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Chapter 1: Scientific Thinking

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Title: Chapter 1: Scientific Thinking


1
Chapter 1 Scientific Thinking
  • Your best pathway to understanding the world

Lectures by Mark Manteuffel, St. Louis Community
College
2
Learning Goals
  • Describe what science is.
  • Describe the scientific method.
  • Describe key aspects of well-designed
    experiments.
  • Describe how the scientific method can be used to
    help make wise decisions.
  • Describe the major themes in biology.

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1.1 What is science? What is biology?
5
Scientists
  • Are curious
  • Ask questions about how the world works
  • Seek answers
  • Does the radiation released by cell phones cause
    brain tumors?
  • Are anti-bacterial hand soaps better than regular
    soap?
  • Do large doses of vitamin C reduce the likelihood
    of getting a cold?

6
Science
  • Not simply a body of knowledge or a list of facts
    to be remembered
  • but rather an intellectual activity,
    encompassing observation, description,
    experimentation, and explanation of natural
    phenomena.

7
How do you know that is true?
  • The single question that underlies scientific
    thinking

8
The most important questions in biology
  • What is the chemical and physical basis for life
    and its maintenance?
  • How do organisms use genetic information to build
    themselves and to reproduce?

9
The most important questions in biology
  • What are the diverse forms that life on earth
    takes and how has that diversity arisen?
  • How do organisms interact with each other and
    with their environment?

10
Scientific Literacy
  • how to think scientifically
  • how to use the knowledge we gain to make wise
    decisions
  • increasingly important in our lives
  • literacy in matters of biology is especially
    essential

11
Take-home message 1.1
  • Through its emphasis on objective observation,
    description, and experimentation, science is a
    pathway by which we can come to discover and
    better understand the world around us.

12
1.2 Biological literacy is essential in the
modern world.
  • A brief glance at any newspaper will reveal

13
  • Why are unsaturated fats healthier for you than
    saturated fats?
  • What are allergies? Why do they strike children
    from clean homes more than children from dirty
    homes?
  • Why do new agricultural pests appear faster than
    new pesticides?

14
Biological Literacy
  • The ability to
  • use the process of scientific inquiry to think
    creatively about real-world issues,
  • communicate those thoughts to others, and
  • integrate them into your decision-making.

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  • Scientific issues permeate the law. I believe
    that in this age of science we must build legal
    foundations that are sound in science as well as
    in law. The result, in my view, will further not
    only the interests of truth but also those of
    justice.
  • U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer
  • February, 1998 at the annual meeting of the
  • American Association for the Advancement of
    Science

17
Take-home message 1.2
  • Biological issues permeate all aspects of our
    lives.
  • To make wise decisions, it is essential for
    individuals and societies to attain biological
    literacy.

18
1.3 The scientific method is a powerful approach
to understanding the world.
  • If science proves some belief of Buddhism wrong,
    then Buddhism will have to change
  • Dalai Lama, 2005

19
Understanding How the World Works
  • Someone wonders about why something is the way it
    is and then decides to try to find out the
    answer.
  • This process of examination and discovery is
    called the scientific method.

20
The Scientific Method
  • Observe a phenomenon
  • Propose an explanation for it
  • Test the proposed explanation through a series of
    experiments
  • ?
  • Accurate valid,
  • or
  • Revised or alternative explanations proposed

21
Scientific Thinking Is Empirical
  • based on experience and observations that are
    rational, testable, and repeatable.

22
Take-home message 1.3
  • There are numerous ways of gaining an
    understanding of the world.
  • Because it is empirical, rational, testable,
    repeatable, and self-correcting, the scientific
    method is a particularly effective approach.

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  • 1.4 Thinking like a scientist how to use the
    scientific method

25
Scientific Method
  • A rigid process to follow?
  • A recipe?
  • An adaptable process?
  • One that includes many different methods?

26
The basic steps in the scientific method are
  • Step 1 Make observations.
  • Step 2 Formulate a hypothesis.
  • Step 3 Devise a testable prediction.
  • Step 4 Conduct a critical experiment.
  • Step 5 Draw conclusions and make revisions.

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What should you do when something you believe in
turns out to be wrong?
  • This may be the most important feature of the
    scientific method
  • it tells us when we should change our minds.

29
The scientific method can be used to examine a
wide variety of issues
  • Does echinacea reduce the intensity or duration
    of the common cold?
  • Does chemical runoff give rise to hermaphrodite
    fish?
  • Does shaving hair from your face, legs, or
    anywhere else cause it to grow back coarser or
    darker?

30
Take-home message 1.4
  • The scientific method (observation, hypothesis,
    prediction, test, and conclusion) is a flexible,
    adaptable, and efficient pathway to understanding
    the world because it tells us when we must change
    our beliefs.

31
1.5 Step 1 Make observations.
  • Look for interesting patterns or cause-and-effect
    relationships.

32
Does taking echinacea reduce the intensity or
duration of the common cold?
33
Take-home message 1.5
  • The scientific method begins by making
    observations about the world, noting apparent
    patterns or cause-and-effect relationships.

34
1.6 Step 2 Formulate a hypothesis.
  • A proposed explanation for
  • observed phenomena

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To be most useful, a hypothesis must accomplish
two things
  • It must clearly establish mutually exclusive
    alternative explanations for a phenomenon.
  • It must generate testable predictions.

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The Null Hypothesis
  • A negative statement that proposes that there is
    no relationship between two factors
  • These hypotheses are equally valid but are easier
    to disprove.
  • An alternative hypothesis
  • It is impossible to prove a hypothesis is
    absolutely and permanently true.

39
Null and Alternative Hypotheses
  • Echinacea reduces the duration and severity of
    the symptoms of the common cold.
  • Or as a null hypothesis
  • Echinacea has no effect on the duration or
    severity of the symptoms of the common cold.

40
Take-home message 1.6
  • A hypothesis is a proposed explanation for a
    phenomenon.

41
Step 3 Devise a testable prediction.
  • Suggest that under certain conditions we will
    make certain observations.

42
Devising a Testable Prediction from a Hypothesis
  • Keep in mind any one of several possible
    explanations could be true.

43
Devising a Testable Prediction from a Hypothesis
  • The goal is to
  • Propose a situation that will give a particular
    outcome if your hypothesis is true
  • but that will give a different outcome if your
    hypothesis is not true.

44
Hypothesis Echinacea reduces the duration and
severity of the symptoms of the common cold.
45
Take-home message 1.7
  • For a hypothesis to be useful, it must generate a
    testable prediction.

46
1.8 Step 4 Conduct a critical experiment.
  • an experiment that makes it possible to
    decisively determine whether a particular
    hypothesis is correct

47
Hypothesis Echinacea reduces the duration and
severity of the symptoms of the common cold.
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Take-home message 1.8
  • A critical experiment is one that makes it
    possible to decisively determine whether a
    particular hypothesis is correct.

52
1.9 Step 5 Draw conclusions, make revisions.
  • Trial and error

53
The Role of Experiments
  • What is important is that we attempt to
    demonstrate that our initial hypothesis is not
    supported by the data.
  • If it is not, we might then adjust our
    hypothesis.

54
Making Revisions
  • Try to further refine a hypothesis.
  • Make new and more specific testable predictions.

55
Does echinacea help prevent the common cold?
Hypothesis Echinacea reduces the duration and
severity of the symptoms of the common cold.
56
Take-home message 1.9
  • Experimental test results can be used to revise
    hypotheses and explain the observable world more
    accurately.
  • Scientific thinking helps us to understand when
    we should change our minds.

57
1.10 When do hypotheses become theories?
  • Two distinct levels of understanding that
    scientists use in describing our knowledge about
    natural phenomena

58
Hypotheses and Theories
  • A hypothesis is a proposed explanation for a
    phenomenon.
  • a good hypothesis leads to testable predictions.

59
Hypotheses and Theories
  • A theory is a hypothesis for natural phenomena
    that is exceptionally well-supported by the data.
  • a hypothesis that has withstood the test of time
    and is unlikely to be altered by any new evidence

60
Theories vs. Hypotheses
  • Repeatedly tested
  • Broader in scope

61
Take-home message 1.10
  • Scientific theories do not represent speculation
    or guesses about the natural world.

62
Take-home message 1.10
  • Theories are hypotheses that have been so
    strongly supported by empirical observation that
    the scientific community views them as very
    unlikely to be altered by new evidence.

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  • 1.11 Controlling variables makes experiments
    more powerful.

65
Elements Common to Most Experiments
  • 1. Treatment
  • any experimental condition applied to individuals
  • 2. Experimental group
  • a group of individuals who are exposed to a
    particular treatment
  • 3. Control group
  • a group of individuals who are treated
    identically to the experimental group with the
    one exception they are not exposed to the
    treatment
  • 4. Variables
  • characteristics of your experimental system that
    are subject to change

66
Controlling Variables
  • the most important feature of a good experiment
  • the attempt to minimize any differences between a
    control group and an experimental group other
    than the treatment itself

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Why does this experiment fall short of qualifying
as a good example of the scientific method?
  • Experimental design
  • Control group with whom to compare the treatment
    group?

69
Design a more carefully controlled study.
  • 160 ulcer patients
  • Experimental group?
  • Control group?

70
Is arthroscopic surgery for arthritis beneficial
for the 300,000 people who have it each year?
  • How do we know?

71
The Placebo Effect
  • The phenomenon in which people respond favorably
    to any treatment
  • The placebo effect highlights the need for
    comparison of treatment effects with an
    appropriate control group.

72
Take-home message 1.11
  • In experiments, it is essential to hold constant
    all those variables we are not interested in.
  • Control and experimental groups should vary only
    with respect to the treatment of interest.
  • Differences in them can then be attributed to the
    treatment.

73
1.12 Repeatable experiments increase our
confidence.
  • Can science be misleading?
  • How can we know?

74
Do megadoses of vitamin C reduce cancer risk?
  • An experiment must be reproducible and repeatable.

75
Take-home message 1.12
  • Experiments and their outcomes must be repeatable
    for their conclusions to be valid and widely
    accepted.

76
1.13 Weve got to watch out for biases.
  • Can scientists be sexist?
  • How would we know?

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Take-home message 1.13
  • Biases can influence our behavior, including our
    collection and interpretation of data.
  • With careful controls, it is possible to minimize
    such biases.

79
1.15 Pseudoscience and misleading anecdotal
evidence can obscure the truth.
80
How to Prevent Being Taken in or Fooled by False
Claims
  • Identify two types of scientific evidence that
    frequently are cited in the popular media and are
    responsible for people erroneously believing that
    links between two things exist, when in fact they
    do not.

81
  • Pseudoscience individuals make
    scientific-sounding claims that are not supported
    by trustworthy, methodical scientific studies.
  • Anecdotal observations based on only one or a
    few observations, people conclude that there is
    or is not a link between two things.

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Four out of five dentists surveyed recommend
sugarless gum for their patients who chew gum.
  • How do they know what they know?
  • Maybe the statement is factually true, but the
    general relationship it implies may not be.

84
Anecdotal Observations
  • do not include a sufficiently large and
    representative set of observations of the world
  • data are more reliable than anecdotes

85
  • Science is a way to call the bluff of those who
    only pretend to knowledge. It is a bulwark
    against mysticism, against superstition, against
    religion misapplied to where it has no business
    being. If were true to its values, it can tell
    us when were being lied to.
  • Carl Sagan

86
Take-home message 1.15
  • Pseudoscience and anecdotal observations often
    lead people to believe that links between two
    phenomena exist, when in fact there are no such
    links.

87
1.16 There are limits to what science can do.
  • The scientific method will never prove or
    disprove the existence of God.
  • Understand elegance?
  • What is beauty?

88
One of Several Approaches to the Acquisition of
Knowledge
  • The scientific method is, above all, empirical.
  • Value judgments and subjective information
  • Moral statements and ethical problems

89
Take-home message 1.16
  • Although the scientific method may be the most
    effective path toward understanding the
    observable world, it cannot give us insights into
    the generation of value judgments and other types
    of non-quantifiable, subjective information.

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  • 1.17 A few important themes tie together the
    diverse topics in biology.

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Two Unifying Themes
  • Hierarchical organization
  • The power of evolution

93
Take-home message 1.17
  • Although the diversity of life on earth is
    tremendous, the study of life is unified by the
    themes of hierarchical organization and the power
    of evolution.
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