I like your definition of science in terms of communal enterprise. (In your 
actual definition you should change your use of "phenomena" and "phenomenon" 
appropriately). Regardless, we often define our enterprises in terms of what we 
do rather than in terms of what we are doing as part of a scientific community. 
Your definition reminds us of that. Thank you.

Bill Scott


>>> "K. H. Grobman" <[email protected]> 03/04/09 7:09 PM >>>
Hi Chris & Everyone,

That is a surprising definition of "science" from an authoritative  
source.  My undergraduate degree is in physics.  I then studied  
philosophy of science because quantum mechanics disillusioned me and  
made me wonder if science really can tell us anything special.  After  
being satisfied with traditional philosophy of science, but dismayed  
by newer philosophy of science, I returned to science by studying  
developmental psychology.  Here's my definition:

======
Science is the pursuit of knowledge by predicting new phenomena from  
prior phenomena, while imposing the greatest degree of skepticism  
possible and yet assuming just enough to allow shared knowledge among  
those maintaining just as much skepticism.  Repeated consistently- 
found evidence of phenomena by independent observers leads this  
pursuit of knowledge to tentatively-accepted truths.  Two minimal  
assumptions of science that allow shared knowledge while remaining as  
skeptical as possible are: (1) truth is a correspondence between  
observed phenomena and statements (e.g.., hypotheses, mathematical  
equations) and (2) an understanding of a whole phenomena is the  
combination of understanding of parts of the phenomena.
======

The definition excludes religion, intuition, values, and common  
sense.  However, the definition does not include so much skepticism  
that we end up believing nothing (e.g., solipsism) or extreme forms of  
post-modernism.  Intelligent Design is not science because it makes an  
assumption that is not necessary to predict phenomena (i.e., it is not  
as skeptical as possible) and because it invokes teleological  
mechanisms instead of explaining solely from prior causes.  Any domain  
can be studied scientifically.  "Content analysis" by our colleagues  
in mass communication is scientific study of television and there is  
no reason the same can not be done for art, literature, or history  
(e.g., Herb Simon's computation models based on diaries of  
historically important scientists, Howard Gardener's studies of  
children's changing appreciation of different kinds of paintings).   
Nobody always does science; I teach with intuition and make choices  
according to moral feelings.  So I am certainly not saying that  
because something is not science, that it is somehow not worthwhile.   
Nevertheless, science has a special place in our lives precisely  
because its truths required so much skepticism be overcome to be  
produced.  No matter how much we disagree on issues of faith,  
intuition, common sense, or emotion - we can still agree to  
incorporate scientific truth into our world-views.

Kevin



_.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._
~ all that you can take with you is that which you've given away ~
~ teaching & learning developmental psychology ~
~ http://www.DevPsy.org ~




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