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Does science produce knowledge?

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Title: Does science produce knowledge?


1
Does science produce knowledge?
2
Biology is a science
  • Atkins on Science

3
What is science?
  • What distinguishes science from other ways of
    knowing?
  • How does science provide knowledge?
  • Does science provide us with truth?
  • Are there limits to what science can tell us?

4
What is Science?
Methods of investigation based on the testing of
falsifiable (naturalistic) hypotheses that can
never be absolutely verified
-Why never absolutely verified?
  • No amount of testing can guarantee absolute truth
  • The complexity of reality precludes certain
    knowledge

5
Science methodology
  • Observation
  • Patterns
  • Explanation
  • Hypothesis
  • Experimentation
  • Verify/reject explanation

6
Science observation
7
Science provides useful and practical
approximations of reality
  • Scientific knowledge changes over time
  • Scientific knowledge is uncertain
  • Light and mirrors

8
Science provides theories to help us understand
how the world operates
  • Atomic theory
  • Gravitational theory
  • Evolutionary theory

Are theories true?
9
Is science an objective endeavor?
  • Bias of investigators
  • Social and cultural influences on interpretations
    of data
  • Social influences on types of scientific
    questions asked
  • Science reinforces and reflects the dominant
    values and views of society

10
Scientific habits of mind can help people in
every walk of life to deal sensibly with problems
that often involve evidence, quantitative
considerations, logical arguments, and
uncertainty without the ability to think
critically and independently, citizens are easy
prey to dogmatists, flimflam artists, and
purveyors of simple solutions to complex problems
  • F. James Rutherford Andrew Ahlgren
  • Science for All Americans, 1990

11
Discerning science from pseudoscience
  • Not all studies are scientific
  • Science is a game with rules

12
Which of the following studies provides
scientific knowledge?
  • 1) A religious organization is upset about the
    potential of human cloning, as they believe it is
    immoral. This group develops a survey to
    determine public opinion. 1000 people of the
    general public are asked if cloning humans is
    immoral. 950 respond that cloning humans is
    immoral.
  • 2) CNN newscast The results of our scientific
    survey are in 75 of those polled agree that
    Saddam Hussein does have weapons of mass
    destruction
  • 3) A person observes that Tylenol is more
    expensive than aspirin and guesses that it is a
    better product. She surveyed 100 doctors, and
    asked which drug is better for a headache. 90
    out of 100 doctors favor Tylenol.
  • 4) 4 Campbell students decide to check out Food
    Lions beer selection. They hypothesize that
    more expensive beer tastes better. They test
    this by purchasing a case of Sam Adams
    (expensive) a case of Miller (cheap). After
    finishing off both cases, they unanimously agree
    that Sam Adams tastes better.
  • 5) A microbiologist, after spending years
    observing the orderliness, yet complexity of
    cellular structures hypothesizes that this
    observed complexity of life is designed, and
    therefore, there is a God.
  • 6) A wildlife biologist finds a rare species of
    fungi in two locations containing the same plant
    animal types, elevation, and climate. She
    encounters another location with the same
    conditions, and predicts that the fungus is
    present. She looks around carefully, and finds
    the fungus, confirming her prediction.
  • 7) All of these
  • 8) None of these

13
Rules of science
  • Observed phenomena to be explained must have a
    natural cause
  • Explanation must be able to be tested
  • Quality value assessments are not scientific
  • Spiritual explanations are not scientific

14
Science (summary)
  • Provides knowledge through inquiry, based on
    testing possible naturalistic explanations of
    observed patterns in the natural world
  • Provides useful approximations of reality
  • Seeks to provide better explanations of
    observed reality
  • Strives to be objective
  • Operates according to specific rules

15
Which of these statements about science is true?
  1. Science is the only source of knowledge available
    to us
  2. Science provides us theories which are absolutely
    true
  3. Scientific knowledge is tentative
  4. All of these
  5. None of these

16
Real science an example
  • Monarch navigation

17
What is the hypothesis of the investigators?
  1. Monarchs migrate to Mexico each winter
  2. Monarchs are not strong fliers
  3. Monarchs use celestial information to navigate
    during migration
  4. Monarchs contain magnetite
  5. Monarchs use an internal magnetic compass to
    maintain their migratory direction

18
What about Ifthen?
  • Used in test (experiment) design

19
Which treatment(s) serve as controls in this
experiment?
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. B and C
  5. All of these
  6. None of these

20
What can be concluded from the experiment
conducted
  1. Monarchs use both magnetic and sun compass
    information to orient and navigate
  2. Monarchs contain magnetite
  3. Monarchs use an internal magnetic compass to
    maintain migratory direction
  4. All of these are valid conclusions
  5. None of these are valid conclusions

21
Biology
  • The scientific study of (physical/natural) life
    on Earth

Romans 810 (KJV) And if Christ be in you, the
body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is
life because of righteousness.
22
Is there a Christian view of biology?
  • God is ultimately the creator of all things
  • How do we respond to creation, knowing there is a
    Creator?
  • How do we use our knowledge of biology to glorify
    God?
  • How do we interpret natural phenomena? (genetic
    disease, pathogenic disease, food chains,
    fossils, various types of sexual attraction,
    physiology)

23
What distinguishes life from non-life?
24
Categories of life
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