Domains of Inquiry (An Instrumental Model) and the Theory of Evolution. American Scientific Affiliation, 21 July, 2012

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Transcription:

Domains of Inquiry (An Instrumental Model) and the Theory of Evolution 1 American Scientific Affiliation, 21 July, 2012 1

What is science? Why? How certain can we be of scientific theories? Why do so many academic 2 areas claim to use the scientific method? Can life be studied strictly scientifically? Is a person more defined by mass than metaphysics? 2

Objectives Introduce an Instrumental Model, Domains of Inquiry, a tool to under-stand how we come to our beliefs Explain some similarities and differences among the Domains 3 of Inquiry Argue that the Theories of Evolution and of Climate Change are not primarily scientific theories but historical theories Assist in understanding personal beliefs 3

Domains of Inquiry Definitions for Manipulating Activities Technology -- Attempts to manipulate the natural (that which has mass) Religion -- Attempts to manipulate the nonnatural (that which does not have mass) 4 Politics -- Attempts to manipulate what happens 4

Domains of Inquiry Definitions of Understanding Activities Science -- Attempts to know and understand the natural (that which has mass) 5 Metaphysics -- Attempts to know and understand the non-natural (that which does not have mass) History Attempts to know and understand what happened 5

Summary on Domains of Inquiry Technology the attempt to manipulate the Natural Religion the attempt to manipulate the nonnatural / Supernatural Politics the attempt to manipulate what happens Manipulation Activities 6 (above) are related to Understanding Activities (below) Science the attempt to know and understand the Natural Metaphysics the attempt to know and understand the nonnatural / Supernatural History the attempt to know and understand what happened 6

Inquiry Process Common to all of the Domains of Inquiry Personal Objectives / Domain Objectives Data Generation and Collection Analysis Prognostication 7 7

Technology and Science Full-disclosure 8experiment (experimental data) Observation (forensic data) Replicable by someone who has the wherewithal and the expertise 8 8

Metaphysics, Religion, and Politics Revered texts Tradition 9 Experience 9

History Primary Sources: Relics and documents from the time 10 Secondary Sources: Identified (writer and date) reporting or analysis Tertiary Sources: Unidentified (writer and/or date) relic, reporting or analysis 10

Data Acquisition Summary Technology and Science data are preferably collected by the replicable controlled experiment Religious, Metaphysical, and Political data are collected by personal experience (forensic data) History data are from personal experience or artifacts (forensic data) 11 We respect Technology and Science data more because they can be repeated and are less influenced by the inquirer s objectives, and we can much more often predict what will happen 11

Abduction Infers the assumed from the observation Infers a (assumption, as an explanation of b (observed) Deduction Derives the conclusion from the accepted -- Derives b (result) from a (accepted definition) 12 Induction Infers the conclusion from multiple observations -- Infers a (result), as an explanation of multiple b s (observed) Statistics -- Infers or discounts the assumed from multiple empirical observations analyzed with tested mathematical models I 12

Analysis Summary All Domains of Inquiry use all of the analytical tools Induction is not the exclusive domain of 13 science/technology Classical Inductive Logic was the act of moving from particulars to universals. Deductive logic was the act of moving from universals to particulars. This did not change with the scientific revolution. 13

Prediction Science / Technology From established laws/observations prediction has been quite effective 14 From Hypotheses / Theories, prediction as a testing mechanism has been useful Prediction is usually not part of metaphysics and history except on a superficial level 14

Prediction Summary Science: Often predictable the data is usually consistent, the systems are simpler Metaphysics: Unpredictable 15 because data varies, the systems are complicated History: Rarely predictable because the systems are complicated too many variables, the individual players are not predictable, and the data is in question 15

Domains of Inquiry and the Disciplines Astronomy, Chemistry, and Physics Meteorology Biology 16 Social Studies Music, Philosophy and Theology Anthropology 16

Chemistry, Physics, Astronomy Repeatable experiments Relatively simple systems Good record of prediction 17 Some historical data in astronomy 17

Meteorology Developed methods for predicting the tides Weather prediction is a somewhat successful Climate Change is a different matter The evidence is forensic there are no replicable experiments 18 The reality is more complex than the model -- unpredictable events affect the outcome Issues have become politicized Climate Change Theory is primarily historical, and predicting Climate Change is prophesying 18

Evolution Complexity Complex because it encompasses many ideas Different people select different sets of the ideas of Evolution 19 The data supporting the Theories of Evolution are forensic The Theories of Evolution are not primarily Scientific theories, they are Historical theories 19

Biology Originally, biology was focused upon the discovery, classification, and structure of living things The discovery and description of organisms provided us with an enormous catalogue of forensic data 20 The development of systems for classification is both metaphysical and scientific Cell Biology has become more scientific as replicable experimentation expands Behavioral biology the data is not replicable 20

Social Studies With sociology and psychology we discover problems that arise when we study people People have different tendencies that derive from both inheritance 21and environment People have histories both the person(s) collecting the data and the collectee 21

Music, Philosophy and Theology The metaphysical domain dominates: All of these disciplines are primarily abstract, they deal with ideas (e.g. Theory of Forms) or abstract expressions (e.g. Beethoven s Fifth) 22 Those who participate in these abstractions come away with different responses Lots of data, but multiple and competing perceptions 22

Anthropology Anthropology encompasses all the domains How does one analyze and understand 23 a 2000 year old culture? How to understand an ancient civilization from our 21 st Century perspective? 23

So what are we? Are we made in the image of God? What does that mean? We, too are creators -- the history and metaphysics are ours24 Yes we have mass, we do get energy from chemical reactions But our ideas and metaphysical constructs are powerful. 24