Wednesday, June 19, 2013

On the Practice of Science (aka a Scientist’s view of science) - Part 1



This essay has been gnawing away at the back of my mind since I read Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) and my repeated frustration with non-scientist media personalities’ attempts to "explain" science. I forgive these individuals for their misunderstanding because science is opaque to outsiders since much of its practice is passed on as an oral tradition from supervisors and senior scientists to their students and post-doctoral researchers (post-docs). In addition, many aspects of science are taught through their practice rather than explicit explanations or definitions; such that not only is science composed of unwritten rules it is also composed of unwrite-able rules. However, in order to understand the success of science as demonstrated by the ubiquity of its products in modern life, we need to examine these unwritten principles and practices.

Purpose of Science

Science, like all academic fields, is motivated by our desire to understand the world in which we live. But this is not the purpose of science. I argue the purpose of science is to enable us to predict the outcomes of our actions. For it is only through accurate predictions can we realize our intentions. The drives which inspire modern science are the same as those which inspired prehistoric man to learn to make fire to keep warm or to predict the location of prey before heading out to hunt. This focus on utility rather than ultimate knowledge has been a major factor in the success of science as opposed to many other academic disciplines and leads naturally to the fundamental assumptions and philosophy of science.

Philosophy of Science

There are two fundamental assumptions upon which all of science is based. Firstly, it is assumed that reality exists and is coherent. Without this assumption all attempts to understand reality are pointless and yet any philosophers reading this will be familiar with the impossibility of proving that a material reality exists or in finding any reason why reality should be coherent. Thus these assumptions are a necessity. Secondly, science assumes that reality behaves consistently over time. In order for past observations to be useful for predicting the outcome of future events, we must assume the rules which governed them still apply today and will apply in the future. Without this second assumption knowledge about reality cannot be gained; it only exists in the moment of its discovery.  Science and all understanding of the world around us would be impossible without these two assumptions, and the success of science suggests they are valid assumptions to make.
                In addition to these assumptions, the final core belief of science I will discuss is the importance of observation and experiment to achieving its purpose. This belief can be explained based on the purpose of utility in science. In order to be useful to explain and predict the outcomes of our actions, ideas must be able to explain observations of about the world and predictions must be checked against experiments. These assumptions and principles are not unique to science thus are insufficient as a definition of science, rather science is the result of our attempts to compensate for our human limitations and failings in the pursuit of these ideas.

Part 2
Part 3
Part 4