does not require it. Technology is the process of tooltool-making and invention. Technology performs empirically to reach a goal (e.g. perfect machines). Often, but not always using theory and prediction derived from science. Science and Objectivity The Uncontrolled Experiment: Typical of journalism (e.g., “40% of children improved”) Which children; over what time; compared to whom? The Controlled Experiment: states how much better (1%, 10%, 200%) than a control. In any set of observations, the dependent variable will change in response to the independent or manipulated variable (e.g., growth of corn in soil receiving different levels of fertilizer). Growth of corn is dependent upon the level of fertilizer applied Failing to isolate variables for cause and effect is the single biggest difference between Science and Pseudoscience. How is astrology different from astronomy? – Astronomy is the scientific study of the universe and the celestial objects within it. – Astrology assumes that the positions of celestial objects influence human events. Does astrology have any scientific validity? – Scientific tests show that the predictions of astrology are no more accurate than pure chance. So what were the Greeks? Science use empirical methods? Yes, but only as part of the process. Science uses technology? Yes Yes, but only for testing hypotheses. Are science and technology synonymous? No, technology is an application of science Technology is the practical application of knowledge in an area (e.g. engineering) Science and Pseudoscience Pseudoscience: discarded scientific ideas, unfounded ideas about the world world— —also called fringe science. Cannot be tested Often presented with a siege or conspiracy theory mentality Poor or nonexistent use of statistics 3 Characteristics of Pseudoscience • • • • • • • • Appears to be scientific Often commingled with a political or religious agenda— agenda —example: Nazi theories of blood purity. Makes assertions it is scientific, but rejects rigorous scientific testing Quickly accepted by nonnon-scientists Often represented as the grand solution Fatally flawed in content, method, or both Fails to differentiate between cause and effect Cannot be tested (can’t test, can’t prove wrong!) Dinosaurs on Venus The Theory of Natural Selection • What lives in jungles? • • • Al & Chuck’s Excellent Scientific Adventure Charles Darwin were Naturalists. 19th Century Naturalists amassed huge collections of anything natural. They practiced inductive reasoning by examining the range of variations in these collections. Venus is V i 100% cloud l d covered. covered d. Where do we see lots of clouds? • The more extraordinary the claim, the more extraordinary the evidence needs to be. –Carl Sagan Alfred Wallace & • • Jungles Dinosaurs Observation: Can’t see a thing. Conclusion: Dinosaurs on Venus This was their Hypothesis: • That variation in plants and animals is a result of random mutations. • Independently; they proposed Natural Selection (from mutations) as the driving force of Evolution (1850’s). But what made it work? • • • • Random Mutations can be good or bad depending on the environment. Stated that nature was implicitly easier for one individual or group over another if there was an inherited trait which made the offspring more successful. There is no explicit force implied. • • • Gregor Mendel demonstrated that inherited traits & mutations were passed from one generation to the next (1860’s). Genetic Mutations may be related to environmental incidents in the life of a single parent. Learned attributes are not passed along! None of this was news to Farmers or Ranchers. It was just BREEDING. 4 Muddy Thinking + PseudoScience = And if Humans are animals too... • • • Sir Francis Galton coins the term Eugenics (well--born) (well born).. Advocates controlling the birthbirthrate of the unfit (1900 1900)). T.X. Huxley introduces the term Survival of the Fittest which eventually led to the concept of Social Darwinism. Darwinism. Oneida Communities and controlled breeding of humans becomes widespread in the U.S. Dinosaurs on Venus and Aryan Supremacy • • Original Hypothesis: That variation in plants and animals is a result of random mutations. Social Response: World War II -and and-Ethnic Cleansing • National Socialists use Eugenics arguments to defend racial policies. • Nazi’s Nazi s envisioned a Master Race (themselves). • 10 million+ Jews, Slavs, & Catholics are executed (to avoid “contaminating” the Aryan Gene Pool). Chapter 3 Redux • Understanding the simple observations of Chapter 2 took humans thousands of years. • Achieved that understanding through a rigorous process of scientific inquiry. • Science itself is a way of making sense of observations • Science, by definition, must be flawed; but it works! Term Exam #1 • Chapters 1-3 and notes from Weeks 1-4. • 45 objective @ 2 points each and 1 essay (selected from 3 choices) @ 10 points. • Particular emphasis on Lunar Phases. • Backwards definitions common. • Just like real life – open book and open notes….but be careful not to trip on this. 5