Title: Science and Anthropology: An Introduction
1Science and AnthropologyAn Introduction
Lake Tahoe Community College Fall 2002
2The Four Fields of Anth.
3The Four Fields of Anth.
4Science is a cycle of asking questions, finding
patterns, generating hypotheses, making
predictions, and conducting experiments or making
observations to support or refute those
predictions (Michael Alan Park, Introducing
Anthropology, McGraw-Hill, 2003, p. 21)
Belief differs from science in that it is taken
on faith, cannot be disproved, relies on answers
that cannot be tested, provide stable bases for
our behaviors, offer explanations for what is
beyond or out there (existential questions).
5So, What Does That Mean?
Unfortunately, misunderstandings of science and
belief have led to many misconceptions
X
X
(1) Science is better than belief
(2) Belief is better than science
X
(3) Science is evil having produced harm in the
world.
X
(4) Belief is unbelievable
6Understanding the Scientific Method
A number of theorists in the History and
Philosophy of Science have suggested that we
consider the processual nature of the scientific
method
7The film What Killed the Mega-Beasts provides an
introduction to the nature of scientific inquiry,
hypothesis-testing and research methods. As we
discovered, three competing theories seemed to be
plausible explanations as to the mammals demise.
Here is one conceptualization of the scientific
method
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9The scientific method is akin to a cycle which
involves a number of processes. The most basic
step involves asking the questions we wish to
answer or describing the observed facts we wish
to explain. We look for patterns, connections,
and associations, allowing for possible
explanations or hypotheses. We attempt to
formulate a general explanatory principle that
will account for the specific pieces of data we
have observed and we wish to explain (induction,
or moving from specific observations to general
explanations).
10Next, we attempt to either support or refute our
hypothesis by testing it. We can then suggest
that specific data would be found if a hypothesis
were true (deduction or moving from the general
to the specific). This leads to future
predictions of phenomena and new observations,
experiments and data. The process then repeats.
When this process allows us to generate an
integrated body of ideas forming a general
concept that coordinates, explains and interprets
a wide range of factual patterns in a given area,
we call this theory.
11- Belief Systems
- Belief Systemsideas that are taken on faith and
cannot be tested. Karl Popper suggested that
science is an engagement in falsificationscientis
ts never really prove their ideas, but they
continually strive to prove that they are not
wrong or cannot be refuted by another explanation.
12- Questions
- What Kinds of Questions Do We Ask?
- The ontological questionwhat is the form and
nature of reality and therefore what is there
that can be known about it? - The epistemological questionwhat is the nature
of the relationship between the knower or
would-be knower and what can be known? - The methodological questionhow can the inquirer
(would-be knower) go about finding out whatever
he or she believes can be known? - The everyday questionhow can I quickly find a
beer?
13- The Goals of Science/Its Community
- Science has three general goals
- (a) describe a phenomenon of interest
- (b) explain what causes it
- (c) predict what it causes
- falsification Karl Popper, things can never be
proven, just refused or shown to be wrong
14- scientific communitya collection of people and
as set of norms, behaviors and attitudes that
bind them together to sustain the scientific
ethos - norms of the scientific community (W. Lawrence
Neumann, Social Research Methods, Cpt. 1) - universalism
- organized skepticism
- communalism
- honesty
15- Research
- Researcha way of going about finding answers to
questions - Alternatives to research (W. Lawrence Neumann,
Social Research Methods, Cpt. 1) - authority
- tradition
- common sense
- media myths
- personal experience
16- Four errors we can make
- Overgeneralizationsome evidence and it is used
to apply to all situations - Selective Observationtake special notice of some
people or events - Premature Closurefeel that you dont need to
listen because you have all of the answers - Halo Effecthighly popular or prestigious people
impact our understandings of the world
17- Approaches
- Positivistic Approachesassume that there is one,
ultimate essence or reality that can be known - Interpretive Approachassumes that there are
multiple truths and perspectives present in the
world. Many can be understood or known, but no
one takes precedent over others
18- Research Process
- choose topic
- focus research question
- design study
- collect data
- analyze data
- interpret data
- inform others
- dataare the empirical evidence or information
that one gathers carefully according to rules or
procedures - quantitative (expressed as numbers) or
- qualitative (expressed as words, pictures,
objects, discourse)
19- Research Methods (adapted from H. Russell
Bernard) - Variablesomething that can take more than one
value values can be words or numbers - Dimensions (of variables)
- unidimensional (height, weight, birth, order,
age, marital status)relatively easy to measure - multidimensional (stress, wealth, political
orientation, wealth)more difficult to measure as
you have to take more things into account - Types of variables
- dichotomous variablesrace, gender (are complex
yet appear to be simple) - continuous variable (gradations)skin color
20- conceptsmental creations (religious intensity,
job dedication, etc.) all variables are concepts - definitions
- conceptual definitions abstractions, articulated
in words, that facilitate understanding
(dictionary defs), - operational definitions set of instructions on
how to measure a variable that has been
conceptually defined - hypothesisproposed explanations for natural
phenomena - alternative hypothesis the monetary value of
automobiles in the LTCC parking lot is greater
than those at Raleys (trying to prove) - null hypothesis the monetary value of
automobiles in the LTCC parking lot is less than
or equal to those at Raleys (opposite of what
youre trying to prove)
21- Measurement
- measurementdeciding which value to record
- measurement problemsIQ tests culturally-bound
situations - levels of measurement
- nominal variablesan exhaustive list of things,
each of which is mutually exclusive (religion)
it is qualitative (1 thing in one category) - ordinal (rank) variablesalso exhaustive
mutually exclusive, but the additional property
of rank ordering (e.g. middle class,
professorships) yet they do not tell you how
much more, cant specify how far apart the
attributes are from one another - interval variablesabove properties but the
distances between attributes is meaningful
(weight, temperature) - ratio variablesinterval variables with a zero
point (age)
22- validity
- instrument validityare the instruments for
measurement valid? - data validity are the findings and conclusions
based on the data legitimate? - finding validityare the explanations offered for
the findings valid? - Reliabilityrefers to whether or not you get the
same answer by using an instrument to measure
something more than once - Precisionwhat level is desired? (i.e. bathroom
scale) - systematic biasif your scale were always off by
5, you could then adjust to fix the bias) - face validitylooking at the operational
indicators of a concept and deciding whether or
not, on the face of it, the indicators make sense - criterion validitydata from an instrument that
purportedly measures a construct are compared
against some criterion that is already known or
valid (i.e. a tape measure will tell you every
time how to measure arm length, etc) - The principle of parsimony (Ockhams razor)
preference for simpler explanations in science
(dont make things more complicated than they
need to be)