Title: Science and How It Works
1Science and How It Works
- Physics 270 Experimental Physics
2The Scientific Method
3Science as a Collection of Facts
Fact 1
Fact 2
Fact 3
4Real Science
- One possible definition activities aimed at
understanding the natural world - Scientists have shared values and perspectives
that characterize a scientific approach to
understanding nature a demand for naturalistic
explanations supported by empirical evidence that
are testable against the natural world. - Other shared elements include observations,
rational argument, inference, skepticism, peer
review and reproducibility of work.
5Physics is many things
- Observations of phenomena
- Experiments
- Empirical formulas
- Models
- Laws / Theory
Lets do some experiments!
6Approaching Problems
- Develop multiple approaches since you arent sure
which one will work.
Start
Goal
7This is not a pipe
- Painting by Rene Magritte
8In science results are presented using
precise (though technical) arguments,
- with
- testable consequences
- falsifiability
- reproducibility
Experimental Verification And Reproducibility
9Truth in science
Descriptions of some aspect of nature in terms
of a model. Any view of the natural world that a
scientist devises is just a model loaded with
assumptions and approximations of that world.
Models, in general, have limited applicability.
As data and technology improve, models are
replaced by others which explain a larger range
of phenomena.
10Theories Knowledge
- Theory the best available description of nature
as close to truth as we get. - Theories are validated by experiments.
- There is no truth-meter in science.
- Experiments expose the limitations or
incorrectness of theories. - Something may only be known if it is proven to be
true. - Beliefs may be true or false.
- Rationality is the best test of truth.
- Our senses can easily be fooled!
11Reductionism versus Wholism
Reduction Reduce a complicated problem into its
constituents and aims to understand that complex
problem through the study of its
components Wholism a phenomena must be viewed
as a whole in order to understand its structure
12Reductionist Example The Structure of
Proteins Proteins consist of amino acids. These
are assembled into ribosomes. The order of
assembly is determined by RNA after it is copied
from DNA. DNA consists of 4 units called
nucleotides. The structure of proteins is very
complicated, but here the problem has been
reduced to the assemblage of simpler building
blocks.
13Holistic Example An ant hill Complex physical,
chemical, and biological structure built and
sustained by millions of ants. Cannot be
understood by braking the ants into tiny
parts. Its essence is in the complexity of the
whole.
14Deduction versus Induction
- Deduction logical development of the
consequences of an explanation - starts with theoretical model
- ? testable prediction
- ? observations under specific conditions
- ? confirmation or rejection of the prediction
and/or the model
15Example The Discovery of the Neutrino
- Enrico Fermi proposed the existence of the
neutrino in 1930 because the observed decay
products from beta decay seemed to violate mass
and energy conservation. - In 1956, Cowen and co-workers detected its
existence.
16Deduction versus Induction
Induction generalization of observed
patterns starts with observations ?observed
patterns ?development of model ?testable
predictions ?competition of models ?theory
17Example Cause of Cholera
- John Snow in 1854 observed that patients who had
contracted cholera had been drinking water from a
particular pump in London. - He suspected that the cholera was spread by
contaminated water. - Led to Louis Pasteurs formulation of germ theory
in 1857. - Bacteria and viruses were later confirmed by
direct observation, establishing their connection
to disease.
http//espanol.video.yahoo.com/watch/327162/214077
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18Fallacies
- Circular Reasoning Begging the question
- Appeal to emotion
- Argument from authority
- Sweeping Generalization
- Irrelevant Conclusion
- Denying the antecedent
19Truth in Experimental Science
- For a given measureable parameter, there exists a
true value of that parameter for a set of
circumstances at a given time. - We do not know what it is, nor do we have any
independent means of knowing it.
Precision versus Accuracy
20Probabilistic versus Deterministic Models