Title: The Study of Life
1The Study of Life
2What is Life?
- The concept of living can be difficult to
define, since many qualities of living things can
be seen in non-living things - Crystals (non-living) can grow.
- A thermostat (non-living) responds to the
environment.
3Qualities of Living Things
- Living things
- are complex, organized, and made up of cells.
- maintain homeostasis.
- respond to stimuli.
- reproduce and grow.
- use materials and energy.
- as species, adapt and evolve.
4Complex and organized
All living things have DNA, which contains
information to build cell parts.
Cells are the basic unit of living things.
Organisms can be single-celled, or cells can
organize into tissues and organs.
5Maintain Homeostasis
Living organisms need to maintain an internal
environment, such as maintaining temperature.
6Respond to stimuli
All living things have ways of sensing the
environment that allow them to respond to threats
and find food or favorable environments.
7Reproduce and grow
Living things produce more of their kind through
reproduction. The young grow to maturity and the
cycle begins again.
8Use materials and energy
In order to maintain complexity, maintain
homeostasis, to grow, and to respond to the
environment, organisms must take in energy and
materials. Living things have a metabolism and
give off waste products as they use materials.
9Still a relevant question
What is life? isnt just a question that you
left behind in Kindergarten.
Astrobiologists who search for signs of life on
other planets look for many of the same
characteristics of terrestrial life.
Microbiologists studying nanobacteria may
challenge our current understanding of life.
10Scientific Inquiry
- Science is an investigation of the natural world,
using evidence from nature to support
explanations. - The methods used by scientists to investigate the
natural world are called Scientific Inquiry. - Scientific Laws and Theories are products of
scientific inquiry.
11Hypothesis Testing
- Scientific Inquiry is often used to test
hypotheses. - A hypothesis is a tentative explanation for an
observation. - A valid hypothesis must be specific, testable,
and falsifiable.
12Scientific Evidence
- Based on natural causes.
- Uniform in time and space.
- Perceived similarly by many people.
- Objective, measurable.
13Forming Hypotheses
- Scientific Inquiry is often used to test
hypotheses. - A hypothesis is a tentative explanation for an
observation. - A valid hypothesis must be specific, testable,
and falsifiable.
14Specific
- A hypothesis is specific if it addresses
particular observations and has specific
variables. - Not specific Toxins in water make fish
populations decline. - Specific The herbicide glyphosate causes trout
embryos to die in the egg when present in water
at levels of 100 parts per million or more.
15Falsifiable
- A hypothesis is falsifiable if it can be true or
false, either supported or rejected by evidence.
Note we do not say proven or disproven. - Not falsifiable Black licorice is the best kind
of licorice. (Opinions cannot be true or false.) - Falsifiable Over half of WOU students in our
biology class prefer black licorice over red.
16Testable
- A hypothesis is testable if involves specific
variables in the real, physical world that can be
measured directly or indirectly. - Not testable Students do poorly on exams
because of bad luck. - Testable Biology students who make outlines and
concept maps while studying their textbook score
10 better on exams than students who only read
the textbook.
17A hypothesis does not
- have to be true at the start of the
experiment. We dont know until the experiment is
over whether the hypothesis is supported or not. - have to explain everything. It only has to
address one variable at a time. If you try to
write a hypothesis that explains everything, it
is no longer specific.
18Hypotheses often begin with an observation that
leads to questions.
19Questions invite possible explanations.
These possible explanations are hypotheses. To be
valid, a hypothesis must be specific, testable,
and falsifiable but it doesnt have to be
correct! In fact, you dont know if it is correct
or not until you test it.
20Each possible explanation hypothesis can give
rise to a prediction, often stated in an
IF...THEN format.
21A good prediction suggests a procedure that can
test the hypothesis.
Scientists test hypotheses and accept or reject
hypotheses based on data. They do not set out to
prove hypotheses or they may bias their results.
22Once the procedures are carried out, scientists
use the data to reach a conclusion regarding the
hypothesis.
Notice that the hypothesis is supported rather
than proven.
23Experiments are one type of scientific inquiry.
Experiments test variables to try to find the
cause of natural events.
24Observational studies are also part of scientific
inquiry. Much of Astronomy and Paleontology, for
example, involves observational science.
25Laws and Theories
- In general
- Scientific Laws and Theories are both products of
Scientific Inquiry. - Laws tend to be descriptions of natural phenomena
in given circumstances. - Theories tend to be explanations of how natural
phenomena work.
26Law of Gravity describes what happens when you
drop a rock or launch a rocket at the moon.
Gravitational Theory explains why dropped objects
fall toward the center of the mass of the Earth.
27Mendels Laws of Heredity Describe patterns of
inheritance in terms of probability.
Darwins Theory of Natural Selection Explains
why inherited traits change in populations over
generations.
28Recap
- Living things are complex, organized, and
maintain homeostasis. - Scientists study living things using scientific
inquiry to make observations and test hypotheses. - Laws and theories are the products of science.
- Evolution is the unifying theory of modern
biology.