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What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?

What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

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Page 1: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?

Page 2: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?
Page 3: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

What is a “physical object”?What is a “physical object”?

Page 4: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

What are physical objects made of?What are physical objects made of?

Page 5: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Aristotle (384 – 322 BC)Aristotle (384 – 322 BC)http://www.chem.uidaho.edu/~honors/history.htmlhttp://www.chem.uidaho.edu/~honors/history.html

Page 6: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?
Page 7: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Another early idea: “atomism”Leucippus & Democritus (~ 500 BC)

John Dalton, 1808. A New System of Chemistry

Page 8: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

http://snobear.colorado.edu/Markw/SnowHydro/mol.html

The quantum physics model of matter

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How easy is it to measure physical objects?How easy is it to measure physical objects?

Page 10: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

What can’t we see?What can’t we see?

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Modern instruments have greatly Modern instruments have greatly extended our detection abilitiesextended our detection abilities

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Why do physical objects behave the way they do?Why do physical objects behave the way they do?

Page 16: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Anthropomorphic explanationAnthropomorphic explanation

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Mechanistic explanationMechanistic explanation

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Can we make predictions about the natural Can we make predictions about the natural world?world?

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• Given a knowledge of Given a knowledge of the “laws” of physics, the “laws” of physics, can you predict what will can you predict what will happen if I drop this happen if I drop this ball?ball?

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• Do the results support Do the results support your prediction?your prediction?

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• Chaos TheoryChaos Theory

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Types of Inquiry

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CuriosityCuriosity

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Curiosity-driven scienceCuriosity-driven science

Basic or “pure”Basic or “pure”often leads to often leads to surprisingly practical surprisingly practical discoveriesdiscoveries

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Problem Solving

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Problem-solving scienceProblem-solving science

Applied or “practical”Applied or “practical”Gives us power over the natural Gives us power over the natural worldworld

http://www.colostate.edu/programs/lifesciences/TrangenicCrops

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How do we investigate the natural world?

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Francis Bacon (1561 – 1626)

• if we understand nature we can dominate it

• Questioned authority

• Emphasis on incompleteness of knowledge

• Proposed a new method of studying nature

• observation over philosophical speculation

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Hypothetico-deductive scientific method

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Step 1: Observations

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The “Where’s Waldo” problemThe “Where’s Waldo” problem

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Step 1b: look for a general pattern

This step uses a process called

Inductive Reasoning

~ in which we develop a rule based on many individual examples

Page 33: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Step 2: Think up explanations (hypotheses) for the patterns observed

3. is generally applicable

A useful hypothesis:

1. leads to accurate predictions

2. is as simple as possible

Page 34: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Step 3: Make a testable prediction

This step uses a process called

Deductive reasoning

~ in which we use the rules of logic to generate a prediction

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Step 4: Make observations or do experiments to test our explanations

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How can you tell if someone is a Witch?

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A Witch! A Witch! We’ve got a Witch

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What’s the general pattern here?

Page 39: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

If she looks like a Witch and acts like a Witch she is a Witch

- Nose like a Witch

- Hat like a Witch

- Wart like a Witch

-Turned someone into a newt

Must be a Witch!

Page 40: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

What do you do with Witches?

Burn them!

Page 41: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

What do you burn other than Witches?

Wood

Page 42: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Why do Witches burn?

Because they’re made of wood?

How can you tell she is made of wood?

Build a bridge out of her

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But can’t you also build bridges out of stone?

Oh Yeah!

Page 44: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Does wood sink in water?

It Floats

Throw her in the pond

Page 45: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

What else floats?Bread!

Apples!

Very small rocks!

Gravy!

A Duck

Cider!

Cherries!

Mud!

Churches!

Lead!

Page 46: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

So, logically . . .

If she weighs the same as a duck

She’s made of wood

And therefore . . .

SHE’S A WITCH!

Page 47: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Bring my large scales

She DOES weigh the same as a duck

SHE’S A WITCH!

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Witch Wood

• Witch burns

• Wood burns-------------------------------

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Duck Wood

• Wood Floats

• Duck Floats

------------------------------

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• Duck Wood

• Girl’s weight Duck’s weight

• Witch Wood

• Girl Wood

------------------------------ Girl Wood

---------------------------------

Girl Witch

Page 51: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

William of Ockham (1280 – 1347)

•“Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate”

• Translation Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily

• Ockham’s Razor

• “keep it simple”

Page 52: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Description of Motion of Planets around the

Sun

Page 53: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Two Competing Models with Different Predictions

Page 54: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Kepler - elliptical

Shape of Planetary Orbits

Copernicus - circular

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More accurate prediction is “better”

Perform Experiment

Page 56: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Two Competing Models with the Same Predictions

Page 57: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Model # 1

• Planets move around sun in ellipses

Page 58: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

• decreases as the square of the distance

• force between them and the sun

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Model # 2

• Planets move around sun in ellipses

Page 60: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

• decreases as the square of the distance

• force between them and the sun

Page 61: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Model # 2

Force is generated by will of powerful aliens

Page 62: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Models # 1 and # 2

• Force between planets and sun determines motion of planets

Page 63: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Models # 1 and # 2

• same type of force

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Models # 1 and # 2

• predicted motion of planets identical for both Models

Page 65: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Model # 2

• has additional baggage (the will of aliens) that is unnecessary for description of system

Page 66: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

• Ockham’s Razor reject’s 2nd model

Page 67: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

• motion of planets can be explained by simple idea of force

• Solar system may be permeated by alien intellect

BUT

•no evidence of alien’s presence nor their absence

Page 68: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

• It does not guarantee that the simplest model is correct, it merely establishes priorities

•Application of Ockham’s Razor directs us to look to simplest model

Page 69: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Scientific Theories keep changing so where is the

Truth?

Page 70: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Newton & Theory of Gravitation

• Newton’s theory “The Truth”

• 1666 – explained all the observed facts

• Predictions later tested and found correct to within accuracy of instruments used

Page 71: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Einstein & Theories of Relativity

• 19th century – more accurate instruments

• Slight discrepancies in Newton’s theories

• Einstein’s theory explained newly observed facts

• Found to be correct with accuracy of instruments used

• Einstein’s theory “The Truth”

Page 72: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

Has the Truth changed?

• Theories can be shown to be incomplete

• No it hasn’t - Universe is still the same

• “Truth” means it agrees with all known experimental evidence

Page 73: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

New Theories

• Devour and assimilate its predecessors

• Explain old and new data

Page 74: What is Inquiry in the Natural World”?. What is a “physical object”?

AcknowledgementsAcknowledgements

I would like to thank Dr. Ted Georgian for the use of I would like to thank Dr. Ted Georgian for the use of a number of his slides and especially his idea to use a number of his slides and especially his idea to use

Monty Python as a humorous example of the Monty Python as a humorous example of the scientific methodscientific method