The statement below is why we still have a general public that doesn't
accept evolution as fact, or global climate change, or, that invasive
species harm ecosystems.  Certainly what the author says is technically
correct, but in reality what is the difference between a probability of
occurrence of 98% and "proven".  There is no functional difference and this
is not just semantics.  After all if evolution can never be proven then why
should it be in text books, and why should creationism (which also can never
be proven) be left out?  I don't want to start a hailstorm here, but I think
that it is an important point to distinguish between what essentially is a
philosophical question and educating students so that they will be able to
realistically communicate science to the public and make biologically-based
decisions in the real world.  Certainly, I also teach the Popperian
falsificationist paradigm, but I also tell my students to use common
decision rules (e.g., if something has a probability of occurrence that is
80% in real life, wouldn't you behave as if it was going to occur) when
describing scientific phenomenon to the public.  Barry Noon wrote a paper
about this many years ago, it basically was "Why biologists don't do well in
court".

On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 5:41 AM,

> Food for thought (hope it's not too simplified for this listserv):
>
> I was taught, and I teach my students, that biologists, ecologists
> included, DO NOT work within the realm of PROOFS (as mathematicians do).
> Rather we work within the realm of PROBABILITIES.  I do not allow my
> students to use the word "prove" either orally or in written format.  Even
> the most well accepted Theories (with a capital T), such as the Theory of
> Evolution by Natural Selection, the Germ Theory, and Cell Theory, are
> constantly being revised, modified, and updated as we trudge forward toward
> a better understanding of biology.
>
>
-- 
Gary D. Grossman, PhD

Professor of Animal Ecology
Warnell School of Forestry & Natural Resources
University of Georgia
Athens, GA, USA 30602

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