Transcript
  • Welcome toBiol 178Principles of BiologyCourse goalsCourse informationTextGradingSyllabusLabChapter Organization

  • Chapter OrganizationConcept OutlineTextConcept ReviewTest Your UnderstandingTest Your Visual Understanding

  • Lecture OutlineDefinition of LifeProperties of LifeHierarchical OrganizationUnifying Themes of ScienceScientific Method

  • What is Biology?Study of life

    Search for order in the natural world

    Discovery of new relationships

    Learn working rules that allow life to exist

  • Properties of LifeCellular organizationOrderSensitivityGrowth, development, and reproductionGenetic system DNAEnergy utilizationEvolutionary adaptationHomeostasis

  • Hierarchical Organization of LifePopulation LevelOrganism LevelCell Level

  • LifeLevels of OrganizationPopulationsAmong OrganismsBiosphereEcosystemCommunityPopulation

  • LifeLevels of OrganizationWithin OrganismsOrgan systemsOrgansTissuesCells

  • LifeLevels of OrganizationWithin CellsOrganellesMacromoleculesMolecules & Atoms

  • LifeLevels of OrganizationAmong organismsWithin OrganismsWithin Cells

  • Consequences of Hierarchical organization Emergent propertiesNew properties arise at each higher levelMake life difficult to define

  • Unifying Themes of Science1. Cell theoryAll living organisms are made of cells, and all living cells come from other living cells.

    2. Molecular basis of inheritanceDNA encodes genes Genes make-up & control living organisms.

  • Unifying Themes of Science3. Evolutionary changeLife-forms have evolved varying characteristics to adapt to varied environments.

    4. Evolutionary conservationSome characteristics of earlier organisms are preserved and passed on to future generations.

  • Summary: Unifying Themes of Science1. Cell theory2. Molecular basis of inheritance3. Evolutionary change4. Evolutionary conservation

  • Scientific Inquiry How is Science Done?Discovery ScienceObservingMeasuring

    Hypothesis-based ScienceScientific MethodProposing & Testing hypothesesInductive & deductive logic

  • ReasoningDeductive reasoningApply general principles to predict specific results

    Inductive reasoningUse specific observations to construct general principles

  • How Science Is Done1. Observation: Begins science2. Hypothesis: accounts for observationsEducated guessInductive Reasoning Generalization3. Prediction: Allows test of hypothesis validityDeductive Reasoning specific outcome4. Experiment: Tests hypothesis validity5. Controlled experiment:One variableControl

  • How Science Is Done

  • Limitations of ScienceHypothesis can NOT be proven true

    Truth TableHypothesisPredictionTrue TrueFalse False or True

  • Limitations of ScienceScience does not prove hypotheses are true.

    Science proves that some hypotheses are not true.

    Hypotheses not proven false are conditionally accepted.

  • Hypotheses, Theories & LawsHypothesis a tentative explanation.

    Scientific TheoryAccepted explanation.Supported by experimental evidence.Solid ground of science.A well-supported hypothesis.

    Scientific LawScientific knowledge accepted as true.An extremely well-supported hypothesis.

  • END


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